The thing Mark couldn’t shake was how quickly it escalated. At first, it was just enough to look odd from over the fence. Then it became enough to make him pause whenever he stepped into the backyard. Then one afternoon, he watched a flatbed truck pull up outside Darren’s house and unload what looked like an entire tractor’s worth of old tires into the driveway.
That was the moment Mark realized this had officially gone beyond “a weird neighbor habit.” Now the whole street was going to notice. And they did. Within days, Mark started hearing people talk about it whenever he was outside. Dog walkers slowed down when they passed the house. Delivery drivers glanced over the fence line before pulling away.
One couple from farther down the street actually stopped in front of Darren’s place and stood there staring for a good ten seconds before moving on. The stacks had gotten that noticeable. From certain angles, they now rose high enough to be seen over the fence, and from Mark’s backyard, they looked even bigger than they probably were. It wasn’t just the number of tires anymore.
It was the fact that Darren kept adding more. And still, he never explained a thing. No sign. No quick answer. No casual “don’t worry, I’m working on something.” Just tire after tire after tire. Mark had to admit — even he was starting to wonder what on earth Darren thought he was doing.