Dear Readers: This is Chapter 1 of a 5 chapter story. All of the chapters are completed and will be released in the next couple of weeks.
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Introduction: Move In
Susan McCall let out a low sigh as she watched the moving truck pull out of the cul-de-sac. It only took six hours longer than she'd been quoted. She shook her head and ran her hands through her long, auburn hair. Every muscle in her body ached, but it felt good. It felt good to be finally moved into her new place. Ever since her divorce 8 months earlier she had been living in a two bedroom apartment with two grown children, her daughter Alyssa and her son Frankie. She'd slept every night on a pull out couch with all of her clothes stacked in piles around her. The idea of sleeping in her own bed that night almost made being exhausted worth it.
She was leaning up against her mail box, staring down the road as the taillights disappeared around the corner. She realized that it was the first time since the horrible process of home-buying had started that she had the opportunity to really admire her new house and her new neighborhood. She breathed in the air deeply and it smell like pine and backyard barbeque. She hugged herself loosely and hoped, for the first time in a long time, she had found a place where she, and her children, would fit.
Ever since she'd first gotten married almost twenty years earlier (a marriage made necessary by Alyssa's unexpected presence) she had lived out in the country with her husband...now ex-husband. Right around the time of the divorce, Susan had realized that she'd lived longer in her husband's tiny home town than anywhere else on earth. 21 years in Fort Roth and 20 years everywhere else. Now at 42, she had decided she had had enough of the boondocks and the kind of people who lived in the boondocks to last her the rest of her life. Not that she would have chosen a divorce on her own, that was her husband's call. He'd decided to start a new family with a much younger woman.
So Susan had taken her ex-husbands "old" family and, at first, moved into the city. She and the kids had spent 8 months in a two bedroom apartment. Susan had grown up in town and she'd thought maybe it would be nice to go back. She gotten a new job there, after all. More importantly she thought that maybe the close quarters of the apartment would keep the remaining three members of her family closely knit. While she was happy to be finished with her husband (it had never been a happy union), she was terrified that her divorce was the start of a general disintegration of her family. She could lose a man she didn't love, but she couldn't bear to see her children grow apart. But the 8 months in the apartment had been a failure. She could no longer handle the cramped feeling of having the entire world in her face all the time in the city. She hadn't liked her son's junior year of high school at the urban public school. He didn't fit in. What's worse, constantly being on top of each other had been driving her family apart, rather than keeping them together. They were simply too old, too adult to deal with the lack of space. And so we'd moved out to the suburbs and Susan hoped they'd finally found a good balance.
It certainly looked pleasant from where she was standing. She turned away from the road and looked down the gently sloping, sparsely wood lot towards her new home. It was a quaint split level with red brick and white aluminum siding. There was a bedroom for everyone (finally, although Frankie's was in the sort of basement area) and it already had a cozy feel, even before they'd gotten all of their stuff into it. The lot was around quarter acre, the slope and the trees growing more intense in the backyard.
After taking it in, Susan turned and looked at the neighborhood around her. She lived in a large housing development that had been constructed on the location of a massive farm in the early sixties. Despite the fact that there were several hundred houses in the immediate area, it was hard to tell from where Susan was standing. The entire neighborhood was heavily wooded and the houses had large lots, set back a good distance from the road. More importantly, Susan's house sat on a secluded cul-de-sac at the extreme northwest corner of the development. The road leading into the cul-de-sac had a long bridge over a small creek, separating the circle from the rest of the development. The creek was somewhat wide and there were steep banks on either side of it. The end result was that the four houses in the cul-de-sac had a slightly insulated quality about them, the nearest other house was almost three hundred yards away. Susan's house was the first on the left upon entering the cul-de-sac and the remaining three housing fanned out clockwise along the circle from Susan's house.
"Oh shit," Susan said as she scanned the other house, nonetheless she plastered on her best fake smile. It seemed that her immediate next door neighbor to her left had seen them moving in. She was walking up the gentle slope of her yard, smiling at waving. Susan was not ready to meet the neighbors. She was wearing a ripped up pair of jeans and her oversized red t-shirt was still sweaty from a day spent moving boxes.
"Hi," the neighbor said cheerfully when she reached the edge of the road. Susan smiled and nodded.
"Hello," she said. The neighbor was a petite Asian woman with strikingly large breasts. She was probably only around 5'2 and had a very slim body with somewhat narrow hips. Those large breasts were pouring out of her tight summer dress. The woman had striking dark eyes and long, midnight black hair that was tied back in a ponytail. Susan wondered briefly if the breasts were real and then shook that un-neighborly idea out of her mind. The woman was quite pretty though.
"I'm Claudia Park, you must be Mrs. Wentz!" the woman said sunnily. Susan shook her head slowly and shrugged her shoulders.
"It's nice to meet you Ms. Park..."
"Claudia, please, we're neighbors," Claudia interrupted good-naturedly, slapping her hand in the air as if to bat away her last name.
"Okay...thanks...Claudia," Susan said, thrown off by the woman's familiar attitude, "But I am not Mrs. Wentz. Susan McCall, nice to meet you." Susan extended her hand. Claudia's eyebrows furrowed and she looked down briefly at Susan's house. She sort of pursed her lips and slid them to the side of your face.
"Is...Is Mrs. Wentz inside?" she asked. Now it was Susan's turned to furrow her brows. She shook her head again.
"No...No Mrs. Wentz," she said. Claudia now tilted her head to the side and looked like she was about to say something else. She caught herself and then started to speak again anyway.
"I am sorry for asking, not my business, but is your husband or...boyfriend Mr. Wentz?" Now Susan was extremely confused. Who the hell were the Wentz's and why did this woman insist on it?
"No," Susan said, trying to sound breezy, "It just me and my kids."
"Huh," the woman said. Her eyes scanned out over the rest of the cul-de-sac for a moment. Susan looked at the woman nervously. This was very strange. Not exactly the neighborly welcome she'd been expecting. The woman suddenly realized that Susan was looking at her.
"Oh jeez," Claudia said, flustered, "I am so sorry. I am not trying to be rude. It's just...when the Brandons moved out of this house a few months ago James, you know James Liston from across the street?" Susan shrugged. The woman gave a pained smile, "Well James was the real estate agent and he said he sold the house to Mr. and Mrs. Wentz and their three sons."
"I bought this house directly from the bank, even before they assigned it to a real estate agent. I had a friend who told me about it. If the Wentz family were the last people to buy it, then the story my friend tells me is that the wife got a new job offer in Tokyo and they accepted. They needed out of the mortgage quick and the bank was buying up homes to use as rental property. Gave a good price. I only got this place because I had a friend inside," Susan explained. As she spoke, she saw Claudia's eyes grow wider, but she never said anything in reaction. When she was done, Claudia simply replied.