The Neighbor Brought a Repair Bill to His Welcome-Home Barbecue, But She Hadn’t Seen His Old Folder

Chapter 1: The Welcome-Home Banner Was Still Crooked

The “WELCOME HOME” banner had come loose on one side, and every time the wind caught it, the last two letters snapped against the barn like somebody knocking from inside.

Michael Anderson stood beneath it with a tray of ribs in both hands, watching the crooked corner slap the weathered boards. Brandon had tied it too high. The boy had always tied everything too high, even after turning thirty-seven and growing a beard of his own. He said it made things visible from the road.

Michael would have preferred it lower.

Behind him, smoke rolled up from the grill in blue-gray waves. Two off-duty officers from the county department stood beside the folding table, arguing over whether the corn needed more butter. One of them had his badge clipped to his belt and a paper plate in his hand. Another leaned against the fence rail laughing at something one of the grill volunteers had said.

They were not there in uniform exactly, not the way people meant it when they said uniform. A few wore department polos. One still had his duty pants on from a shift that had run long. A couple had come straight from the station because Brandon had called everyone Michael had once helped after a storm, a wreck, a missing dog, a flooded road.

Michael had told him that was too much.

Brandon had said, “You fell off your own porch and spent three weeks pretending you didn’t need anybody. Let people bring you potato salad.”

So they came.

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