The Woman at the End of Maple Street
When the ambulance lights painted our bedroom ceiling red and blue, I thought I was just about to feed a starving cat.
Mrs. Halloway lived alone at the end of our block—silent, strange, her only companion a thin orange tabby. As EMTs wheeled her out, she grabbed my wrist: “Please… my cat. Don’t let her starve.”
Inside, the house smelled like dust and secrets. I fed the cat, but curiosity pulled me deeper. Beneath a sheet: a baby grand piano. On the mantle, a photo—a woman in sequins, mid-song.
I knew that face. A forgotten jazz legend my father worshipped—vanished decades ago.
At the hospital, I brought daisies. “I know who you are,” I whispered. She told me everything: a brilliant career ended by an abusive husband, her daughter lost to bitterness and silence. Only the cat and piano remained.
Weeks later, she gave me a wrinkled address—her daughter’s. “I was too afraid,” she said.
I went. The daughter slammed the door. But a teenage girl peeked out—her granddaughter. I told Mrs. Halloway everything. She wept.
Eventually, they met. Harsh words, tears, but also forgiveness.
“I can die in peace,” she said.
Two weeks later, she did. At her funeral, her granddaughter sang her song. My kids cried like they’d lost family—because, somehow, they had.
Being a good neighbor, I learned, is more than waving from porches. Sometimes it means stepping into someone else’s silence… and helping them finish their song.