every night, before bed, a simple ritual: he walks to the foyer and drags the deacon's bench to the door to keep intruders at bay
has been this way, since the day he read "In Cold Blood" and realized what uninvited guests can do under a god's watchful eye
the belly of the bench holds every bible he has ever owned in his four score years save the one by his bedside, where it sits as sentinel against other imagined foes and woes
though he is long deaf, those who would defile him can yet hear, and the righteous moan of the bench on the hardwood would give them pause
or so the old man believes; as if a simple sound could be so profound to tip cosmic scales in his favor, save him from the tyranny of evil men
this very night, before bed he takes the same walk, shoves the same weighted wood against a locked door, a simple ritual