Salvador has one clear assignment. He must measure the mountain village of Vallon des Glaives, record what stands, and recommend what should last. He believes that careful drawings and sound calculations can keep any project from slipping. Jacques takes a short term rental with a key under a stone and a promise to leave as soon as the road opens. A heavy snow closes the pass, and the village settles into the kind of winter that asks for patience and skill.
Their days fill with lists and verifiable facts. They count rafters, note frost lines, and test the old timber that still holds more than it should. They repair a stubborn door and build shelves that square a crooked wall. The caretaker brings bread and news, and the neighbors move from curiosity to trust. During the long evenings the two men cook together and compare the lives they have been protecting. The work grows precise and personal, and the house becomes a place that expects them to return to the table.
When the thaw threatens the road and the first water runs in the gutters, the choice is simple to describe and difficult to make. They can go back to separate lives that never settled, or they can stay and build a future that has real weight. Good Light to You delivers a story about what to keep, what to change, and how two people learn to carry a life together.