I Hired A Man To Mow My Daughter’s Lawn And He Heard Crying From Below The House

Part 1

I was balanced on a ladder, pulling soggy leaves from the gutters, when my phone vibrated in my pocket. The morning air carried that strange early-autumn feeling—still warm enough to remember summer, but already smelling like change.

“Morning, Dad.”

The moment I heard Clara’s voice, I frowned.

“You sound worn out.”

She gave a quiet laugh.

“It’s been a long week.”

Behind her, I heard a muffled airport announcement, followed by the rolling thunder of suitcase wheels. I pictured her walking through the terminal with the careful, measured pace she had developed over the last six months. Since her separation from Evan, nothing about her had been casual anymore. Every movement seemed planned. Every choice controlled.

“I’m at the airport,” she said. “They just started boarding an earlier flight, so it’s loud here.”

I climbed down the ladder slowly. At seventy-two, I did not take chances with my footing anymore.

“You always show up too early.”

“I know,” she said. “It helps with the anxiety.”

There was a brief pause.

“I wanted to say thank you for checking on the house while I’m gone.”

“That’s what fathers are for.”

“And for finding someone to mow the lawn.”

“He should be there around one.”

“Perfect.”

Another silence followed. This one felt heavier.

“If you go by today,” she said carefully, “don’t worry if the inside looks bare. I packed most things away before leaving.”

I paused.

“You planning to move while you’re gone?”

She laughed, but it was not a happy laugh.

“No. I just wanted everything neat.”

It sounded odd, but then again, so much had seemed odd since the divorce and the ugly custody battle. Clara had become almost painfully cautious. She locked doors twice. Closed curtains before dark. Filed every receipt. Saved every message. She never said she was scared.

But I knew my daughter.

“You’ll call when you land?”

“I promise.”

“I love you.”

“I love you too, Dad.”

The call ended.

At that moment, I had no idea that it would be the last normal conversation we would have that day.

Around noon, I drove to Clara’s house to water her flowers before going back home to finish my own yard work. Everything looked exactly as it should. The white shutters were closed against the afternoon heat. The porch was clean. No packages sat by the door. Nothing seemed broken, disturbed, or out of place.

I checked the mailbox, watered the hanging baskets, and locked the gate the way Clara always asked me to.

As I drove away, a dark pickup truck turned out of the neighborhood. Its windows were too tinted for me to see the driver. I barely noticed it.

Later, I would wish I had.

At 1:15 p.m., Jesse, the young man I had hired to mow the lawn, sent me a photo of the front yard. The grass looked clean and even.

Looks good so far, he wrote. Starting the backyard now.

I sent back a thumbs-up and returned to cleaning out my garage. I was sorting old tools and moving boxes, doing the kind of work that keeps your hands busy while your mind wanders.

About forty-five minutes later, my phone rang.

Jesse’s voice was different this time—lower, careful, uncertain.

“Mr. Whitmore?”

“Everything okay?”

“I’m not sure.”

I set down the rake in my hand.

“What happened?”

“I keep hearing someone crying.”

My chest tightened.

“Where?”

“Inside your daughter’s house.”

For a second, I did not answer.

“That can’t be right.”

“I thought it was coming from another yard,” he said quickly, like he was embarrassed. “But whenever I turn off the mower, it sounds like it’s coming from inside.”

Then I heard the mower stop in the background.

Continue reading

You may also like...