Ethan stood frozen next to me.
Mrs. Harlow didn’t stop until the entire ramp collapsed.
“Fix your mess,” she said coldly, dropping the bar.
Then she walked away as if nothing had happened.
Silence settled over the street.
Caleb’s mother stood beside him as he sat at the top of the steps again.
Watching.
Just like before.
Back inside, Ethan sat on the edge of his bed, staring at his hands.
“I should’ve made it stronger,” he muttered, blaming himself.
I sat beside him. “No. You did something good. That’s what matters.”
“But it didn’t last.”
I didn’t have an answer for that.
I thought Mrs. Harlow’s actions were the worst part.
Until the next morning.
I heard several car engines outside.
I stepped onto the porch and saw a long black SUV pulling up in front of Mrs. Harlow’s house. Two more followed. When the doors opened, serious-looking men in suits stepped out.
They weren’t neighbors. They weren’t police.
One of them walked straight to her front door and knocked.