Chapter 57: Charity Work
(What a wonderful day to start a new arc — wishing everyone gets one just as pleasant.)
Martin Reeves adjusted the plastic tablecloth one more time, smoothing out a wrinkle that probably only he could see. The community room at Sunset Gardens Retirement Home was alive with quiet chatter and the soft sound of mugs tapping saucers. Warm afternoon sunlight poured through the wide windows, laying golden patches on the carpet where elderly residents sat in little groups.
"Stop fussing with that table, you're making me nervous," Emma laughed, balancing a tray of fresh-baked cookies as she stepped out of the kitchen.
Her auburn hair was tied in a messy bun with a few loose strands framing her face, and a dusting of flour clung to her blue volunteer shirt. Even after hours of baking and serving, she still wore the bright smile that had first caught Martin's eye two years ago in the university library.
"Sorry," Martin said, finally stepping back from the table. "I just want everything to be perfect for them. Mrs. Lewis specifically asked if we'd have those chocolate chip cookies again."
"And we do." Emma set the tray down dramatically. "Three dozen, just like she requested. Though I suspect Mr. Wilson is going to try to sneak extras again."
As if summoned by their conversation, Mrs. Lewis shuffled over with her walker, her face brightening up at the sight of the cookies. At eighty-three, she moved slowly, her silver hair neatly pinned back and her cardigan buttoned up despite the warm afternoon.
"Oh, you beautiful children," she said in her gentle, accented English. "You spoil us old folks."
"It's our pleasure, Mrs. Lewis," Martin said, carefully selecting two of the largest cookies and placing them on a small plate for her. "How was your physical therapy session this morning?"
"Terrible," she said with a mischievous grin. "That therapist, she makes me work too hard. But I tell her, 'Listen, young lady, these legs carried me across an ocean and through seventy years of marriage. They deserve some respect.'"
Emma giggled, covering her mouth with her hand. "Did you really say that to her?"
"Of course not," Mrs. Lewis winked. "I'm too polite. But I thought it very loudly."
Martin smiled as Emma's face lit up at the old woman's joke. This was why he loved her so much — not just the way she looked when she laughed, but how she truly enjoyed these small moments with the people the outside world had mostly forgotten.
They'd been volunteering at Sunset Gardens together for eight months now, every Saturday afternoon without fail. It had started as Emma's idea; she was studying social work and needed volunteer hours for her program. But Martin had tagged along that first day and found himself surprisingly moved by the residents' stories and grateful expressions. These people had lived full lives – they'd fought wars, raised families, built careers, survived losses – and now they spent most of their days in small rooms with few visitors.
"Mr. Martin," a rough voice called out from across the room. "Come here, I want to show you something."
Frank Wilson, a seventy-nine-year-old former construction worker, sat in his usual spot by the window. His rough hands held a wooden carving that he'd been working on for weeks. Frank had been teaching Martin basic woodworking techniques, insisting that "every man should know how to make something with his hands."
Martin walked over and examined the small figurine. It was a bird – a cardinal, judging by the carefully carved crest on its head. Frank had been working on it for a long time patiently, using only a small knife and occasionally asking Martin to help steady his hands when arthritis made the delicate work difficult.
"Frank, this is incredible," Martin said, turning the carving over in his palm. "The detail work is amazing."
"It's for my granddaughter," Frank said gruffly, though Martin could see the pride in his old face. "Her birthday's next month. She's turning sixteen, can you believe that? Seems like yesterday she was this tiny thing who used to climb on my shoulders."
"She's going to love it," Martin assured him. "How often do you get to see her?"
Frank's expression dimmed slightly. "Not as often as I'd like. Her parents are busy, you know. Jobs, school activities. Life." He shrugged, trying to appear nonchalant. "But she calls sometimes. Sweet kid."
Martin felt the familiar pang of sadness that came with these conversations. So many of the residents had families who visited rarely, if at all. The staff at Sunset Gardens did their best, but there was only so much they could do to fill the emotional void left by absent loved ones.
"Hey Martin," Emma called from across the room. "Can you help me move this chair for Mrs. Peterson?"
Dorothy Peterson, ninety-one years old and sharp as ever, wanted to move to a spot with better lighting for her crossword puzzle. She was known for completing the Sunday New York Times crossword in under an hour, a speed that amazed even the younger staff.
"Of course, Mrs. Peterson," Martin said, carefully lifting the chair and positioning it exactly where she indicated.
"Perfect," she said, settling into the seat with a satisfaction. "The light was creating a glare on the paper. At my age, every advantage helps." She looked up at him with bright, intelligent eyes. "You know, Martin, you and Emma remind me of my late husband and myself when we were young. The way you two work together and care about we people."
