
At seventy-four, I thought I was simply buying peace from leaks. I hadn’t bargained for what they’d find up there, or the decision their discovery would force on me.
My name’s Evelyn, I’m 74, and a widow of almost ten years. My husband Richard passed suddenly, a heart attack, right in the garden while trimming the hedges.
One moment, he was grumbling about the weeds; the next, he was gone. No kids, no family left, just me and this old, creaking house.
It’s funny — in a cruel sort of way — I’ve kept myself busy. My roses, my bread, the library volunteer shifts where the kids roll their eyes when I recommend Dickens — but nothing fills the silence.
And in that silence, you hear things.
The house has a way of whispering its decay: the groan of old beams, the drip-drip-drip of water through a roof I’ve been too broke to fix.
Every storm, I’d lie awake clutching my quilt, staring at the ceiling. Would tonight be the night it caves in?
Would I wake up buried under soggy shingles?
Finally, this spring, I scraped enough together for repairs and found a small roofing crew. They seemed… rough around the edges. Tattoos, cigarettes dangling, the kind of men Richard would’ve called “trouble in steel-toe boots.”
Still, I told myself, Evelyn, don’t judge.
You need a roof, not a choir boy.
The morning they pulled into my driveway, my roses trembled from the bass thundering out of their truck. Four of them piled out, boots heavy on the gravel.
Joseph was the first to catch my eye — young, maybe mid-twenties, hair too long for a roofing job, but he looked at me with this soft kind of respect. “Good morning, ma’am,” he said, tipping his head.
“We’ll get you taken care of.”
I smiled. “Thank you, dear. Call me Evelyn.”
Then came Josh, loud and swaggering like he owned the place.
“Where’s the access? We’re burnin’ daylight here.” He barely glanced at me before barking at the others to unload.
Kevin, tall and lean with a cigarette stuck to his lip, muttered, “This roof’s a nightmare already,” before even setting foot on the ladder. And then there was Matt.
Neutral, steady-eyed, but his silence wasn’t comforting. He seemed to drift after the others like smoke.
I decided to play hostess anyway. Old habits die hard.
At noon, I brought out a tray of turkey and cheese sandwiches with a jug of lemonade.
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