“Tessa, explain to me why we’ve come back to the house? It’s 8:30 at night?”
Tessa closed the door behind them and turned on the light in the living room. “I know, Arturo. We’re starting on the most invasive part of the reno tomorrow and I want to introduce you to the house first.”
“You want to, what?”
“Trust me, Arturo.”
“I do boss, but…” A door slammed upstairs. Arturo jumped. “What was that?”
Tessa smiled. “That’s the house letting us know it’s listening.”
“Uh huh…” Arturo looked around, eyes wide.
Tessa took a few steps into the middle of the empty living room, work boots sounding on the wooden floor. “It’s just me,” she addressed the house, looking around as she spoke. “I came back tonight because we need to have a talk. There’s some major work that’s starting tomorrow and I want you to know what we’re going to do and what we’re not going to do.”
The house creaked audibly.
“This is some weird shit, boss…”
“First,” Tessa ignored him and continued addressing the house, “I want to go over what we have done.” She looked down at the rich grain of the floor. “We cleared out all the laminate flooring and the shitty MDF that was coving your gorgeous floors.” She walked to a wall and ran her hand along the warm plaster. “We pulled the MDF off your walls, exposing your plaster walls so you can breathe.”
Footsteps sounded overhead.
“All of this is to say, I’m here to help you. But the next step is… well, it’s a lot. I’m not going to lie.” Tessa took a deep breath and then just said it: “We need to cut into your walls and replace all your wiring and plumbing.”
A bang sounded somewhere and everywhere in the house and the lights all went out. More than the loss of light, though, a psychic weight seemed to descend on them. She heard Arturo’s quick steps towards the door.
Before he could get there in the dark, she had her flashlight out and shone it on him. “Arturo, don’t freak out on me, okay?”
“Boss, we’re way past freaking out,” he said, fear evident in his voice.
“We’re good,” Tessa said with as comforting a tone as she could. Then, to the house, her voice stern, she started, “Now, you need to stop that. I came here to talk to you and I don’t need you throwing a tantrum.”
A long, heavy silence passed. And then the lights came back on, but the heaviness remained.
“Thank you,” Tessa said. Then, continuing in her stern tone, “You’ve seen the work and care me and my team have put in here. Tomorrow’s work is going to be a lot, but I brought Arturo here because he’s the best plasterer in the state.” She gestured for Arturo to join her in the middle of the living room.
“H-Hi, house,” he said haltingly.
“We’ve taken to calling it ‘Rutherford’,” Tessa offered.
“Hi, Rutherford,” Arturo said. “I’ve, uh, worked with Tessa on a lot of jobs and she’s the real deal. And, uh, I am too. I don’t know if you remember, but earlier today I was looking at your walls. We sourced soil and sand out behind the garage and mixed it up and it matches perfectly. So, yeah, Tessa’s got a lot to do and it’s going to be a lot, but she’s super qualified. And I promise you I’ll put your walls back better than they are now.” His fear gone by now, He moved to a wall and traced his fingers down a line of holes. “We’re going to repair all the damage from when they covered these up.” He smiled and nodded. “You’re in the best hands you could hope for.”
“Thanks, Arturo.” Then, to the house, “He’s right. You managed to scare more than a few contractors off and we lucked out that they called me back. But it would only be a matter of time before they either found some butcher to just go in without any care for your bones or, worse, they just knock it down to a single wall and replace you with a McMansion.” Every door in the house started opening and closing loudly. Tessa held up a hand and the house quieted. “That isn’t going to happen,” she said with certainty. “But you have to trust me.”
The next morning, the house was quiet. Dust sheets hung like ghosts from the ceiling joists and heavy plastic covered the newly exposed hardwood floors. Lines of blue painter’s tape marked the paths for the new wiring.
“We start here,” Tessa said, resting her hand flat against the plaster by the staircase. “Old knob-and-tube. We’ll open it slow.”
Arturo pressed the edge of his plaster saw against the wall. The blade’s first pull made a soft rasping sound, more whisper than cut.
The house answered with a groan deep in its ribs.
“Easy,” Tessa murmured. “Let her know why.”
Arturo kept going, careful, respectful. Chips of plaster drifted down, revealing the thin wooden lath beneath. The smell of chalk and iron earth filled the air.
“See that?” Arturo said, brushing dust from the exposed section. “She’s got good bones. They mixed her plaster from this soil. You can see the red from the clay.”
Tessa nodded. “Then let’s make her whole again.”
The house shuddered once more, then stilled – a sigh, almost approval – as the morning light poured across the open wall.
