They Escorted The Old Man Out Before He Could Unroll The Line They Moved

Chapter 1: The Rolled Paper At The Glass Doors

The first time Jeffrey Clark put a hand on Samuel Walker’s shoulder, he did it gently enough that no one in the glass lobby would call it force.

That was the trouble with people like Jeffrey. They knew how to make pressure look like courtesy.

Samuel stood just inside the double doors of the sales center with the rolled survey held tight against his chest. The paper had been wrapped in a rubber band gone pale with age, and his fingers pressed around it as if warmth alone could keep it from being taken. Beyond the glass walls, late sun flashed on the metal arms of machines parked near the half-framed townhomes. Inside, everything smelled of fresh coffee, floor polish, and the sweet icing from the miniature cupcakes arranged beside glossy brochures.

A woman near the model display turned to look at him, then looked away.

“You came at a busy time, Mr. Walker,” Jeffrey said.

His voice was smooth. It carried just far enough for the closest guests to hear the patience in it.

Samuel looked past him toward the long table where the neighborhood drawings were spread beneath clear plastic. A large rendering showed the new units, the landscaped walking path, the drainage channel, the row of young trees that did not exist yet. The drawing made everything look clean and generous. It did not show the mud already pushed against Samuel’s side fence. It did not show the old stones Anna had set one by one along the garden edge, the ones now half-buried under dust from the grading work.

“I need to show the board this,” Samuel said.

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