When a single mother quietly begins clearing snow for her elderly neighbor, a silent bond forms between two women who rarely speak. But when a chilling note appears on her doorstep, everything shifts. What begins as a small act of kindness unravels into something far deeper.
The cold air hit my face like a slap as I opened the front door.
“Of course it snowed again,” I muttered to myself. My shovel was already leaning by the porch railing.
Micah was still asleep upstairs. I could hear the faint hum of his sound machine.
“Come on, Dako,” I said to myself. “Let’s get this over with.”
Our neighborhood always looked peaceful in the snow; postcard-pretty. But beauty doesn’t shovel itself.
I started on our walkway, counting each motion like I counted bills when I waitressed. When I reached the edge of the driveway, I paused, hands on my hips, steam curling around my face.
Three houses down, Lois’s porch light flickered on. I watched as she cracked open her door, cane first, then her foot, then her dog’s tiny white blur of body appeared. Benny barked once, then decided that it was too cold to continue.
The snowbank blocking their front steps was too high.
Lois didn’t try to fight it. She simply stepped back inside, closing the door without drama or fuss.
I stood there for a beat, lips pressed together. Then I turned, dragged the shovel behind me, and walked to her house.
I couldn’t imagine her staying cooped up until the snow melted. I didn’t knock. I didn’t wait for permission. I just started clearing her path.
The next morning, I did it again. And again the day after that.
By the end of the week, it had become a routine: I cleared mine, then hers, then went home for a cup of coffee and shortbread.
Micah caught on quickly.
“Mom helps the dog lady,” he told his friends, like it was something everyone’s mom did; like it was built into the fabric of the world.