Six weeks later, the house had settled into its new rhythm. When Tessa met Matheson on the porch, sunlight pooled across the freshly restored steps. “Mr. Matheson,” she greeted him with a smile. “Good to see you.”
Matheson’s face looked pinched. “Nice to see you, Ms. Calder. I hope you have good news for me. My investors are extremely nervous with how long this renovation has taken already.”
“Mr. Matheson, I told you I was going to do this right. I think you’ll be pleased with where we’re at.” She turned and headed up the steps to the porch.
“I hope so,” he said. Then, looking at the door, “This… this is a different door.”
“Perceptive,” Tessa smiled. “We talked about this that first day, remember? Henrick, my go-to restoration carpenter took care of this one first,” she traced her finger along the detailed woodwork of the inset. “He does amazing work – he’s finishing up the back door right now.” As if on cue the whirr of a sander started up in the detached garage.
Matheson inspected the door carefully. “It really is nice work,” he said somewhat begrudgingly.
Tessa opened the door and led him into the living room, the walls now completely repaired.
“You changed the color!” Matheson exclaimed. “We didn’t talk about that!”
Tessa laughed. “I didn’t. This is the same color plaster as when I showed you when we first exposed it.”
Matheson moved to a wall and ran his hand along the plaster. “How can that be? It was that dull gray. This… this positively glows. The room feels positively… alive.”
Tessa chuckled to herself. “It does. A lot of the credit goes to my plasterer, Arturo. He’s the best and he matched the original plaster absolutely perfectly. Seriously, I’ve never seen better work.”
Matheson continued moving around the room, examining the walls, the floors, the wavy glass windows.
“Final inspections were last week,” Tessa said. “Plumbing and electrical both passed with compliments.”
“I saw the reports.”
“HVAC signed off Monday, and Jacobs from County Building gave us final approval yesterday.”
“This… this feels like a different house,” Matheson said staring around.
“Well, in many ways it is. We undid a lot of damage and trauma that happened over the last, I don’t know, sixty years. Structurally, it’s in way better shape, and psychically she’s much, much happier.”
Matheson gave her a quirked eyebrow. “I’m not going to get into your methods, but there’s no arguing the results…”
“Oh,” Tessa said. “The basement door…” she started through the house to the door.
“Oh, darn, I forgot all about that. We never found the key, and haven’t had a chance to get a locksmith out here. I can have my folks call the people we use…”
One hand on the knob, Tessa looked back at him quizzically. Then, she turned the knob and opened the door to the basement easily.
Matheson gaped. “That… we haven’t been able to get into that door. It’s been locked solid. The last contractor was going to break down the door, but they got scared off before they did… but… No, how did you do that?”
Tessa smiled. “The house trusts us,” she said.
Matheson rolled his eyes and followed her down into the basement. Despite the few window wells, the basement felt much lighter and airier than Matheson expected.
“This is the new Air-Handler for the heat pump – you can see how we rout into the old furnace ducts and the refrigerant lines to the outdoor unit. And the tankless water heater replaced the ancient unit here…” she showed him the finer points of the new electrical panel they put in, pointing out the joints and inspection tabs. Finally, she led him to a dark section of the basement. “Over here,” she started to pull back a dusty sheet, “we found some of the original built-ins from upstairs. At least the folks who tore them out had the courtesy to put them all down here.” She pulled back the sheet. Dust motes whirled in the air, catching the light from the window well. “See?” she said softly. “She kept them safe all these years. That’s really our last major step. We have the original dining room buffet, there’s bookcase dividers with Inglenook benches, and even the original cabinet doors from the kitchen. Henrick has looked it all over and is going to give it all a nice refresh before we get it installed.”
“Uh, well, we’ll have to check with the investors to see if that’s the look they want to go for,” Matheson said matter-of-factly.
The door at the top of the stairs slammed shut and the light from outside seemed to dim a little. Matheson flinched and visibly paled.
“Sorry, Mr. Matheson, that’s non-negotiable. It’s part of me doing this restoration my way.” She gestured to the covered pieces, “This is part of putting the house back together. Believe me, your investors will want a happy house.”
Matheson eyed the closed door and clearly wondered whether the stubborn lock would reengage trapping them down here.
Seeing his unease, Tessa smiled. “Don’t worry, Mr. Matheson. As I said, these are going back in place and the house will be happy. We’re not trapped.”
The door above them creaked open again, slow and deliberate. Tessa looked up, smiling. “See? She agrees.”
Final walkthrough occurred two weeks later.
