The White Line Across Tyler’s Driveway Wasn’t Just a Parking Rule

Chapter 1: The Line Was Dry Before Tyler Got Home

The white stripe cut across Tyler Walker’s driveway like somebody had drawn a boundary through his life while he was gone.

He stopped with one boot on the concrete and the truck door still open behind him. The engine ticked as it cooled. His right hand stayed on the door frame. For a second, he thought it was tape, the kind utility crews used before digging, but the line was too wide and too clean for that. It crossed from the left edge of his driveway to the right, bright against the old gray slab, running under the nose of his truck as if the truck had been parked wrong in its own home.

The paint was already dry.

Tyler looked toward the curb. No city truck. No workers. No orange cones. Just his front lawn, his father’s two trimmed maples, and Karen Clark standing on the sidewalk with a clipboard held against her ribs.

She was waiting for him.

“Evening, Tyler,” she said, like she had come by to borrow a rake.

Tyler shut the truck door carefully. He had grease on his knuckles from the shop, and his shoulders ached from leaning over a transmission all afternoon. He stared at the line again. It ran across the driveway just behind where his front tires usually rested.

“What is that?”

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