Ethan was a practical man, but when it came to his backyard fence, he opted for the cheapest materials available. "It's just a fence," he'd tell his wife, Jenna. "What's the worst that could happen?"
That spring, Eden Prairie thawed under the first warm sun after a harsh winter. Ethan decided it was the perfect time to build the fence. He bought flimsy wood panels, rust-prone nails, and a second-hand power drill from a garage sale down the street on the other side of Duck Lake Trail.
Ethan worked tirelessly, determined to finish before the weekend was over. By Saturday evening, the fence stood complete. It wasn't perfect, but it was done. Jenna watched from the kitchen window, an uneasy feeling gnawing at her. She had always trusted Ethan's judgment, but this time felt different.
That night, the wind picked up, howling through the trees surrounding their home. Ethan was awoken by the sound of something crashing in the yard. He groggily got up, grabbed a flashlight, and ventured outside to inspect the noise.
The wind was fierce, and the temperature had dropped significantly. Ethan's breath fogged in the beam of his flashlight as he approached the fence. A section had broken loose and was swaying dangerously. He cursed under his breath and reached out to steady it.
As he touched the panel, a sudden gust of wind ripped the loose section free. It slammed into Ethan, knocking him to the ground. Dazed, he struggled to get up, but the fence's rusty nails had scratched his arms deeply. Blood oozed from the wounds, staining the snow beneath him.
In his struggle, Ethan hadn't noticed the nail he had used to temporarily hold the gate in place. Now, it protruded at an odd angle, unnoticed and deadly. As Ethan pushed himself up, his hand slipped on the icy ground, and his weight shifted forward. The nail pierced his throat, and a guttural scream was choked off by the rush of blood filling his airway.
Ethan tried to call for help, but only gurgling noises emerged. He grasped at his throat, eyes wide with terror, as the cold Minnesota night pressed in around him. The flashlight lay in the snow, casting eerie shadows across the yard.
Jenna woke to the sound of Ethan's choked cries. Panic surged through her as she rushed outside, but it was too late. Ethan lay motionless, the life drained from his eyes, his blood pooling around the base of the fence. She screamed, her voice lost in the howling wind.
The following morning, the neighborhood buzzed with the news of Ethan's tragic death. Jenna could only stare blankly at the now-silent backyard, the flimsy fence standing as a grim testament to her husband's final, fatal project.
The fence was torn down the next week, replaced by a more robust, professionally built one. But for Jenna, every gust of wind was a haunting reminder of the night Ethan died, and the cheap fence that had claimed his life. If only he had called the professionals at Sterling Fence for his project, this tragedy could have been avoided.