By the time the leaves began to fall, the roof of Mrs. Gable’s house bristled with stakes, each one sharpened to a precise angle, standing tall like an eerie warning. The villagers were unsettled, whispering that the old woman had finally lost her mind. After her husband’s passing the year before, she had withdrawn from the community. Now, this strange structure above her home had them convinced she was either preparing for something ominous or perhaps even had gone mad. The murmurs grew louder, speculating wildly—some believed it was a defense against dark forces, others thought it was an eccentric renovation, and the boldest whispered she had started a cult.
Days passed, and the neighbors, unable to contain their curiosity, began asking her directly. “Why are you doing this?” one brave soul finally asked. “What’s it for?” Mrs. Gable calmly replied, “This is my protection.” When pressed, she only added, “Protection from what’s coming.” The cryptic words left them more puzzled than before. They couldn’t understand the method behind the madness they saw. She was an elderly widow now living in isolation, and the roof, with its stark appearance, seemed like an overreaction.
Winter arrived soon after, and the storm that came was more violent than anyone had predicted. The wind howled through the village, bending trees and tearing roofs off houses. By morning, the damage was clear: entire roofs had been ripped apart, fences were down, and debris littered the yards. But Mrs. Gable’s home stood untouched. Her roof, lined with the sharp stakes, had absorbed the full force of the wind. Not a single plank had moved. Her method had worked—the stakes redirected the wind’s power, shielding her home from destruction. The villagers were stunned, realizing the woman had known something they hadn’t.
As the villagers started to recover from the storm, the truth about the stakes began to emerge. The storm defense technique Mrs. Gable had used was an ancient one, known to her late husband, Thomas. He had been a retired engineer who had studied the region’s wind patterns for decades. Before his death, he had told Martha about the risks posed by the valley’s changing geography—how the clearing of the North Forest would allow for a new kind of wind to tear through the village. With her husband’s guidance, she had crafted the design, carefully choosing the wood and sharpening the stakes. It was his final act of love, and she had 