Police Opened My Neighbor’s Basement After 7 Weeks Of Fake Dog Complaints-thuyhien

Officer Reed’s question stayed in the stairwell like a hand on the back of Mrs. Harlan’s neck.

“Why?”

The old freezer hummed against the concrete wall. The basement light swung slightly from the ceiling, throwing yellow strips over stacked boxes, cracked paint cans, and the locked crate with the pink collar looped through its bars.

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Mrs. Harlan’s fingers pressed so hard into the railing that her knuckles turned the color of chalk.

“Because it’s dangerous,” she said.

Officer Reed did not move his flashlight away from her face.

“Dangerous how?”

She swallowed. Her pearl necklace shifted against her throat.

“It leaks,” she whispered. “The freezer. It’s old. There could be mold. You don’t want to touch it. I’ll call someone tomorrow. A professional. This is already embarrassing enough.”

Animal Control Officer Dana Miller stood two steps behind Reed with a catch pole folded at her side and latex gloves pulled over her wrists. She was a small woman with gray in her braid and the calm eyes of somebody who had seen too many houses lie from the outside.

“Move away from the stairs, ma’am,” she said.

Mrs. Harlan tried to smile at her.

“Officer, I’m seventy-one. I’m not a criminal. I’ve lived in this neighborhood for thirty-four years. Ask anyone. I bring casseroles when people are sick.”

A soft scrape came from behind the freezer.

Not a pipe.

Not settling wood.

A nose pushed once against metal.

My phone was still recording. My hand had gone numb around it. The screen showed 10:04 p.m., the red dot blinking, the battery at 18%.

Officer Reed stepped down first. Dana followed. Marcus, my cousin from code enforcement, stayed at the top with me and said my name under his breath.

“Don’t go down there. Let them work.”

The basement smelled worse with the door open. Bleach burned the back of my throat. Under it sat something sour and warm, like wet towels left in a trunk. The concrete floor glistened in patches. A box fan faced the wall even though it wasn’t plugged in.

Reed crouched at the crate. Inside was the golden retriever from the missing flyer, thinner than the photo, ribs showing under matted fur, one front paw wrapped in silver duct tape.

Dana’s voice changed.

“Hey, sweetheart. I see you. I see you.”

The dog lifted her head, tried to wag her tail, and hit the plastic wall of the crate with a weak thump.

Mrs. Harlan made a tiny sound, almost offended.

“That dog is aggressive. It bit me.”

Dana looked at the duct tape on the paw.

“When?”

Mrs. Harlan blinked.

“Weeks ago.”

“You reported a bite?”

“I didn’t want trouble.”

Reed turned his flashlight toward the old freezer.

The small whine came again.

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