She looked up at me with eyes that held no anger.
Just truth.
“I realized something,” she said.
“No one visits unless there’s a reason.”
I already knew where this was going.
“So I created one.”

The room felt heavier somehow.
“The police always come when someone calls 911,” she continued softly.
Her smile returned, small but sincere.
“And for ten minutes each night… the house isn’t empty anymore.”
I didn’t know what to say.
She sipped her tea like this was the most ordinary conversation in the world.
Finally she added, almost apologetically:
“I know I shouldn’t. And if you tell me to stop, I will.”
That was the moment something shifted inside me.
I thought about the station.
The eye rolls. The frustration.
And I looked around the quiet house.
At the empty chairs.
At the photos of people who no longer came.
I finished my tea.
Then I stood.
“Well,” I said, clearing my throat, “I’ll report the issue as resolved.”
She nodded politely.
I left.
Back at the station, I wrote the report.
Caller contacted. Situation resolved. No further action required.
But the next evening, at 9:03 p.m., I was back.
Not in uniform.
Just a guy knocking on a porch.
She opened the door again.
And smiled.
“Oh,” she said softly. “You came back.”
I shrugged.
“Thought I’d try the tea again.”
So we talked.
About her husband who had been a carpenter.
About the garden she used to keep.
About the town when it was smaller and everyone knew each other’s names.
And the next evening, I came again.
Then the next.
Sometimes we played cards.
Sometimes we just sat and talked.
Eight months passed like that.
Then one evening, the house was dark.
No porch light.
No answer at the door.
A week later, a small envelope arrived at the station.
Inside was a teacup.
Delicate porcelain, painted with tiny blue flowers.
Taped inside was a folded note in careful handwriting.
It read: “You were the first person who came back without being called.”
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