Downpipe Blocked //top\\ Site
“Right,” she muttered, channeling her aunt’s can-do spirit. “Easy.”
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. downpipe blocked
She looked out the window at the downpipe. It was no longer silent. It was humming a low, gurgling song. And she understood, with a cold, certain horror, that she hadn't unblocked the pipe. She had opened a door. Eleanor, a graphic designer who preferred the clean
The first time the gurgle started, Eleanor ignored it. It was a low, wet cough from the downpipe outside her kitchen window, easily dismissed as the old house settling after a spring shower. By the third week of November, the cough had become a death rattle, and then, a silence so complete it was more ominous than any noise. It was no longer silent