It wasn’t just a house. It had been a home. The house felt different today. There was a stillness in the air, a quiet anticipation, as if the very walls knew that change was coming. The old owner had left in the morning, their footsteps fading down the path, a lingering glance at the door before disappearing from view. And now, the house waited. When I stepped inside, the scent of aged wood and forgotten stories wrapped around me. Dust swirled lazily in the sunlight filtering through the tall windows, illuminating the worn-out furniture, the slightly creaky floorboards, the memories embedded in every corner. I ran my fingers along the edge of an old wooden table, feeling the ridges and marks left behind—by someone who had once lived here, laughed here, maybe even loved here.
When I stepped inside, the scent of aged wood and forgotten stories wrapped around me. Dust swirled lazily in the sunlight filtering through the tall windows, illuminating the worn-out furniture, the slightly creaky floorboards, the memories embedded in every corner. I ran my fingers along the edge of an old wooden table, feeling the ridges and marks left behind—by someone who had once lived here, laughed here, maybe even loved here. It wasn’t just a house. It had been a home. The grandfather clock in the hallway caught my attention, its pendulum swinging in slow, deliberate movements. Tick. Tock. A steady rhythm, as if reminding me that time doesn’t stop, not even for moments like this. I stood there for a while, just listening. The house and I, meeting for the first time, silently acknowledging each other.** just the walls, the floors, the furniture—but the stories yet to be written here. The memories waiting to be made. The laughter that would one day echo through these rooms again. A new owner, yes. But maybe, in time, this place would call me something more. Maybe, just maybe, it would call me home.