I paid for lumber, screws, nails, and paint. Walt lent tools and kept an eye on everything. My father did the labor. He tore out rotten boards. Reset posts. Straightened the fence. Hauled debris. Got blisters. Got sunburned. Got quiet.
On the second day, he muttered, “You planned this fast.”
I handed him a drill.
“No. I just had a long time to think about what a man owes after leaving.”
That shut him up.
My mother refused to come during the first two days.
On the third day, she brought iced tea. She set one cup on the porch rail near him and said, “Check the support beam before you cover it. Rotten wood doesn’t get stronger because you hide it.”
Then she left.
Later that week, Walt pointed out an area near the porch where old fill dirt had shifted. Mixed in with the dirt and debris was a carved wooden block.
My mother recognized it immediately.
It had come from my crib, which her father had made by hand.
After the fire and demolition, pieces of the old house and furniture had been pushed into a side trench before the lot was regraded years later. That was how it ended up there.
She ran her thumb over the carved star and said, “I thought all of it was gone.”
By the end of the week, the porch was solid and the fence stood straight.
My father looked exhausted.
Older too.
He said, “I did what you asked.”
“Yes.”
“So now what?”
“Now you get one month.”
He blinked.
“One month?”
“Room above my store. Food. Time to find work. That’s it.”
“I’m your father.”
“Biologically, yes.”
He nodded slowly.
Then he looked at my mother.
“I know I don’t deserve another chance.”