The New Neighbors
My name is Deborah Fielding, and I’ve lived on Maple Street for nearly fifty years. You get to know the rhythm of a neighborhood when you’ve been somewhere that long. Last May, a couple moved into the old Victorian house across from mine—you know, the one with the gingerbread trim that the Hendersons let fall into disrepair. I did what any good neighbor would do: baked my famous banana bread and marched myself across the street to welcome them. The man introduced himself as Mark, tall with watchful eyes that seemed to catalog everything. His wife, Claire, stood slightly behind him, her smile appearing just a beat too late, like someone had pressed a delayed reaction button. ‘We’re so grateful for the welcome,’ Mark said, his hand resting on Claire’s shoulder in what looked like affection but felt more like… control? They accepted my bread with polite thanks, but their door closed quickly behind me. Walking home, I couldn’t shake the feeling that something was off about their carefully measured responses. Claire’s long sleeves in May’s warmth. The way Mark answered questions I’d directed at her. The calculated tidiness of their story about moving for ‘a change of pace.’ After fifty years of reading people, you develop a certain instinct. And honey, my instinct was screaming.



























































