Excerpt:

THE OLD MAN AT MY DOOR

His bow seemed to be in deference, so deep that he had to right the earmuffs that dropped on to his forehead. His enunciation was loud, but the KN95 mask still muffled his greeting.

“Ms. Renata Todd?”

“That’s me. How can I help, sir?”

I could see the knock-outs in the snow behind him, his imperfect path from whoever dropped him there. There was one large smudge among them, a convulsive snow angel. He had sprawled out in a fall; I detected a patch of muddy wet snow on the hip of his gray wool coat and his knee.

“Ma’am, I grew up in this house, my father, mother, brother and me. I wasn’t technically born in it, but close enough; my father got my mother to the hospital with only minutes to spare. I left right around Labor Day in 1959 and, while I was tempted, I have not been back since. I thought I had made peace with it all, but I need an ending. I say ending because I love movies, all types. I tend to look back at my life as something projected on a screen. I was hoping to see this house again before I get to the final credits.”

Delivered so deliberately, he had clearly memorized his metaphoric introduction and poetic request.

He wiped his nose with his gloved hand. “My name is Albin Lawrence.”

“Alvin?”, I repeated.

“No,” he said patiently, “Albin, with a b. A-L-B-I-N. You could pronounce it all-fancy, like it’s French, Al-bahn, but it’s just Albin, Al-bin.”

“Come inside, Just Albin,” I offered, as he knew I would.

Impulsive behavior is not a trait I am know for, so why was I doing this? But, after a preamble like his, who would strand an elderly man on a doorstep in 22 degree weather? But I was also wondering: was this some gag, a set-up, a misdirection?

“I’ve been vaccinated, and boosted,” he declared.

“Me, too. You can remove your mask.”

As he did, Albin was almost hopping. I realized he was carefully seeking somewhere in the foyer to wipe his feet. His shoes, or rather their rubber coverings, betrayed their age, veined with salt stains and desiccated at the seams, and snow was sliding off on to the hardwood floor. I offered to take his coat and pointed to a Chevron rug.

“I think maybe you fell out front.”

“A little. I misjudged the depth, ma’am.”

When he smiled, I thought I could hear his dry lips actually crackle. Albin had been handsome when young. His cheekbones were high, what remained of his hair was wavy and fell into a gentle part and his blue eyes were like the water in the Florida Keys  and eerily direct.

“Renata. Call me Renata.”

This was when I noticed that no hand was visible below his left sleeve, which bore cuff links, and when he removed his coat, why: his arm was missing past the elbow but before the shoulder, and his shirtsleeve  had been neatly folded into two equal panels and affixed with a stickpin. A gory interlude in The Walking Dead notwithstanding, I’ve never been especially squeamish about a missing body part, and less so after my own simple mastectomy. Its twin remains, but breasts aren’t working appendages, and the removal was a medical decision, terrifying but absolute: live, or die. What a burden this must have been for Albin, more so given his age; things like getting dressed and bathing were probably a challenge. But he had layered festively --a white shirt, a navy blue vest, an unexpected white-and-baby blue polka-dot bowtie, khaki pants with perfectly-creased pleats. His intent was to make a favorable impression.

“Step on through.” On the hall tree I draped his coat; the loose lining, I noted, need restitched. He followed me into the living room. “Please. Sit.”

Albin went to the rolled-arm Chesterfield sofa, carefully moved too many fringed pillows and sat on the middle cushion. “This is nice leather!”

“The manufacturer calls it buttery,” I laughed. “Where did you come from, Albin?”

“The Saint Kate. I went there after my flight arrived. So arty and beautiful!” he exclaimed.

“When I asked where you came from, I meant in the more permanent way.”

“An Assisted Living community called At Water’s Edge in middle Ohio. It’s named that because it’s situated on a river. It’s very nice. I have an actual apartment. It even has a kitchen, but no stove, just a microwave. Old people have been known to set themselves on fire.”

“Do they know you got on a plane and took this trip to your hometown?” I inquired.

Albin’s chide sounded hurt. “It’s not like I have a keeper. I sign out and can come-and-go. It’s not like I’m gallivanting around. I’ll take an Uber to check out whatever’s new at the movie theatre. I go to the matinees, usually by myself. I might do some mall-walking with a big, salty pretzel as my reward.” Maybe his wink was a tic. “We have a computer library. I bought my airplane ticket on there. I had a lot of time on my hands to stick key words into the search engine and look up things during the COVID lockdown. Outsiders were prohibited. I didn’t have any, anyway.”

A simple admission, with no self-pity: no visitors came to see him.

“The worldwide web is how I put you and the house together,” he continued. “I found this property and saw that, by the 90’s, parcels were being sold off,  two acres here, ten there. I Googled more and found the newspaper write-up about how you and your husband Matteo were re-doing it.”

That I’m now thinking about privacy and cyberstalking is crazy. This was an old man. I did want to correct Albin quickly on one issue.

“Matt  -- he went by Matt -- and me weren’t married, and he doesn’t live here anymore.”

“Then I’m sorry I brought his name up,” Albin offered.

“Don’t be. He was a major part of my life for nearly five years.”

“He was eye candy, from the picture they printed,” Albin grinned.

“And he knew it,” I replied, doing my best not to sound bitter.

“Who decided to buy?”

“Me, initially,” I replied. “It ticked enough boxes. We are --  I am -- very private, and that was the biggie. I value quiet.”

“And here I turned up,” Albin lamented. “But I’ve learned it is sometimes better to beg forgiveness than ask permission.”

“No forgiveness necessary.” I rose. “I am more than happy to take you through the house, Albin.  I’m proud of our work here. We had very little access to old photos for reference. You may not be happy with all the changes.”

“Change is good, and necessary,” Albin countered, “Social norms. Relaxing formalities. Like flying. I used to wear a sport coat and tie. I like the new casualness. I saw people in tracksuits.”

“Then are you ready for the tour?”