By the next day, Mark was still thinking about it. The police had gone into Darren’s backyard, looked around, and come back out without giving anyone a real answer. The HOA had pushed. The neighbors had complained. And somehow, Darren was still out there quietly stacking tires like none of it had happened.
Mark was in his backyard the following afternoon when he heard the crash. It was loud enough to make him turn instantly. By the time he reached the back fence, the damage had already been done. One of Darren’s tires had toppled over the stack, cleared the fence, and landed hard enough to smash a ceramic planter sitting near the edge of Mark’s yard. Soil was scattered across the grass.
Flowers were crushed beneath the weight of the tire, which still rocked slightly where it had landed. Mark just stood there staring at it for a second. Because up until that moment, the whole thing had still felt like something happening next door. Now it was in his yard. And just like that, the mystery had become his problem too.
This time, there was no HOA representative standing around. No police. No neighbors pretending not to stare from across the street. This time, it was just Mark, a broken planter, and one very clear reason to stop waiting for someone else to handle it. He looked over the fence toward Darren’s backyard, then down at the tire sitting in the middle of his lawn.
That was enough. If nobody else was going to get answers, he would. And that evening, Mark walked straight to Darren’s side gate.