His bed jolted at precisely seven-o-five, like it had been nudged, and the unmistakable whine of a drill gnawed into the wall by his pillow. First it rattled in short bursts, then let out an angry, drawn-out wail.
Edward Collins sat bolt upright, his pillow toppling to the floor. His heart plummeted to his stomach and thumped there unevenly. He clung to the edge of the mattress until the drill faded to a background buzz. In the corner, the old radio clock flickered: 7:06.
What sort of people start with all this racket so early? he muttered as he fumbled for his slippers. The left one had vanished under the armchair, so he shuffled into the kitchen with one bare foot scraping the lino. He turned on the tap, filled a glass, and gulped twice. The water was warm and stale from the night, but it eased the tightness in his chest a bit.
The drilling stopped. Edward managed to relax his shoulders, only to be assailed by thudssomeone was hammering or perhaps smashing up tiles. Laughter exploded, and then a shout:
Chris, hold it straight!
The voices were young, male, probably the lads from flat 205 whod moved in a month ago. Hed seen them once or twice: two skinny blokes in sports jackets, lugging boxes and rolls of something under their arms. On the stairs, one had politely said,
Hello, Grandpa.
Edward had mumbled a noncommittal reply, unsettled by the Grandpa. Later he tried remembering when someone last called him by name, rather than treating him as part of the furniture in the block.
He had been retired for two years. Thirty years as a design engineer at the planthe still missed the blueprints, the hush, the sense that ideas were clearest when only the hum of the lamps and the swish of paper surrounded you. After the plant closed, he did odds and ends, and lately hed been drawing diagrams for a small firm from his desk by the window. He had loved his flat on the ninth floor for its quietbehind it lay a pocket garden, a bench, and a pair of poplar trees. The motorways distant noise was just a soft, steady hush, perfectly bearable.
But the last month had unravelled everything. First, in flat 203, new windows went indays of sawing and pneumatic hammering. Then flat 201 had a bathroom refit, leaving the hallway dusty enough to make you want to scrub your nostrils. Now it was 205s turn. He sometimes joked the drills were passing the baton down the plumbing stack.
He tried to endure, convincing himself that the renovations would end eventually. He turned the radio up in the kitchen, attempted to read the news on his tablet. But the drilling faded then flared again, and a dull ache grew behind his temples. His blood pressure soared, and he started needing his tablets more often. Night brought its own disturbances; young people above started their evening with laughter, music and deep bass vibrations that waltzed through the walls like drums.
One night he couldnt bear it anymore. It was nearly eleven and the downstairs banging made the display cabinets glass wobble. Edward got up, pulled on battered lounge trousers, slipped bare feet into his trainers, and headed for the door.
He slid the chain aside, opened up, and stepped onto the landing. The walls vibrated. Letter boxes rattled. Behind the door of 205 was the high-pitched whine of an angle grinder.
Edward clenched his fist and banged hard on the door three times.
Silence. Moments later, the door cracked open. A lad appeared in a grey shirt, tousled, safety glasses perched on his head, chest streaked white with filler.
Whats up? he said, then quickly corrected himself: Sorry, good evening. Is there a problem?
There is, Edward exhaled. Look at the time. Its the middle of the night.
He realised his voice trembled, which only made him angrier.
Right, yeah, the lad glanced over his shoulder. Were wrapping up nowreally. We only have today until
Until morning? Edward snapped. Do you not care that our walls shake? That there are elderly and ill people here? Ive got a doctors appointment in the morning and I cant sleep.
His own words sounded strange, shrill, like those squabblers on television. The lad wilted in the doorway, as if Edward had smacked him rather than just raised his voice.
Alright, alright, he muttered. Wont happen again. Sorry.
The door closed softly. The house remained quiet. Upstairs, the lift banged shut.
Edward lingered for a moment, feeling the lump in his chest dissipate. Passing flat 203, he glanced at the spyholenobody there, yet it felt like someone was watching. Returning to his flat, his reflection in the hallway mirror seemed more tired and aged than ever.
Shouting at young lads… Well done, hero, he thought, mocking himself.
That night, he struggled to sleepnot from noise this time, but shame. He remembered, years ago, when neighbours chopped firewood all night in the shared house, and hed sworn never to be the kind who thumped the ceiling with a broom.
He was woken next morning not by the drill but by the doorbell. It was ten to nine. He threw on his shirt and shuffled down the hall. Through the peephole: yesterdays lad, now in a clean t-shirt, clutching a bag.
Hello, said the lad when Edward opened up. About last nightwe honestly lost track of time. For you. Some chocolate. Also… if were ever noisy again, let us know. Were fine to arrange something.
