The Night the HOA Tried to Turn a Bird Feeder Into a Police Case-eirian

The projector fan clicked twice before the video moved.

Patricia’s face filled the white wall in a wash of gray light. Rain streaked behind her in the clip. Her flashlight beam jumped over my fence, across the grass, then down to the loaf of sandwich bread in her hand.

In the community room, no one spoke.

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The real Patricia stood six feet from the screen with her pearl bracelet pressed against her wrist, her fingers pinching the laminated fine so hard the plastic bent. Officer Reyes watched the footage without blinking. The stamp sat in his right hand, lifted but not yet pressed.

On the video, Patricia shook the bread hard. White pieces scattered across my yard like confetti.

My neighbor Gary leaned forward in the second row.

‘Patricia,’ he said quietly, ‘is that you?’

Her mouth opened, but no sound came out at first. The fluorescent lights showed every crease around her lips. Tyler, her grandson, lowered his Ziploc bag of peanuts into his lap.

Officer Reyes paused the clip on a frame where Patricia’s hand was still over my fence.

‘For the record,’ he said, ‘this changes the nature of the complaint.’

Patricia laughed once. Thin. Dry. Too high.

‘Oh, please. I was cleaning up the street.’

The rain knocked harder against the window. Somewhere outside, a crow called from the maple tree near the parking lot. The sound cut through the glass and made three people turn their heads.

I did not smile. I did not lean back. I kept one palm on the blue folder and one hand around the paper cup, feeling the warm coffee leak through the seam onto my thumb.

Before the crows, I had mostly been invisible on Meadowlark Lane.

I moved into the ranch house after my father died and left it to me with a mortgage balance, a cracked front step, and a garage full of tools labeled in his handwriting. I was 42, divorced, and too tired most nights to make small talk under porch lights.

Second shift does that to a person.

You leave while everyone is eating dinner. You come home when the street is already dark. You learn the sound of garage doors closing, sprinklers ticking, dogs barking behind fences. You know who gets Amazon deliveries too late and who forgets to bring in their trash cans.

At first, the crows were just a test.

My dad had liked birds. Not in a grand way. He never bought binoculars or joined clubs. He just knew what nested where. He called crows ‘little old men in funeral suits’ and kept a coffee can of unsalted peanuts by the back door.

After he died, the coffee can stayed on the shelf for six months. Dust formed a gray ring around it.

One October night at 10:36 p.m., I came home from the warehouse with my shoulders aching and saw three crows on the maple branch over the driveway. The air smelled like leaves and cold motor oil. My lunch bag strap had cut a red line across my palm.

I opened the coffee can and tossed out one handful.

The next night, they were back.

By December, there were six.

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