Morning Light on the Porch
The sun was already spilling gold across the cracked sidewalk when I shuffled out of my one‑room rental, a battered pair of boots slapping against the uneven concrete. The air smelled of damp leaves and the faint, sweet rot of a garbage bin a few doors down. I could hear Mrs. Rhode’s old record player humming a tinny waltz from the open window of the house next door, the notes barely cutting through the chirp of sparrows perched on the fence.
She was there, as always, sitting in the armchair that faced the street, a mug of tea steaming in her lap. The chair was the kind you find in a thrift store—faded floral upholstery, a little too soft, the springs squeaking whenever she shifted. She lifted the mug, her frail fingers trembling, and caught my eye.
“Morning, James,”
She said, her voice a little raspier than I remembered from the night before. “You look like you could use a fresh start.”
My throat tightened, not because she was being kind, but because I could feel the weight of every empty promise I’d ever made to myself. I stared at the chipped porcelain, at the steam curling up like a ghost, and thought about the cold that had seeped into my bones the night before, when I’d lain awake listening to the wind rattling the shutters.
“Morning,” I replied, forcing a smile that felt as cracked as the sidewalk.
She set the mug down, the clink echoing a little too loudly, and gestured to the small wooden table beside her. “Sit,” she said, “and tell me why you’re still here.”
I lowered myself onto the creaky chair opposite hers, the wood sighing under my weight. The porch light flickered, casting a soft amber glow over the two of us. I could see the faint lines etched around her eyes, the silver of her hair tangled in a knot that seemed to have been there for years.
“I’m just trying to get by,” I said, the words feeling insufficient. “I’ve been… around.”
She nodded, as if she understood the vague, endless loop of “trying” that had been my life for as long as I could remember. She reached for a small, hand‑stitched bag and pulled out a pair of ugly green socks, the yarn thick and lumpy, the color a sickly olive that reminded me of a wilted lettuce leaf.
“For you,”
she said, pushing the socks into my hands. “So your feet don’t freeze.”
I stared at them, feeling the roughness of the yarn under my fingertips. They smelled faintly of wool and a hint of lavender detergent—her favorite scent, I’d learned from the few times we’d chatted while I was sweeping the porch.
“Thanks,” I muttered, trying not to let the absurdity of the moment get to me.
She smiled, a thin line that didn’t reach her eyes. “You’re welcome, son.”
That was the beginning, the first thread pulled taut between us, and I didn’t know where it would lead.
Learning the Ropes
The next few weeks fell into a rhythm that felt almost comfortable. I’d wake up before the rooster in the nearby field, the sky a bruised purple, and make my way to Mrs. Rhode’s house. The first thing I’d do was check on the pills—her daily regimen was a colorful mosaic of tablets, each day of the week a different shade, sorted into a cheap plastic box with compartments labeled Monday through Sunday.
I’d count them, line them up, and then place them where she could reach them. The box was cheap, the kind you buy at a dollar store, and the compartments were too shallow, often spilling the pills onto the table. I’d have to scoop them back up with a tiny spoon, the metal clinking against the plastic.
One afternoon, while I was changing the light bulb in her kitchen—an old, buzzing fixture that hummed like a distant insect—I heard her gasp.
“Oh, James,”
she said, clutching the edge of the counter. “You’re so gentle with that thing. I used to have a man who’d slam the switch and make the whole house shake.”
She laughed, a thin, cracked sound that made me realize how rare it was for her to be amused. I turned the bulb, the room filling with a soft, amber glow that seemed to make the shadows retreat.
“You ever think about why you’re here?” she asked, her eyes flicking to the ceiling as if searching for a hidden answer.
“Just trying to make something out of the mess,” I said, feeling the words slip out like gravel.
She sighed, a sound that seemed to carry the weight of decades. “I’ve been alone a long time,” she said. “No family. No friends. I’m… dying, James.”
She didn’t say it with drama. It was a fact, like the way the kettle whistled on the stove, or the way the wind rustled the curtains. I felt a knot tighten in my chest, a mixture of pity and something else I couldn’t name.
“If you take proper care of me,” she continued, her voice dropping to a whisper, “I’ll give you everything I have.”










