The Man Across the Street
The first time I saw him was Halloween. We had just moved in and were taking the girls trick-or-treating. My older daughter was a witch, my younger a watermelon.
When we turned left at the end of our driveway, I saw him sitting in his yard across the street with his eight-year old son. A fire was burning between them in a portable fire pit. He was speaking to his son loudly enough that I could hear him from across the street. Couldn’t make out the words, but it seemed like theater. Like he was acting.
We walked down the street in a cold drizzle. Not a good first Halloween. My older girl did fine, but the little one could barely hang on. Too many steps up porches and back down. Too many people, too much stimulation, too hard for me to hold her hand and the umbrella and her plastic pumpkin full of candy. We crossed the street and turned towards home, ringing door bells on the opposite side.
As we approached the man’s house I heard him coaching his son on how to scare kids. He said these girls coming up – my girls – were too small for him to do the thing he did with that last bunch. His eyes were on me.
In the spring, I was digging up dead bushes and the girls were playing in the yard when the man decided to fix his front door. The front door he never used. He came and went through the side entrance off his driveway. Never opened his front door at all. Not until that day he decided to fix it. While I was in the yard with the girls. He had a couple of tools. Screwdriver. Wrench. Whatever. He wasn’t doing any fixing.
When we went inside, so did he.
My wife suggested he was gay, and interested.
In the summer, I was reading on a couch near the window when I saw him on the roof with a rake. He was clearing off debris from the trees. There was a young girl up there with him. She was wearing a dress and was maybe six or seven.
“What kind of man takes a little girl onto the roof?” I said.
“You know, when you’re sitting there, he can see you,” said my wife. “I always see you when I pull into the garage.”
“Is that his daughter?” I said.
In the fall, as I was raking leaves to the curb and my girls were jumping in the piles, he crossed the street for the first time and stretched out his hand.
“I’ve neglected to make your acquaintance far too long,” he said. False smile. Sporadic eye contact. He told me his name.
His hand jiggled coins in his pockets. His knees waggled like he was jogging but his feet remained planted. He watched the girls as we talked, but that didn’t seem odd because they were running and jumping and I kept having to say no baby, or be careful honey. He asked if I was a Buckeye fan and suggested we watch a game down at Leigh’s house. He said the girls could play in the basement with Leigh’s kids and his.
I said sure, but I didn’t mean it.
In the winter, after putting the girls to bed, I sat on the couch and watched out the window as police cars lined up against his curb. No lights flashing, but every room in the house was lit up. The front door was wide open. Officers stood in the yard. A plain clothes cop was walking the perimeter, talking on a cell phone. The man’s wife was in the yard, talking with an officer.
I’d only seen the man’s wife outside once before, when she planted flowers around the enormous buckeye in their yard. My wife and I joked about her being a mail order bride. We were only half-joking. The flowers died after a few weeks.
I called my wife into the room and gestured out the window.
My wife noticed the van. The nondescript van. My wife loves her tv cop shows. I hadn’t noticed the van (it was nondescript). But my wife, she loves those cop shows.
She crossed her arms. She didn’t like the man across the street. She has a gut sense about people. I have it too, but she has it more. The one time she was in the same room with the man at Leigh’s house, the man left. Not the room. He left the house. Practically bolted. That’s how strong her gut sense of these things is. He felt it.
A plain clothes cop emerged from the house rolling what looked like a computer server on a dolly. He took it straight to the van.
I guessed child pornography. I was only half-joking. I told my wife she watched enough cop shows to know it had to be child pornography. Unmarked van. Plain clothes guys in and out. Computers being trucked out. What else could it be.
She stood there half glaring, half in shock.
Across the street, the man’s wife went back inside. The front door that never opened closed behind her. One police car left. The others remained. So did the van.
Next day, my wife called me at work. She said she was picking up my youngest at pre-school when Leigh grabbed her by the arm, her own daughter at her side. Bleary eyed, Leigh asked if anyone from the news had contacted us. My wife said no. Leigh said they were doing a story about the man across the street. He’d been arrested for child pornography.
“Why didn't they didn’t contact us?” I said.
“We never let our girls in his house,” she said.