The iron gate squeaked when I pushed it, a small, dignified sound. Inside, the air smelled like coffee and furniture polish, and the living room looked like a history book—oaken cabinets, sepia photographs, shelves of dog-eared novels and engineering manuals.
“I’m Claire,” I answered. “Mariah from the corner store gave you my name.”
He smiled at that, as if the neighborhood itself were an old friend. “Come in.”
I set the kettle to boil, and he watched me—not intrusively, more like an observer catching a familiar rhythm. “You walk fast,” he noted. “As if time is pushing you.”
I laughed. “Habit.”
Continue reading…