Mrs. Adele tucked the envelope behind the rest of her mail.
“Just bills, honey. They come whether you invite them or not.”
“Do you want me to read anything for you?” I asked. “Or go over anything?”
“No, Carmen. Thank you. Elias handles most of that now.”
“Your nephew?”
She nodded.
“Since my eyes got worse, he put everything online.”
“Does he live close?”
“Two hours away.” She gave a small laugh. “He’s busy. I just hope he remembers the electric bill. It’s due today. Companies don’t wait for old ladies to find their reading glasses.”
That made me pause.
“Mrs. Adele, if anything feels wrong, please knock on my door.”
“Oh, Carmen.” She patted my arm. “You already have Oliver, work, groceries, bills. I won’t become another thing for you to carry.”
Oliver looked up at her.
“Mom carries heavy bags all the time.”
Mrs. Adele smiled sadly.
“I know. That is why I won’t add one more.”
I should have pushed harder.
Three nights later, Oliver stopped in the hallway with his toothbrush still in his hand.
“Mom.”
“What is it, baby?”
“Mrs. Adele’s porch light is still off.”
I looked out the window. Her little house was completely dark. No porch light. No kitchen lamp. Nothing.
“She might have gone to bed early,” I said, though I did not believe it.
“No.” Oliver ran into his room and came back holding his green piggy bank. “She says porch lights help people find their way home.”
I glanced at the bills sitting beside my coffee cup.
Oliver noticed.
“Are we out of money too?”
continued on next page
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