The real trouble began when she decided to clear the blockage from the bottom. She crouched by the splash block, unscrewed the first joint of the pipe, and peered into the darkness. A single, fat woodlouse scuttled out. She pushed her phone camera into the gap and took a picture.
Eleanor laughed, a sharp, hollow sound. It was a prank. Some neighbourhood kid. But the paper was old. The ink had the sepia tinge of time. She turned the page. downpipe blocked
Eleanor closed the book. Her kitchen was silent. The kettle was off. The fridge wasn’t humming. Then she heard it—a single, soft drip from the sink. She hadn't turned on the tap. She walked over. The faucet was dry. The drip came again. And then, from the plughole, a tiny, perfectly formed leaf, copper-brown and sodden, unfurled itself like a tongue and lay glistening on the stainless steel. The real trouble began when she decided to
Eleanor had inherited 17 Maple Drive from her Aunt Margaret, a woman who had treated her bungalow like a ship’s captain treats a vessel. Every tile, every gutter, every whisper of the drainpipes had been accounted for. Eleanor, a graphic designer who preferred the clean logic of a screen to the messy physics of the real world, had let things slide. The autumn had been a spectacular riot of colour, and the giant sycamore tree in the front yard had surrendered every single one of its copper-coloured leaves directly onto the roof. She pushed her phone camera into the gap and took a picture
She fetched a ladder, a trowel, and a bucket. The first scoop of sludge came out with a wet schlorp —a black, gritty paste that smelled of ancient rainwater and rot. She worked methodically, pulling out fistfuls of the muck. But after clearing the gutter, the downpipe remained a mute, stubborn plug. She poked a garden cane down the top. It went about two feet and stopped. Solid.
The image on her screen made her sit back on her heels. It wasn't leaves. It wasn’t a tennis ball. Wedged in the bend of the pipe, glistening with slime, was a small, leather-bound notebook.