Inside the bag: a bar of dark chocolate and a box of tea bags. Edward was embarrassed, mumbled thank you, nodded. They shuffled awkwardly, then parted ways.
It was quiet till the evening but the unease wouldnt shift. It felt like hed won a skirmish but lost something deeper. Any thought of knocking again made his chest ache.
The drill resumed the next day, but at least started from ten rather than seven, and lasted nearly till nine in the evening. Upstairs, the young ones began their music in the pausesbass lines that kept Edward awake. Hed never dared complain to them, just wore earplugs, but the low rumble seeped through.
By weeks end, he found himself waking an hour before the alarm, listening to silence like a minefield. Every sound felt like the gateway to another pandemonium. His pills ran out, so he fetched a new strip from the chemist.
On the way back, he stopped at the residents office, where Mrs. Watson, the building manager, sat behind piles of papers, her glasses dangling on a chain.
Hows the health, Edward? she asked.
Noisy, he said. Renovation after renovation. Is all this drilling even legal?
She sighed. Law says they can do refurbishments from nine to one and three to seven on weekdays, shorter hours weekends. All we can do is remind folks, maybe pin a notice on the board. Shall I draft an announcement?
He grimaced. Notices in their building had hung for years: Dont leave bikes, Take your rubbish out, No smoking. People read them, sighed, then ignored.
No need, thanks, he replied, then asked, Is our buildings floor rep still around?
Mrs. Parker? Oh yes, she keeps everyone in line, said Mrs. Watson, with respect. She even runs our group chat.
Group chat. Edwards old phone had no such thing but his granddaughter gave him a smartphone last year and set it all up. The messenger app was there; hed only ever used it to send her smiley faces.
At home, he hauled out her cheat-sheet of passwords, searched for Building 14, Entrance 3. The chat appeared: forty members, cat photos, reports of the broken lift, complaints about the cleaners.
He sat a long time before typing. His fingers struggled across the screen. At first, he wanted to write: Dear neighbours, please stop the endless noise, but deleted it. He settled on something softer:
Good afternoon. Edward Collins in #97 here. Theres lots of renovations and loud music lately. Im not sleeping well, my blood pressures bad. Could we arrange agreed hours for noisy work?
He sent it, accidentally mistyping one letter.
Reply came before he looked away.
Hello, Edward Collins, Mrs. Parker here, floor rep. Youre right. Lets talk.
Other posts followed. Someone moaned about the drill in 205, others defended the renovatorsthey need to live too. A young mum in 209 wrote, My baby naps midday. If the drills on, he wakes screaming. Lets get clear times.
Reading all this, Edward felt a strange reliefturns out the racket bothered more than just him. But he couldnt bring himself to make sharp demands. Instead, he offered:
Law says noise allowed 913 and 1519, not at night. Should we set that as our rule, and warn here if someones planning hammering?
For two hours, the chat buzzed. Mrs. Parker suggested a resident meeting. The young man from 205 joined: Its Chris from 205. Were renovating. Happy to stick to a schedule. Lets discuss.
Mrs. Parker rang Edward that evening herself, her voice brisk.
Edward, dont bicker on chatlets talk face-to-face. Tomorrow at seven, meet me at your entrance. Well go together to see those… musicians upstairs and the workmen in 205. Agreed?
Edward put down the phone, surprised at how quickly words became action. He was nervous, but felt retreat wasnt an option.
He rehearsed his speech all night, planning how hed say that hed once played his records loud too, but his heart wasnt young anymore and he needed consideration. Practice speeches always broke into fragments.
Next day, he tidied the hall, dusted the shelf, moved his coat to a different peg for no reason. By five to seven, he waited by the door, listening to the block. The lift clanged, and Mrs. Parker, sturdy in a pale mac, appeared carrying a folder.
Right then, lets do this, she said cheerfully.
They rode up to the tenth, to the musicians, as Mrs. Parker called them. A young couple rented the flat; Edward recognized their voices from the laughter and music but had only glimpsed them in passing. Live, they were a pale blonde woman and a man with glasses.
Hello, Mrs. Parker began when the door opened. No need to worry; were not here to shout.
The man tensed, the woman gripped her towel tighter.
Its about your speakers at night, Mrs. Parker explained. Theres pensioners and children here. Weve devised a plan. From her folder appeared a table: days, hours when noise was allowed, when silence was expected. Edward had typed it up himself, making the grid wide so nothing got missed.
We dont play after eleven, the man said uncertainly. Sometimes its just a film. Were young, we want
He glanced at Edward hopefully. This was Edwards moment.
