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I was equally startled, and for a moment we both stayed where we were, catching our collective breath. Then I said, “Bejesus? ”

He gave me a flat look. “You startled me.”

“Sorry, I didn’t mean to. I just needed to escape for a little while.” I stood up, stepping out onto the snowy ground, and waved my hand at the stairs. “It’s all yours.”

He nodded at the flashlight, still in my hand. “I actually just came for that. We’re about to bond and need some illumination.”

“What?”

Before he could answer, I heard a scraping noise from the garage behind him. The Volvo was parked outside, and looking in, I saw Mr. Wade, moving some metal bookshelves that lined one wall.

“Garage cleanup,” he explained as his dad picked up a cardboard box. “It’s a chore and a father-son activity, all rolled into one.”

“Sounds like fun.”

“Oh, it is. You have no idea.”

“Dave?” Mr. Wade said, peering out at us. “How’s that light coming?”

“Got it. Be right there,” he replied. His dad nodded, waving at me, and I waved back, watching as he carried the box out of the garage, placing it beneath the basketball goal, then doubled back. Dave said, “To my dad, heaven is a big mess and an endless supply of Rubbermaid bins.”

I smiled, then looked up at the building in front of us. “Hey, did you ever go in here? You know, beyond the cellar?”

“A couple of times, when I was a kid,” he replied. “Before they boarded up the windows.”

“Is it a house?”

“If it was, it was a big one. It’s huge inside. Why?”

I shrugged. “Just wondered. It seems so out of place here, with everything else grown up around it.”

“Yeah? ” He looked back at the building. “Never really thought about it like that. It’s been here for as long as I can remember, though. I guess I’m just used to it.”

We started walking across the yard, toward our driveways, where Mr. Wade had piled a few more boxes under the basketball goal, along with several Rubbermaid plastic bins. “See?” Dave said. “Welcome to paradise.”

I scanned the boxes. Some were open, some taped shut, and hardly any were labeled. “What is all this stuff anyway?”

“You name it.” He clicked the flashlight on, moving it across them. “Old chemistry-set parts, rat cages—”

“Rat cages?”

“My mother is allergic to all dander,” he explained. “Except rat.”

“Ah.”

“And then, of course, my model trains.” He leaned over, lifting the flaps on a box and pulling out something. When he held it out to me, I saw it was a toy soldier, small and green, holding a gun. Bang.

“Wow,” I said. “How much of this stuff do you have?”

“More than you would believe. If you and your dad are minimalists, then we’re . . . maximumalists. Or something.” I looked at the soldier again. “We don’t throw much away. You never know what you might need.”

“That’s what stores are for.”

“Says the girl with no thyme,” he replied. There was a loud scraping noise from the garage, and we both looked over to see Mr. Wade, red-faced, his skinny arms straining as he tried to push the shelves out from the wall. “I think I’m being paged.”

“Right,” I said. “Have fun.”

“You know it,” he said, then walked over to the garage, sliding the flashlight into his back pocket, taking his place on the other side of the shelves.