Its symmetry from the front appealed to her. The house was a
 
 rectangular, three-story building. The porch had once wrapped
 
 neatly around the front. The windows were evenly spaced,
 
 four big ones on the lower story, five on the upper, and a peak
 
 at the top, rising out of the roofline with three tiny panes. The
 
 turret was the only thing not symmetrical about the monolith
 
 of a building. It stood proudly in strange and utter defiance of
 
 any architectural rhyme or reason.
 
 One look at the house, which she’d found on a website of an
 
 elderly woman with a passion project for older architecture
 
 that needed to be restored, and she knew it was hers.
 
 Over the past six months, it had become her home away
 
 from the home she’d never really had. She’d started slowly to
 
 put it back together, documenting every step of the way. She’d
 
 doubled her social media following, and the videos she
 
 uploaded were getting more and more views every single
 
 week, which brought in its own revenue stream. Since she
 
 didn’t need the money, Adalynn had said she would take the
 
 profits at the end of it all and donate them to a worthy cause
 
 .
 
 She hadn’t found one yet, but she would.
 
 The interior of the house had been moderately better cared
 
 for. It was three thousand and some odd square feet of ancient
 
 doors, mantles, fireplaces, ornate woodworking, solid
 
 banisters, and craftsmanship that wouldn’t be found in the
 
 modern century because the art had been nearly lost and it had
 
 become unaffordable for things to be worked and produced by
 
 hand.
 
 As she did at seven every night, Adalynn sat down at her
 
 farmhouse kitchen table. She’d furnished the house sparsely,