She had come for the summer months. But the summer months, she realized, had been waiting for her all along.
One evening, a thunderstorm rolled in off the bay. She sat on the screened porch and watched the sky split and mend, split and mend. The power went out. She lit candles, made a sandwich by flashlight, and realized she hadn’t checked her phone in six hours. summer months
By mid-May, she had learned the rhythm. The hardware store closed at noon on Wednesdays. Mrs. Pellegrino from three doors down left a basket of rhubarb on the step every Friday. The bay was still too cold for swimming, but she walked the shore each morning, collecting smooth stones and watching the fog burn off. She had come for the summer months