Teaser from The People in the Neighborhood
A teaser from my story in the forthcoming anthology: π·ππ‘πππ‘ππ£ππ , ππππ’π‘βπ , & πππ π¦ ππππβππππ : π·π¦πππ πππ ππ π΄ππ π€ππ!
The People in the Neighborhood
Elle almost dropped the crumpled piece of paper in the trash.
What impulse stopped her, she had no idea. Curiosity, maybe? Β But then she didnβt know why sheβd picked it up in the first place, instead of raking it into the growing mound of debris. She yanked off her gardening gloves, dropped the rake, and smoothed out the wrinkles in the sheet. A stray spring breeze almost snatched it from her hand, but she held tight.
The penciled lines, written in a shaky hand, might represent some schoolkidβs first attempt at a homework assignment. Elle painstakingly deciphered the spidery printing. Her first reactionβthat it was a kidβs prank or jokeβdrowned in growing unease as she stared at it.
The note said, βHelp, please! Prisoner in my own house.β It was signed, βAnnie Henderson, 1606β
She didnβt recognize the name. The number belonged to the house immediately to the left of her own, and sheβd found the note just a foot from the chain-link fence that separated the two properties. Sheβd bought her house in this pleasant Charlotte suburb three months before, and in that time the only person sheβd seen go in or out of the place was the rather surly middle-aged man she assumed owned it. When sheβd tried to introduce herself to him, as she tried to say hello to all of her new neighbors, heβd nodded icily, hopped into his battered F-150 pickup, and driven off, leaving her gaping.
Elle stuffed the note in her pocket. While raking up more debris previous owners had left in the yard, she considered what to do about the note. Would the police even believe her if she took this to them? Would they take it seriously? Should she take it seriously?
Maybe enough to try to check it out, at least. First, she wanted to find out if anyone even knew an Annie Henderson.
That afternoon, she talked to the people in the house on the other side of hers, but it didnβt help. The family with two small children had moved there a year or so ago. They did vaguely remember an older woman living at 1606 when they first moved in, but they hadnβt seen her in quite a while and never caught her name.
The couple directly across the street, though, did remember.
βAnnie, right,β Martha Lambert, the middle-aged wife said. βIβve wondered what became of her. Sheβd be in her late seventies, I think. She liked to putter around in the yard, though she never accomplished much. Seemed a bit ditzy, but sweet and friendly. Havenβt seen much of her since her son moved in about six months ago.β
βNephew,β her husband Sam said. βSaid he was her nephew. She never had any kids. He moved in to help take care of her. Dementia. She was becoming a danger to herself. I feel bad for her, though. He doesnβt seem a very friendly or caring sort. But itβs not our business.β
Martha frowned. βCome to think of it, we havenβt seen anything of her in months. But itβs been winter and sheβs kind of frail for being outside in the cold.β
After a quick internal debate, Elle showed them the note sheβd found.
Martha sucked in a sharp breath. βOh, my.β A moment later, she added, βI think this is Annieβs handwriting. She wrote down a recipe for me a while back. Let me get it.β
She went to a desk on the other side of the room and extracted a sheath of papers. βHere it is.β She pulled one from the stack and brought it over.
They all compared the two papers. βIt is Annieβs writing,β Sam said.Β βStill, if she has dementia, she may not beβ¦all there. In her right mind.β
βBut what if she is?β Elle asked. βOr even if sheβs not, but sheβs being mistreated?β
????????
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