My House
A story about what you build when no one is watching, and who shows up when you’re done
The key was cold in my palm, its edges sharp and new in the way of things that have not yet been worn smooth by use. I stood on the sidewalk for a long moment before I walked up to the door, because I had been imagining this moment for ten years and I wanted to give it its full weight before it became simply a thing that had happened and moved on into the past. The house was exactly the blue I had hoped for, a soft robin’s egg that seemed to hold light rather than simply reflect it. The fence was white, the oak tree in the front yard was exactly as tall and broad as the one I had been drawing in notebooks since I was a child, and the porch swing moved slightly in the afternoon breeze as if it had been waiting.
My name is Madison Carter. I turned thirty two months before I got this house, and the decade between twenty and thirty had been almost entirely organized around the single goal of being able to stand on this sidewalk holding this key. While my friends were traveling and spending and living at the rate that people in their twenties are supposed to live, I was doing overtime shifts in the IT department of a mid-sized company in a city where I knew almost no one, eating cheaply and well below my means and putting the difference somewhere it would compound. On good evenings I sit on it and read until the light goes too low and then I sit without reading and watch the street, and sometimes a neighbor waves and I wave back, and sometimes a child on a bicycle goes past and the child waves too, and the house behind me is warm and lit and full of the particular silence of a space that belongs entirely to you and has been earned in full.
I did not just buy a house. I learned, finally and at some cost, what it means to be the person holding the key.