The Stolen Backyard Pool That Made A Neighbor Lose Everything-Quieen - Chainityai

The Stolen Backyard Pool That Made A Neighbor Lose Everything-Quieen

For years my neighbor insulted the pool I built after my divorce.

He never called it ugly, because Martin Holloway liked clean hands and dirty meanings.

He called the stone unusual.

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He called the waterfall ambitious.

He told me the lights were a little theatrical for resale, as if my backyard existed to impress buyers I had never invited.

My pool was different.

It was not a status symbol to me.

It was the first thing I built after my divorce that did not feel like survival.

My daughter Olivia learned to swim there.

My brother ruined hamburgers there.

My mother sat on the steps every summer with her ankles in the water, acting like she was only there to keep me company.

That pool held noise when the house felt too quiet.

It gave my life back a center.

Martin saw attention where I saw peace.

I left for Chicago on a Monday morning after he offered to keep an eye on my place.

He stood beside my driveway in a pressed polo, smiling with that smooth neighborhood confidence men use when they have already decided they are smarter than you.

I thanked him and drove away.

Two weeks later, I came home just after midnight with a dead phone, a bad headache, and a suitcase wheel that kept sticking.

All I wanted was my own shower.

Then I opened the side gate and stopped.

The pool was gone.

Gone still feels too small, because this was a wound in the ground: cut stone, exposed pipe, crushed grass, and the waterfall wall missing.

I stood there with my suitcase behind me and laughed once, because sometimes the brain chooses nonsense before horror.

Nobody steals a swimming pool.

Except somebody had.

I touched the broken edge of the patio and felt my anger arrive cold.

At sunrise, I went back outside with coffee I never drank and tried to build a reasonable explanation.

Maybe a contractor had gone to the wrong address.

Maybe the HOA had made some wild mistake.

Maybe I was about to wake up and tell Olivia the strangest dream over breakfast.

Then I heard splashing.

It came from Martin’s yard.

Soft jazz floated over the fence with it.

I walked down the side path and looked through a gap between the boards.

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