I’m 91 and had basically accepted that my life was going to end in silence—no visitors, no calls, just me and the ticking clock—until a skinny 12-year-old with a skateboard moved in next door, and one night I heard him crying alone on his porch.
I’m 91, and for a long time I felt like I’d already died, I just hadn’t had the decency to lie down yet.
My husband’s been gone for decades.My kids moved away, started families, and slowly drifted off. At first, there were visits. Then calls. Then texts.
Then silence.
Birthdays consisted of me, a cupcake, and the TV. Holidays were frozen dinners and reruns. Most days it was just the hallway clock ticking and the house creaking like it was trying to talk to me.That’s the kind of lonely that makes you feel see-through.
Then Jack moved in next door.
He was 12. Too big for his age in that lanky way, hat always backward, skateboard glued to his hand.
I’d see him out front in the evenings. Up and down the sidewalk. Practicing tricks. Falling. Getting back up.
Other kids would get called in.”Dinner!” Or “Homework!”
Doors opened. Porches lit up.
No one ever called for Jack.
His house stayed dark most nights. No car in the driveway. No lights in the windows.
At first, I told myself I wasn’t being nosy. Just observant. That lie worked until the night I heard him cry.
It was late. I woke up to this soft sound. Not TV. Not the pipes. Not a baby.