He Missed A Funeral, Then Found His Lake House In A Forged Loan-myhoa

The call came before the sun had burned the fog off the lake.

I was in my workshop behind the house, sanding the rough edge of a cedar birdhouse for Ava, my six-year-old granddaughter.

My old flip phone buzzed across the workbench, bumping against a coffee can full of bent nails.

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The number belonged to Margaret Sloan.

“Walter,” she said, “are you sitting down?”

Nobody asks an old man that unless they are about to hand him grief.

I sat on the stool beside the bench with sawdust still on my palms.

Margaret told me Thomas Mercer had died sometime during the night.

Massive heart attack, quick and quiet, gone before the ambulance made it up his driveway.

For a few seconds, I did not understand the words.

Thomas was not a man who vanished in his sleep.

Thomas was the man who had thrown himself into me under a collapsing bridge platform forty years earlier.

I still remember the cable snapping above us and the sound of steel screaming as several tons of scaffold dropped toward my head.

I froze.

Thomas did not.

He hit me hard enough to crack two of my ribs and shoved me clear before the platform folded into the river.

He shattered three discs in his spine saving me, then spent the rest of his life pretending the limp was nothing.

After my wife Eleanor died, Thomas came over every Thursday with bad coffee and worse jokes.

He taught Ethan how to fish when I was too hollowed out by grief to teach anyone anything.

He sat beside me during the nights I thought widowhood might swallow me whole.

Now Margaret was telling me that man was gone.

The funeral would be Sunday morning at St. Andrew’s.

I thanked her, hung up, and sat there holding a birdhouse I suddenly could not finish.

Rain came that evening, soft at first, then steady against the kitchen windows.

I had laid my black suit over the guest-room chair and polished my shoes at the table Eleanor and I built by hand.

That was when headlights swept across the yard.

Ethan’s black SUV rolled into the driveway like it had rehearsed the turn.

My son stepped out in a charcoal coat with his phone already pressed to his ear.

Clare followed him in high heels that looked irritated by the weather.

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