Summer's Sinking Breath
By Eva Suluk
The oppressive heat of a late summer afternoon draped itself over Blackwood Grange like a shroud. Ivy, thick and ravenous, throttled the ancient stone, its tendrils reaching into fractured window panes, drawing shadows across rooms that had known little light for decades. A silence, heavy and humid, clung to the air, broken only by the distant, lethargic hum of unseen insects and the occasional, mournful creak of settling timber. Jeff's arrival was not heralded by fanfare, merely the crunch of his tyres on the loose gravel drive, a sound absorbed almost entirely by the suffocating density of the overgrown grounds.