The Birdhouse That Fell Before Sunrise and the Neighbor Who Could Have Knocked First

Chapter 1: The Birdhouse Was Taller Than Barbara Thought It Should Be

Barbara Campbell stood directly beneath the birdhouse, tilted her chin toward the top platform, and said, “That is a violation.”

John Thompson still had a cordless drill in his hand. A silver screw clung to the magnetic tip. Behind Barbara’s shoulder, the late Saturday sun caught the new cedar shingles he had cut one by one, making the little rooflines glow warm and clean above the fence.

“It’s a birdhouse,” John said.

“It is a structure,” Barbara replied.

She said the word the way other people said infestation.

John looked up at what he had built. It was taller than he had meant it to be. He could admit that much. The main post rose from a fresh concrete footing beside the back corner of the yard, and above it sat three stacked compartments with narrow ledges, tiny arched openings, and a slanted roof he had sanded until the edges no longer caught his fingers. It looked less like a birdhouse than a small, hopeful apartment building for sparrows.

Rebecca had laughed when he carried the first frame out from the garage.

“You built a condo,” she had said.

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