The air inside the Rutherford house was lighter now, warmer. Sunlight through the leaded windows painted soft gold on the restored floors. The buffet and bookcase dividers were back in place, their oak gleaming like honey. Even Matheson had to admit it looked perfect – maybe too perfect. Tessa felt it the moment she crossed the threshold: the stillness wasn’t absence. It was contentment, the kind that comes when something broken has been made whole again.
Matheson’s face bore the genuine grin he had from the moment he stepped onto the porch. Tessa knew it was more dollar-sign inspired than true appreciation, but given how far they’d come from the contentious first meeting, she’d take it.
“Ms. Calder, this is spectacular work. You were absolutely correct on everything. My investors will be exceptionally happy. I’m sure we’ll have new owners for this gorgeous place in short order.”
“Thank you, Mr. Matheson. About that,” she sighed. “I wanted to see if I could put in an offer on the house. As you can imagine,” she said smiling as she ran a hand along the rich wood mantle, “we’ve become pretty close over the time working here.”
Matheson’s face fell. “I’m… I’m so sorry, Ms. Calder. We already have several solid offers lined up. We were waiting on final walkthrough before showing them, but at this point it’s practically a fait accompli.”
Tessa’s heart sank and she sighed heavily. She pasted on her best consolation smile and said, “Well, I’m sure whoever is lucky enough to purchase her will be more than thrilled.”
“Oh, I have no doubt,” Matheson said, the grin returning.
Tessa made polite conversation and left as quickly as she could. She patted the newel post at the foot of the porch stairs. “Be good,” she said, swallowing tears, her heart a little broken, if she was honest with herself.
A month later she was finishing up on another job across town when her phone rang. She saw the caller ID show Matheson’s name and number.
“Mr. Matheson? I didn’t expect to hear from you again. Do you have another property that needs my special brand of house whispering?” She smiled as she spoke, even if her heart still ached.
“Uh… no,” he said, his tone serious. “It’s about the Rutherford house.”
Tessa’s blood ran cold. “What’s happened? Is she okay?”
“Oh,” he said, surprised at her visceral reaction. “It’s fine. Well, it’s not fine… The house is there, your work was impeccable. But… we’ve had some issues with the buyers.”
“Oh? That’s too bad,” Tessa lied. “But it sounded like you had several lined up, right?”
“Uh… yes, well, that’s the thing… they all fell through.”
“I’m sorry, what?” Tessa shook her head. “You said… what was the term, it was a fait accompli?”
“Yes… it seemed the house had different ideas…”
Tessa raised an eyebrow at hearing Matheson talking about the house as if were more than a building. “Oh really?”
“Yes,” he took a deep breath and then let out a litany of problems with the showings: “Doors wouldn’t unlock, lights wouldn’t come on, doors slammed unexplainably. Footsteps overhead when the only people were downstairs. And then…” he paused.
“And then?” Tessa encouraged.
“Tessa,” her ears perked up as he used her first name for the first time that she could remember. “The walls literally dripped blood.”
Tessa let a cackle of laughter out before she could stifle it. Then professional concern reasserted itself, “Did it stain the plaster?”
“No, that’s the thing – as soon as the would-be buyers left the blood disappeared like it was never there. But I saw it. I touched it. It was blood.”
“Oh wow…”
“The basement flooded on a perfectly dry day. Two feet of water – only it was bone dry again later that same day. No sign of water when the plumber showed up. Neighbors saying lights are coming on at night when there’s no one there…”
“Our electrical work was flawless,” Tessa got defensive.
“Yes,” he agreed. “We brought in our own electrician who said it was some of the best work he’d seen. Yet the lights kept coming on without explanation.”
Tessa sighed and tried her best to suppress her grin coming through in her voice. “Sounds like the house isn’t happy.”
“No shit,” Matheson cursed. Tessa’s eyes went wide at his outburst. “All of this is to say that our investors are extremely agitated. They want to get rid of this property as quickly and quietly as they can. To that end, if you are still interested in putting in an offer I can assure you that any reasonable offer would be happily accepted.”
Tessa let her tears of joy run down her cheeks unchecked. “I’ll have an offer for you in the morning.”
In the end, Tessa’s offer was less than they had expected, but she knew she had them over a figurative barrel and her offer was fair – just not the windfall they had hoped for.
Two weeks later, Tessa smiled as she climbed out of her F-150 in front of the Rutherford house – her house – just as the sun dipped behind the neighbor’s elms. The leaded glass glowed faintly with reflected firelight from the setting sun. When she opened the gate, the porch light flicked on before she could reach the switch.
“Miss me?” she murmured.
The front door eased open by itself with a slow, contented sigh.