Porch Light and Thermos Steam

The dusk light’s gone soft on the porch planks, turning the cedar to warm honey. I’m holding this old thermos—got it the day we started building this deck, when Jake was ten, dropping nails in the sawdust like he was planting marigold seeds. He’d keep tugging my sleeve, asking why I sanded the railings three times over. Told him wood’s got a memory, same as folks. Rush it, and it’ll splinter when you need it most.
Now he’s got his own kids, but he still shows up every other Thursday with a thermos just like this one. We sit right here, watch the oak trees shed their leaves slow, sip coffee that’s gone lukewarm, and don’t have to say a word. This porch ain’t just nails and lumber. It’s the way the light hits the rail just right at this hour, the hum of crickets starting up, the quiet of days that stack up like well-sawn boards, solid and sure.


