The HOA Parked Two Trucks in His Garage, But the Old Man Knew Why They Chose His Door

Chapter 1: The Trucks Were Already Inside the Garage

Justin Davis saw the two white trucks before he saw his grandfather.

They were parked deep inside the open garage, nose to tail, where George Davis’s old blue pickup usually sat with its hood half-raised and a coffee can full of bolts balanced on the bumper. The trucks were too clean for ranch work. Too square. Too official-looking. Each had a magnetic sign on the door with the neighborhood association’s green crest, the kind Justin had seen on mailers about fence height, lawn edges, and holiday decorations left up too long.

For a second, he stayed seated in his own car with the engine ticking down, one hand still on the wheel.

His grandfather’s ranch house sat at the far edge of the subdivision, where the smooth HOA streets gave up and turned into cracked county pavement. George had lived there before the gates, before the decorative stone entrance, before the association decided the past could be managed with bylaws and monthly dues. The garage was not some community shed. It was where Justin had learned to change brake pads, where George sharpened mower blades, where his grandmother’s handwriting still labeled coffee cans: deck screws, spare hinges, don’t throw away.

A woman in a green polo stepped out from behind the first truck carrying a clipboard and a half-empty bottle of water. She looked at Justin like he had walked into her office.

“Can I help you?” she asked.

Justin got out slowly. “I was about to ask you that.”

The woman blinked. She had short blond hair tucked behind one ear and sunglasses pushed up on her head. Her polo had the HOA crest stitched over the left side, but the name tag clipped beneath it was turned slightly sideways.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *