Alderberry Lane
When Stephen returned to his late mother’s house on Alderberry Lane, it didn’t feel like home so much as a stage set—lovingly arranged but eerily inert, waiting for its lead actor to fumble his way through the old lines. The porch steps gave a weary creak beneath his weight, like an old friend too polite to sigh aloud. The brass doorknob was cool in his hand, polished from years of habit, not use. He opened the door, and the familiar scent hit him: lavender sachets tucked in unseen drawers, a faint trace of lemon polish clinging to the baseboards, and under it all, that faint must of time unbothered. The furniture had softened and slumped, like actors gone method in their old age. The living room armchair still let out a complaining grunt when he sat, and the couch wore its crocheted afghans with the unbothered glamor of an elderly socialite attending her fifth memorial service of the month. The side tables, all mismatched in height and origin, stood expectantly, like they were a...