I do get it, Edward began. My wife and I used to blast our records, too. But Im struggling now. My heart… I wake up to your bass like its a building site. If you just keep it down after ten, Ill breathe easier. Kids sleep then, too. And if youve got a noisy party coming up, just post in our chat. Ill take my pill, shut the window ahead of time. Somehow, knowing its just for an hour is easier.
Edward was surprised to hear himself say it out loud. His voice was calm and steady.
The woman let go of her towel and appeared to soften.
Honestly, we didnt realise it was that loud, she admitted. Our last neighbours yelled louder than our music. Alrightafter ten, headphones only, films kept quiet. And if we have friends round, Ill post in chat. And you, let us know if theres an issue, please.
Deal, Mrs. Parker smiled.
They headed down to the ninth. The door to 205 smelt of fresh filler and primer. Chris answered, another lad peered out behind. Inside, plastic sheets hung everywhere, wire scraps littered the floor.
Its you again, Chris smiled at Edward. Still making noise?
Were not here to argue, Mrs. Parker repeated. We want to agree.
Chris and his friend listened closely to the plan, looked over the noise timetable, heard about the napping baby in 209, Edwards blood pressure, and the city ordinance.
My client wants the job done in two weeks, Chris mate confessed, his hand shaking as he pocketed a screwdriver. The pressure was clearly getting to him.
Has anyone told you to work till midnight? Edward asked gently. Lets agree: you drill weekdays 101 and 37. The rest, do quiet jobsfilling, wallpaper. Were not unreasonable; we know youre not making holes for fun.
Chris smirked, Would be odd if it was for fun. Still, we mostly keep to those times. Sometimes we got carried away. Let’s sign your schedule. And if we need to push later, we’ll post in chat to warn people.
And weekends, only till four, alright? Mrs. Parker added. People need their rest.
Hands were shaken. When 205s door closed, the corridor held silence. Only someone on the second floor could be heard scolding a child about washing hands.
There we are, Mrs. Parker said. Edward, seewe didnt shout, didnt threaten. We talked things through. Anyone who wont listen, thats a different problem.
He nodded. Inside, he felt empty, like after waiting on a tough exam that turned out easier than expected. A quiet surge of prideno heroism, just an ordinary man who finally spoke up.
Next day, the drill started at ten, stopped at half past twelve, then resumed at three till seven. Chris posted in chat: Today, well be drilling till 8pm, really sorry. Chris, 205.
Several grumpy faces appeared below, plus one like from a younger neighbour. Edward considered, then wrote: Can you do an extra hours quiet tomorrow afternoon? Best, 97. Chris replied with a heart emoji.
That evening, upstairs music played, but lower; nearly no bass, just muffled beats. At nine, the tenth-floor woman posted: Neighbours, heads-up, friends round tonight, will keep quiet till 11pm. Let me know if too loud.
Settling back in his chair, Edward found it odd how everything once hostile and shapeless was now schedules and brief messages.
Sometimes the noise still got through: the child in 209 had sudden meltdowns, things crashed upstairs, Chris ran 15 minutes late with the drill and the block rumbled again.
But now the noise had a face, name, and flat numberhe could text, phone, or knock with more than anger, with the schedule in hand. It felt more empowering than the elusive silence.
One afternoon, drawing plans at his desk with the window ajar, he heard hammering outside. Once, hed snap the window shut at any disturbance. Now he simply noted the timework hours, so fair enoughand went back to his measurements. His heartbeat stayed regular, his palms dry.
One evening, he retrieved his old radio, set it in the kitchen, tuned to the familiar station. Eight oclock, news on air. He started to dial the volume up louder than usual. Hed always been careful, as if even his own noise would bother someone else. Now he thoughtat seven, he had as much right to turn up the news as Chris did to drill at three.
From the other side of the wall came laughtermaybe the young ones upstairs discussing yet another TV series. Below, the drill started up and fell silent, as if its owner had glanced at the clock and flicked it off.
Edward poured strong tea, broke off that chocolate bar from the awkward visit, and put a bit on a saucer.
In the building chat, someone posted a photo of a new lift mat. Someone else asked if anyoned found a missing scooter. All the noise was now a collection of voices, emojis, and snippets.
The quiet of his kitchen, between news and the ring of a spoon, no longer seemed fragile or random. It wasnt simply the absence of sound, but a negotiated, shared space where every neighbour took a small step towards each other.
Noise in the block hadnt lessened, but now, waking and looking out at the garden, Edward knew he could text, call, or knocknot with fury, but with a schedule and understanding. That knowledge made his nights a little sounder, and growing older felt just a shade less helpless.
Sometimes, finding your peace isnt about silencing the worldits learning to talk to it.






