The power went out at exactly 2:17 a.m., and the silence that followed felt physical—like the whole neighborhood had inhaled and forgotten how to exhale. One second my furnace was cycling normally, the house humming with that steady suburban background noise you don’t notice until it vanishes. The next, the bedroom lights blinked twice and died.
The refrigerator stopped mid-whir. Even the faint buzz of the streetlamp outside my window disappeared, leaving only the sound of wind dragging snow across the siding like fingernails on a chalkboard, relentless and cruel. I lay in bed for maybe ten seconds, listening to that wind, feeling the house already starting to lose heat through the windows despite the storm glass and expensive insulation the HOA-approved contractor had installed three years ago.
Then I threw off the covers and moved. Outside, Minnesota was doing what Minnesota does best when it decides to remind you who’s actually in charge. The storm had been building all week, every forecast growing more dramatic, every meteorologist more apologetic about the numbers they were reporting.
Meadowbrook Heights is the kind of suburban development where people file formal complaints about the incorrect shade of beige on someone’s exterior trim, but even the HOA email blasts had taken on an unusually nervous tone over the past forty-eight hours: secure patio furniture, stock emergency supplies, avoid unnecessary travel, check on elderly neighbors. The temperature outside read minus twelve degrees Fahrenheit and dropping steadily. Wind chill was already pushing minus thirty-five, the kind of cold that stops being an inconvenience and starts being a legitimate threat to human life.
My first thought wasn’t about my own pipes or my pantry or the extra blankets stacked in the hall closet. It was about Mrs. Patterson next door.
She was seventy-eight years old, lived alone since her husband Gerald died from a heart attack last spring, and had the stubborn Midwestern pride of someone who’d raised four kids in an era when you didn’t ask for help unless you were actively bleeding. I’d heard her stories about the winters she’d survived in this same neighborhood back in the seventies and eighties, but those winters were different in ways that mattered. Back then, communities were warmer even when the temperatures weren’t.
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