Chapter 1: The Accusation on Maple Street
“Walter, open the garage! Now! We know what you’ve been doing!”
The shouting cut through the quiet morning like something ugly and eager. By the time I stepped onto the porch, half the neighborhood was already outside. Some stood in their driveways pretending they were concerned. Others didn’t bother pretending at all. They looked energized, almost relieved, like suspicion had finally become entertainment.
Mrs. Donnelly stood at the edge of our lawn with her phone raised, filming every second. A police cruiser sat crooked by the curb, its lights flashing red and blue against the neat rows of houses. The officer near the garage looked serious but not aggressive, like a man trying to do his job in the middle of somebody else’s storm.
My father stood in his work boots and faded flannel, arms crossed over his chest. At seventy-two, he still carried himself with a kind of stubborn strength that made people underestimate how much he noticed. He had lived alone ever since my mother died twenty-six years earlier. Alone, but never idle. He fixed engines, repaired fences, sharpened tools, and left the house before sunrise more often than most men half his age.
He did not look afraid.
He looked tired of foolishness.
“Sir,” the officer said, calm but firm, “we’ve received multiple reports. Neighbors say you’ve been bringing dogs home from the shelter, and then the dogs disappear.”
Dad gave a short, humorless laugh. “That’s what they think?”
I felt my stomach drop. I knew my father. I knew his habits, his silences, his grief, his rough edges. But hearing something so vicious spoken out loud still made my chest tighten.
“I need you to open the garage,” the officer said.
“Do you have a warrant?” Dad asked.
The officer held up a folded paper. “Yes, sir.”
Dad nodded once, reached into his pocket, and pulled out his keys. No speech. No protest. He just walked forward while the neighbors leaned in like they were about to witness a public unmasking.
The garage door began to rise.
And the entire street fell silent.