When Six Yellow Posts Ended A Neighbor's Driveway Power Game-Quieen - Chainityai

When Six Yellow Posts Ended A Neighbor’s Driveway Power Game-Quieen

The crash came on a Tuesday morning, but it had been building for three months.

Six yellow steel posts stood at the edge of my driveway like they had grown there overnight.

They were not hidden behind shrubs.

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They were not painted to blend into the concrete.

They were bright enough to warn anyone who was looking where a two-ton SUV was going.

Olivia was not looking.

Her Range Rover rolled forward the same way it had rolled forward for weeks, slow and entitled, head angled down toward the phone in her hand.

The sound of impact moved through the neighborhood before the steam did.

Metal buckled.

Plastic cracked.

The front bumper folded in on itself while the bollards stayed still.

For one stunned second, even the birds seemed to stop.

Then Olivia opened her door and screamed.

I was inside by the front window with a cup of coffee, watching the camera feed because I had learned not to trust a morning where she was involved.

I had also learned that the loudest person in a dispute is usually hoping nobody checks the paperwork.

Olivia and her husband Mark had moved next door two years earlier.

Their old ranch house came down almost immediately, and a stone-front mansion rose in its place with oversized garages, imported shrubs, and vehicles that cost more than some homes on the street.

I did not resent it.

People can build what they can afford, and I had enough repairs in my own modest brick house to keep me from staring too long at anyone else’s choices.

What I did resent was the moment their convenience became my problem.

The community mailbox sat near the end of the street, close enough that walking from Olivia’s garage would have taken half a minute.

She preferred to drive.

Not just drive, but stop sideways across the end of my driveway so she could reach the boxes without taking extra steps.

The first time, I thought it was a mistake.

I stood beside my old pickup with my work bag in hand and waited for her to return.

When she came back sorting envelopes, I asked if she could leave the driveway open in the mornings.

She gave me a soft little smile that made the apology before it disappear.

“Relax,” she said. “It’s only a few minutes.”

The next morning, she did it again.

By the next week, it had become part of her routine.

She would block me in, check her phone, open her mail, and walk back slowly while I sat in my truck watching the clock move.

Some mornings I missed the start of appointments.

Some mornings I had to call ahead and explain that I was stuck in my own driveway because a neighbor did not feel like parking at her own house.

That explanation sounds absurd when you say it out loud.

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