The Front Room Dthrip -

Not deliberately. Rooms don't intend. But the front room had a particular shape to it, a slight dip in the floor near the bay window where Mr. Haskins had always stood to watch for the postman. The dip held his weight. It held his habit. And when no one came to stand there anymore, the dip began to whisper.

That night, the front room tried to remember how to be a room again. It pushed warmth up from the floorboards where the old radiator pipes still ran, even though the boiler was long dead. It coaxed a smell from the plaster—lavender, which the Haskins woman had worn. It arranged the dust motes into a shape that almost looked like someone sitting in the chair that wasn't there anymore. the front room dthrip

And the front room, which had never been spoken to directly before, did something it had never done. Not deliberately

This room had seen four families, two funerals, one wedding reception, and a child learn to walk by holding onto the radiator pipes. It had known laughter that left grease-spots on the ceiling and silences that sank into the plaster like cold water. After the last family left—the Haskins, who had simply walked out one Tuesday with a half-eaten loaf of bread still on the counter—the front room began to remember. Haskins had always stood to watch for the postman

Stay.