Martin felt heat rise in his cheeks. "That's very kind of you to say."
"I'm not being kind, I'm being observant," she said matter-of-factly. "Harold and I were married for sixty-eight years. You learn to recognize real partnership when you see it. That girl of yours is special. Don't let her get away."
"I don't plan to," Martin said quietly, glancing over at Emma, who was now deep in conversation with a group of residents about their afternoon activity options.
Mrs. Peterson followed his gaze and smiled knowingly. "Good. Harold used to say that finding the right person to share your life with is like finding a perfect piece for a puzzle – it just fits. Everything else becomes easier when you have that."
The afternoon moved along quietly. Martin served tea and coffee, fetched things from high shelves, and listened to stories from years long gone. Emma led a small craft session, helping the more mobile residents make paper flowers for their rooms. Together they wiped up spills, refilled water glasses, and offered the warm, patient company these seniors so often longed for.
Around four o'clock, they began the cleanup process. Martin stacked chairs while Emma washed dishes in the small kitchen. The residents gradually dispersed to their rooms for afternoon naps or to the television lounge for their daily programs.
"Same time next week?" Mrs. Lewis asked as they prepared to leave, though she asked the same question every Saturday.
"Absolutely," Emma replied, giving the older woman a gentle hug. "We wouldn't miss it."
"You two are angels," Mrs. Lewis said, patting Emma's cheek with a soft, wrinkled hand. "Real angels."
Outside, the late afternoon air was crisp with the promise of autumn. The sun dipped lower, stretching long shadows across the lot and bathing Sunset Gardens' brick walls in golden light. Martin loaded their supplies into the trunk of his Honda Civic while Emma said goodbye to a few staff members who were just arriving for the evening shift.
"I love this time of year," Emma said, joining him by the car. She took a deep breath, inhaling the scent of fallen leaves. "Everything feels so peaceful." She pulled out her phone and showed him the screen. "Look what Mrs. Patterson gave me."
Martin leaned closer to see the photo Emma had taken – it was the crossword puzzle, completely filled in, with a handwritten note at the bottom: "For Emma – Thank you for making an old woman feel young again."
"She insisted I take a picture," Emma laughed. "Said she wanted me to have proof that her brain still works at ninety-one."
"That's so sweet," Martin said, then grinned. "Though I think you're the one making her brain work better. You remember everyone's stories, their favorite snacks, even their family names. "
Emma blushed, tucking a strand of hair behind her ear. "It's not hard to remember when you care about someone."
"See? That's what I'm talking about." Martin shut the trunk and turned toward her. The sunlight caught the copper in her hair and her cheeks were pink from the busy afternoon. She looked beautiful and at peace — just the way he imagined her whenever he daydreamed about their future together.
"What's that look for?" Emma asked, tilting her head with an amused smile.
"I've been thinking," he said, leaning against the car.
"Dangerous habit," she teased, stepping closer to him.
"I'm serious." He reached for her hands, intertwining their fingers. Her hands were soft and warm, with a small bandage on her knuckle where she'd scraped it against the oven door earlier.
"About us, about all this." He gestured toward the retirement home. "I love spending time here with you. I love seeing how you make everyone smile, how you remember little details about their lives. I love that you genuinely care about these people."
Emma's expression grew soft and attentive. "Martin..."
"Do you remember our first day here?" he continued. "You were so nervous about making a good impression that you practiced introducing yourself in the car for ten minutes. And then Mr. Wilson spilled coffee all over your white sweater in the first five minutes."
"And you immediately gave me your jacket," Emma said softly, her eyes growing distant with the memory. "Even though it was freezing outside and you were just wearing a t-shirt underneath."
"You looked so horrified, like you'd ruined the whole day But then Mrs. Lewis started laughing and said coffee stains were just proof of a life well-lived, and suddenly everyone was telling their own spill stories." Martin brought her hands to his lips, pressing a gentle kiss to her knuckles. "That's when I knew."
"Knew what?"
"That you were going to fit perfectly into my life. Into any life, really, but hopefully mine." He took a breath, his heart starting to race. "I know we're still young. We've got school to finish and careers to start. But when I look at you, when I see us together like this, I can picture our whole future."
Emma's eyes widened slightly. "What kind of future?"
"Everything," Martin said, his voice growing stronger with conviction. "Graduation next year – you walking across that stage to get your social work degree, me finally finishing my education program. Maybe we move in together after that, get a little apartment with a kitchen big enough for all your baking experiments."
