She picked the wrong house to mess with.

 

The Neighborhood Watch Trap

…text her: “Hey, why don’t you come over to the back patio? I’ve got the fire pit going, a bottle of wine, and the ‘old ball and chain’ is finally gone for the night. Wear that silk robe I saw you in the other day. And don’t wear anything underneath.”

My husband, Mark, watched me type it, shaking his head with a grin. He had been the one to tell me about her advances immediately; we were a team, and we were tired of her disrespect.

“Are you sure about this?” Mark asked.

“Positive,” I said. “She likes an audience? Let’s give her one.”

It was the night of our monthly Neighborhood Watch meeting. Usually, these were boring affairs with coffee and donuts inside, but tonight, I had told everyone to park a block away and gather quietly in our backyard for a “special presentation.”

I had twenty neighbors—including Mrs. Higgins, the biggest gossip in the county, and the strict HOA president—sitting in the shadows of our large patio. I killed the main floodlights, leaving only the dim glow of the fire pit where Mark sat with his back to the gate.

Ten minutes later, the side gate unlatched.

The 25-year-old neighbor, whose name was Tiffany, sashayed into the yard. She wasn’t just wearing the robe; she had it uncinched, letting it flow open as she walked. She looked like she was prowling.

“I knew you’d come around, Mark,” she purred, her voice echoing in the quiet yard. She walked right up behind him and dropped the robe completely to the grass, standing there stark naked. “I’m the upgrade you deserve. Forget that wrinkled old wife of yours.”

That was my cue.

I flipped the switch for the high-intensity security floodlights. The backyard instantly lit up like a football stadium.

“Surprise!” I shouted, stepping out from the sliding glass door.

Tiffany shrieked, freezing in place. But the horror really set in when she looked past Mark. The darkness melted away to reveal twenty of her neighbors staring at her in stunned silence. Mrs. Higgins actually dropped her cookie. The HOA president looked like he was about to write a citation for indecent exposure on the spot.

Mark stood up, walked over to me, and put his arm around my waist.

“Actually, Tiffany,” Mark said, his voice carrying perfectly to the stunned crowd. “I love my wife. And we thought since you like showing off so much, you’d want to meet the whole Neighborhood Watch. We were just discussing ‘intrusive pests’ in the area.”

I walked forward, picked up her robe with a pair of long BBQ tongs, and dropped it at her feet.

“You might want to cover up, honey,” I smiled sweetly. “It’s a little cold to be that desperate.”

She didn’t say a word. She scrambled into her robe, sobbing, and sprinted out of the gate faster than I’d ever seen anyone run.

The aftermath was swift. She couldn’t walk to her mailbox without the neighbors snickering. Mrs. Higgins made sure the story reached three towns over by the next morning. A “For Sale” sign went up in Tiffany’s yard less than a week later. She moved out in the middle of the night, and my husband and I have enjoyed our peace and quiet ever since.

Leave a Reply

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