For four years, I watched my elderly neighbor dig holes in her backyard every weekend.
At first, I told myself it was harmless.
Strange, yes. But harmless.
Mrs. Harper was seventy-two, widowed, and quiet in the way some people become when life has taken too much from them. She lived alone in the house beside mine, behind drawn curtains and a porch light that never seemed to turn on…
In nearly four years, I had exchanged maybe twenty full sentences with her.
Still, every Saturday morning, there she was.
Out in the backyard.
Digging.
She never planted flowers. Never placed seeds in the soil. Never laid down bulbs or shrubs or anything that explained the effort.
She dug a hole, sat beside it for hours, then filled it back in before sunset.
Every weekend.
Same yard.
Same routine.
Same haunted look on her face.
“Karen, she’s doing it again,” I said one Saturday, peeking through our kitchen blinds.
My wife didn’t even look up from her coffee.
“Doing what?”
“Digging. Same spot as last week.”
Karen sighed. “David, she’s a lonely old woman. Let her dig.”
“But she doesn’t plant anything.”
“Maybe she lost something.”
“Every weekend for four years?”
That made Karen glance up.
“Please don’t start this again.”
But I couldn’t let it go.
There was something wrong about the way Mrs. Harper moved in that yard. Her hands trembled on the shovel. Her shoulders stayed hunched, like she was trying to make herself smaller.
And every few minutes, she would stop.
Not to look at the road.
Not to look toward my house.
But back at her own windows.
As if someone inside was watching her.
One afternoon, a silver car pulled into her driveway.
Mrs. Harper froze when she saw it.
Her face went so pale I thought she might collapse.
A man in his forties stepped out. He didn’t knock. He simply walked inside like he owned the place.
“Who’s that?” I asked Karen later.
“Probably her son.”
“She has a son?”
Karen stared at me. “You’ve lived beside her for four years and didn’t know that?”
“She doesn’t talk to anyone.”
“Exactly,” Karen said. “Which is why you should stop watching her like she’s part of a mystery show.”
I tried.
I really did.
But the next Saturday, when I saw Mrs. Harper digging again, something in me wouldn’t stay quiet.
I walked to the fence and called over gently.
“Mrs. Harper? Beautiful morning, isn’t it?”
The shovel stopped.
Slowly, she looked up.
“Oh. Hello, dear.”
I leaned against the fence, trying to sound casual.
“I was just wondering what you’re planting back there. I’ve never seen anything grow.”
The shovel slipped from her hands and hit the dirt.
Her eyes flicked toward the back window of her house.
Just for a second.
But I saw it.
“Nothing important,” she whispered.
“Do you need help?”
Her mouth trembled.
“No. Please don’t worry about me.”
“Mrs. Harper—”
“I have to go inside now.”
She left the shovel in the dirt and hurried away.
That night, I told Karen everything.
“She was scared,” I said.
“Of you?”
“No. Of something in that house.”
Karen closed her book and looked at me with concern.
“David, promise me you’ll leave this alone.”
I nodded.
But I didn’t mean it.
Around two in the morning, a scraping sound woke me.
Slow.
Heavy.
Deliberate.
I got out of bed and went to the window.
A tall figure moved through Mrs. Harper’s backyard, dragging something under a blue tarp toward the side door.
It wasn’t Mrs. Harper.
The person was too broad.
Too strong.
“Karen,” I whispered. “Wake up.”
She groaned. “What?”
“Someone’s in Mrs. Harper’s yard.”
“Call the police then.”
I picked up my phone.
Then stopped.
What was I supposed to say?
That my elderly neighbor dug holes?
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