"My baking experiments are not that messy," Emma protested with a laugh.
"Tell that to my kitchen ceiling," Martin said dryly. "But I love it. I love finding flour in my hair three days after you've made cookies. I love how you leave little notes in the margins of cookbooks, rating recipes and suggesting improvements. I love that you cry during every romance movie but pretend it's just allergies."
"I do not cry during romance movies," Emma said, though her voice wavered with barely suppressed emotion.
"The Notebook. You sobbed through the last thirty minutes and went through like half a box of tissues." Martin grinned. "And then you made me promise to love you even if you got old and forgot who I was."
"That's a reasonable request," Emma said quietly.
"Which is why I said yes immediately." Martin's expression grew serious again. "I can see us getting married someday – nothing fancy, maybe something small with just our families and the friends who matter most. Mrs. Lewis could be your honorary grandmother."
Emma's breath caught. "You think about us getting married?"
"I think about everything with us," Martin admitted. "A house with a garden where you can grow those herbs you're always talking about. Maybe kids someday – little ones who inherit your kindness and your terrible habit of singing off-key in the shower."
"I do not sing off-key!" Emma protested, but she was smiling through tears that had started forming in her eyes.
"You absolutely do, and it's adorable." Martin reached up to cup her face gently.
"You want to grow old with me?" Emma asked quietly, her eyes searching his face.
"I want everything with you," Martin said, surprised by the certainty in his own voice. "Every day, every year, every wrinkle and gray hair and creaky joint. I want to argue with you about what to watch on Netflix and have you steal my hoodies and wake up next to you when we're eighty. I know it sounds crazy, but—"
"It doesn't sound crazy," Emma interrupted, her voice barely above a whisper. "It sounds perfect."
Martin felt his throat tighten with emotion. "Emma..."
"I love you," she said, the words tumbling out in a rush. "Not just the way you are now, but the person I know you'll become. I love your patience with people like Frank who repeat the same stories every week. I love how you remember Mrs. Peterson's crossword puzzle times and celebrate her victories like they're Olympic records. I love that you see the best in everyone, including me."
"Especially you," Martin corrected.
They stood there for a moment, hands clasped, sharing one of those beautiful moments when the future feels not just possible but inevitable.
"What are you smiling about?" Emma asked, studying his face.
"Just... us," Martin said. "All the ways I want to love you."
Emma stood on her tiptoes and kissed him softly, her lips warm and tasting faintly of the chocolate chips she'd stolen while baking.
As they separated, Martin opened his mouth to suggest they grab dinner at that little Italian place Emma loved – the one where she always ordered too much food and insisted on taking leftovers to share with Mrs. Lewis the next week. Maybe afterward they could stroll through the park and talk about their future — the apartment Emma had been secretly looking at, and the life they were stitching together, one small moment at a time.
Later, he would remember this moment with crystalline clarity: the warmth of her lips, the scent of her shampoo mixed with the vanilla from the cookies they'd baked, the way the setting sun made her eyes look like honey, the absolute certainty that this was the woman he would love for the rest of his life.
The world exploded into heat and light.
Time fractured. Everything slowed to an impossible crawl as Martin's brain struggled to process what was happening. He felt himself being thrown backward, his body moving through air that suddenly felt heavy and thick.
The sound – when it finally registered – was unlike anything he'd ever heard: a roaring whoosh followed by Emma's scream.
Where Emma had been standing, there was nothing but flame. Not fire surrounding her, not fire near her – she was simply gone, replaced by a column of brilliant orange and yellow that reached toward the darkening sky. The heat hit him like a physical blow, and somewhere in his slowing perception, he felt his skin begin to blister and burn.
His back struck the concrete with an impact that drove the air from his lungs, but he couldn't look away from the space where Emma had existed mere seconds before. The flames were already dissipating, leaving only a small charred husk and the sharp of burned flesh and melted fabric.
Martin tried to scream but no sound came. His throat felt raw, his lungs burnt by superheated air. The pain was everywhere – his face, his arms, his chest – but it felt distant, unimportant compared to the impossible reality that Emma was simply gone.
Through his dimming vision, he saw a figure emerging from the shadows between two buildings across the street. Tall and lean, wearing some kind of flight suit with mechanical wings, the figure moved slowly.
As darkness began to creep in from the edges of Martin's sight, he heard a voice, distorted and metallic through what must have been some kind of voice modulator.
"Beautiful," the voice said, "Absolutely beautiful."
Martin's consciousness faded as sirens wailed in the distance, the stranger's words echoing in his mind as everything went black.
Notes :
You can guess where I took the inspiration for this scene from.
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