HOA President Stole His Barbecue. His Porch Camera Caught the Truth-Ginny

Brenda, the HOA president next door, stole my barbecue delivery and called the sauce on her chin a face mask.

I said nothing.

The next morning, I put a bakery bag on my own porch and watched her reach for it on camera.

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The story started with a routine physical, which sounds harmless until you remember that fasting turns a normal grown man into a hollow shell with insurance paperwork.

I had not eaten since before sunrise.

The doctor’s office smelled like disinfectant, old magazines, and burnt coffee from the little machine near the checkout desk.

The paper on the exam table stuck to the backs of my legs every time I shifted.

The doctor looked at my chart and said my name in a tone that made it sound like I had personally disappointed my own liver.

By the time I got back into my car, the late-afternoon sun was hot against the windshield, my mouth tasted like stale water, and my stomach was making noises that did not belong in polite society.

Oak Haven Estates looked exactly like it always did when I turned in.

Trimmed lawns.

Matching mailboxes.

Driveways full of family SUVs and pickup trucks.

A few porch flags hanging limp in the heat.

It was the kind of neighborhood where people waved while secretly knowing how many inches too tall your grass was.

I pulled into my driveway and sat there for a second with both hands on the steering wheel.

I was no longer hungry in a normal human way.

I was dramatic.

I was hollow.

I was one more inconvenience away from becoming a local news item.

So I ordered from Big Bubba’s Smokehouse.

Ribs.

Brisket.

Mac and cheese.

Cornbread.

Banana pudding.

The sort of meal that makes a cardiologist close his eyes and ask the Lord for backup.

I changed into gray sweatpants, set a roll of paper towels on the coffee table, and opened the delivery app like it was showing me the path of a rescue helicopter.

The little car icon crawled across the map.

I watched it turn onto my street.

I heard a mower somewhere down the block cough twice and die.

I smelled cut grass through the front window screen.

Then my phone buzzed.

Delivered.

I opened the front door like a man greeting destiny.

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