Marlene sounds rushed, distracted, and faintly irritated by the entire business of responsibility. She explains that the woman is her aunt, Evelyn Mercer, eighty-two years old, widowed, stubborn, and refusing assisted living. She needs someone to sweep, dust, wash dishes, maybe tidy up the bathroom and kitchen once a week. Two hundred dollars per visit.
For a second you think you heard her wrong.
Two hundred dollars would cover groceries for the week and part of your electric bill. Two hundred dollars would buy you breathing room, which at that point feels almost luxurious. You agree to come the next morning before class.
The alley is smaller than you expected, tucked behind a row of old brick shops and a laundromat with a flickering sign. Mrs. Mercer’s house sits at the very end of it, a narrow two-story with peeling blue paint, a sagging porch rail, and flower boxes that haven’t held flowers in years. The place looks less abandoned than left behind, as though life stepped out for a moment twenty years ago and forgot to come back.
When you knock, it takes a long time for the door to open.
The woman standing there seems to have been assembled from bird bones, white hair, and determination. She is very thin, wrapped in a thick cardigan despite the weak sunlight, one hand gripping a cane, the other resting against the doorframe as if the act of standing has already cost her more than it should. Her face is lined deeply, but her eyes are clear, alert in a way that surprises you.