Margaret Whitmore had not felt her heart race like that in decades. At seventy-two, she had grown used to silence. Since her husband Thomas passed five years earlier, the large colonial house in Cedar Ridge felt less like a home and more like an echo chamber. Her children visited on holidays. They called when they remembered. They loved her—she believed that—but their lives were full, and hers had quietly narrowed.
Then she met Daniel.
He was forty-two, a landscape architect hired by the neighborhood association to redesign the community park. They met when Margaret attended a planning meeting. He had kind eyes and an attentive way of listening that made her feel visible again—not as someone’s mother, not as someone’s widow, but as Margaret.
