went to work.
6
It was nearly 2 A.M. by the time Ben pulled the Honda back into his driveway and set the parking brake. The rain had tapered to a thin drizzle, and the town seemed to have finally resigned itself to sleep. The interior lights of most of the houses Ben passed on the way home had been extinguished, and a fitful state of quietude had settled upon the neighborhood like a fine layer of fresh snow. Benâs own house sat mostly in darkness, except for the exterior motion-sensor light near the front door, which snapped dutifully on as he approached the dwelling. He turned his key in the door lock, hearing the reassuring click of the dead bolt sliding back within its housing. Placing his hand upon the cold brass knob to which the eveningâs precipitation still clung, he opened the door and stepped inside.
The front foyer sat mostly in shadows, and he snapped on a small lamp that rested atop a wooden cabinet to his right. The Stevensonsâ massive harlequin Great Dane, Alex (âAlexander the Great,â as Joel lovingly referred to him with reverent, exaggerated bows), ever present at the front door to greet new arrivals, nuzzled Benâs hand for affection, tail whipping ardently back and forth. True to his typical style, Alex stepped heavily and obliviously onto Benâs left foot as the dog leaned into him, and Ben was forced backward against the front door. At 180 pounds, the domesticated Goliath didnât find it necessary to wait to be pettedâhe simply stood next to the closest person and leaned. The affection lavished upon him was merely an act of self-defense.
Ben ruffled the side of the big dogâs head as Alex buried his face in Benâs leg. Ben placed his keys on the wall rack and took off his coat, listening to the subtle sounds of the house. The kitchen refrigerator hummed softly, warm air blew steadily from the wall vent to his left, and the grandfather clock in the living room down the hall ticked quietly to itself, keeping its own perpetual rhythm. But it was more than these simple, mechanical sounds that he heard. On a deeper level, the house seemed to breathe of its own accord, shifting slightly as it continued to settle, growing more comfortable and more secure upon the foundation on which it rested. Both practically and figuratively, it held within it the very core of the family that lived here, providing warmth, refuge, and an irrefutable sense of home. In doing so, it seemed infinitely stronger than the material from which it had been constructed. No matter what transpired during the course of the day, coming home to this place filled him with gladness, and helped to put the dayâs events in better context. Alexander the Great wagged his tail contentedly from side to side in complete agreement.
Ben trod quietly down the hall and across the living room, Alex padding not so softly behind him. He crossed the family room and ascended the stairs. At the top of the staircase he paused for a moment, then turned right and walked down the short hallway leading to the bedrooms of his two sons. He stood outside their rooms in the darkness for the span of about thirty seconds, simply listening, needing to be close to them for a moment. Then he turned and headed back down the hallway in the opposite direction toward the bedroom he shared with Susan. Having successfully escorted his owner to the appropriate sleeping quarters, Alex turned and descended the stairs to his own bed beside the living roomâs front-facing bay window. Ben pushed open the bedroom door and entered quietly, trying not to wake his wife.
For Susan, sleep was often restless and difficult to initiate. Sheâd suffered from some degree of insomnia for as long as Ben had known her, and had experimented with a multitude of unsuccessful remedies throughout those years. Contrary to the experience of many women, however, sheâd managed to sleep well during both of her pregnancies. Even during her