Summer Months - _verified_
On her last morning, she sat on the porch swing one final time. The bay was the color of hammered pewter. A single sailboat cut a slow path toward the horizon.
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
July brought heat that pressed the air flat. The porch swing was useless by noon; she moved inside to the north-facing bedroom, where a ceiling fan turned slow circles. She read novels so long they felt like places she lived in. She learned to can peaches from the orchard two miles down the road. The syrup stained her fingers amber for days.
The last week of August, she packed her bags slowly. She washed the sheets and folded them into the linen closet. She left the rhubarb basket on Mrs. Pellegrino’s step, filled with the stones she’d collected. She turned off the water heater and emptied the fridge. On her last morning, she sat on the
She arrived on the first of May to find the cottage still buttoned up against April’s chill. The key turned with a groan. Inside, the air smelled of dust and old linen. She lit the pilot light for the stove, swept the floors, and made the bed with sheets she’d brought from the city.
The rental ad had said, “Perfect for summer months.” Four words, clipped and optimistic, typed beneath a photo of a small white cottage with robin’s-egg-blue shutters. She had come for the 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.