In the quiet suburbs of northern Kansas, my life had become a masterpiece of predictable monotony. My name is Mark Ellison, and at thirty-nine, I had settled into the role of the neighborhood’s silent observer. After two divorces, I had traded the complexities of shared intimacy for the simplicity of a meticulously maintained lawn and a vacuum cleaner I called George. It wasn’t that I was unhappy; I was simply finished. I had retreated into a cycle of morning coffee and a passionless job, filling the silence of my evenings with the hum of George’s motor. I was the guy you called to replace a high-set lightbulb or to watch your house while you were on vacation—reliable, unassuming, and emotionally distant.
Living to my left was Caroline Hayes. For nine years, we had coexisted as “silent partners,” our interaction limited to the occasional nod across the fence or a perfunctory comment about the humidity. At fifty-nine, Caroline was a widow of two decades, a woman who had lived half a lifetime in the shadow of a car accident that claimed her husband, Robert, when she was only thirty-eight. She was the neighborhood’s enigma, a woman who sipped green tea and listened to Elvis on an antique record player, tending to her petunias with a devotion that suggested she was gardening for a ghost. She seemed to have the answer for everything but shared nothing of herself.