When my husband and I bought our house three years ago, we thought we’d finally found peace. After years of apartment living, noisy upstairs neighbors, and constant parking wars, our new suburban cul-de-sac felt like heaven. The lawns were tidy, the streets were quiet, and the neighbors waved politely when we moved in.
But there was one person we hadn’t yet met who would change that peace entirely, our next-door neighbor, Darlene. At first, she seemed like the stereotypical retiree with too much time on her hands. She spent most of her days pruning her already perfect rose bushes, sweeping her driveway twice a day, and standing on her porch with a cup of coffee, watching everything that happened around her.
My husband, Caleb, joked that she was our own “neighborhood security system.” But as the months went by, her obsession with everyone’s business became less amusing and more invasive. The first incident was small; she left a note on our mailbox about our garbage bins being left out “too long after pickup.” The bins had been out for three hours. Then she complained that our mailbox post was “an inch too tall.” Later, she marched over to tell us the “shade of beige” we painted our front door wasn’t “community appropriate.”
We live in a neighborhood with no homeowners’ association, so she had no real authority.
Still, Darlene acted like she was the self-appointed president of one. Every neighbor had a Darlene story, some minor, some infuriating, but ours eventually topped them all. It started one Friday evening when both of our cars were in the driveway.
Caleb’s old pickup sat on one side, and my newer SUV was beside it. We’d been working on cleaning out the garage that weekend, so there wasn’t space to park inside. Our driveway was clearly on our property, well within the boundary lines, but Darlene seemed to think differently.
At around 7 p.m., while we were inside having dinner, Caleb noticed flashing lights through the window. He went outside and froze. Two tow trucks were backing into our driveway.
“What the hell?” he shouted, running out barefoot. One of the drivers held up a clipboard. “We got a call from a resident saying these vehicles were parked illegally on city property.”
Caleb pointed to the concrete beneath his feet.
“This is *my driveway*! What resident called you?”
The driver shrugged. “Lady next door.
Said this was a shared easement, not private property. She paid the fee upfront.”
That was when I saw Darlene standing on her porch, arms folded, smiling like a cat who’d caught the canary. “Good evening!” she called.
“You can’t park here overnight. City ordinance. I told you before.”
Caleb stormed toward her, but I caught his arm.
“Don’t. Let them finish. We’ll fix this properly.”
We had proof that the driveway was entirely ours, our property survey from the sale, the county plat map, everything.
But Darlene wasn’t interested in facts. She just wanted control. Both cars were hauled away, one after the other, while she watched.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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