The Night They Put a Repair Bill Beside Michael’s Untouched Glass at the Old Tavern

Chapter 1: The Bill Beside the Untouched Glass

Daniel Scott put the folded repair bill on the bar hard enough to make Michael Johnson’s iced tea tremble.

The glass had been sitting untouched in front of Michael for nearly fifteen minutes, beads of water sliding down its side and gathering in a pale ring on the dark wood. Brenda Hill had set it there the way she always did on Friday evenings, without asking, with one lemon wedge and no straw because Michael never used one. He had wrapped both hands around it once, then let go. His fingers rested flat now, the knuckles swollen from years of gate hinges, fence posts, and cold mornings spent holding tools before his joints were ready.

The paper landed beside those hands.

A silver clip held a photograph to the front. Even before Daniel spoke, Michael saw the image clearly enough: the rear gate between their properties, one brass latch bent out of line, the driveway apron cracked in a jagged curve near the alley.

The tavern got quiet in the way a room gets quiet when everyone pretends not to listen.

Daniel stood too close to Michael’s stool. He had come in through the side door with his jacket still on, his cheeks bright from the cold outside, one hand on the bill like he had brought in proof from a courthouse. He was thirty years younger than Michael and carried himself like a man who expected rooms to open around him.

“You can look at it now,” Daniel said. “Or you can look at it after the HOA secretary gets a copy Monday.”

Michael did not pick up the paper.

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