The Cord Between Us

I noticed the extension lead first as a thin black line snaking from Ron’s garage into the outdoor socket at the back of my house.

At first I thought it had to be a mistake, until I traced it properly and realized it was running electricity straight from my supply into his property.

I went next door furious, ready for confrontation, and told him he couldn’t just take my electricity like that, not even “for a few pennies.”

Ron barely reacted the way I expected—he actually laughed, as if I was making a fuss over something too small to matter.

That laugh irritated me more than the cable itself, so I cut the conversation short and went home determined to stop it immediately.

I installed a lockable cover over the socket that same evening, feeling justified as I tightened the final screw into place.

But the next morning, I found a folded note pushed through my letterbox with a single line written in uneven handwriting.

“You’re colder than your electricity, mate.”

I stood there reading it twice, unsure whether to feel angry, confused, or strangely unsettled by how personal it sounded.

Ron had lived next door for years, mostly quiet, mostly kept to himself, a man who repaired old radios and broken tools in his garage.

Since his wife Maureen died, the house had felt different—quieter, more closed off, like something in him had switched off along with her.

We used to talk more often than we did now, small chats over the fence that gradually faded into polite nods and silence.

I told myself I was only protecting what was mine, but the note lingered in my mind longer than I wanted to admit.

That evening, I noticed something unusual: Ron’s garage was completely dark, not a single light or sound coming from inside.

Something about it made me hesitate, and for the first time since the argument, I felt less certain I was right.

I walked over, knocked, and when there was no answer, I pushed the door open and stepped inside anyway.

Ron was on the floor, collapsed beside an old chair, his breathing shallow and uneven in the dimness of the unlit garage.

I called an ambulance immediately, my earlier anger dissolving into something heavier as I realized how serious this actually was.

Later, I learned his electricity had been cut off weeks earlier, and he had been surviving however he could without telling anyone.

The extension lead hadn’t been theft at all—it had been his way of keeping a few basic things running while he quietly struggled.

And standing there in the empty garage, I understood I had been protecting a socket while ignoring a man who needed help.

THE STORY CONTINUES ON THE NEXT PAGE… 👇👇👇


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