Stories

While I Was on a Business Trip, My Neighbor Took Down My Halloween Decorations and Used Them to Decorate Her Own House

After two exhausting weeks on the road, all I wanted was to come home, take off my heels, and soak in the comfort of my favorite holiday. Halloween had always been my escape from reality, the one night of the year when imagination ruled the streets.

I am thirty-two, recently divorced, and without children, though I do have an impressive collection of animatronic skeletons and fog machines. Some people decorate for Christmas, but Halloween has always been my masterpiece. Every October, my little house on Pineview Avenue turns into a haunted wonderland. The neighbors call it the Witch House, and I have worn that title with pride.

This year was supposed to be the best yet. I had spent months designing new props and setting up a sprawling cemetery scene in my yard. But just when the finishing touches were in place, my boss called with a last-minute request. A business emergency required me to fly to Chicago for a week. I argued, pleaded, and even hinted that I might be “unavailable,” but work won, as it always did.

Before leaving, I looked back at my front lawn one last time. Tombstones gleamed under orange lights, my twelve-foot spider towered above the bushes, and two motion-activated ghosts hung from the maple tree. I smiled, imagining the children who would squeal with delight on Halloween night.

Fate had other ideas. My meeting wrapped early, and I managed to catch a flight home on Halloween afternoon. Excitement buzzed through me as the taxi turned onto my street. I was already picturing the crowd of trick-or-treaters and the laughter that would echo through the neighborhood.

Then I froze. My yard was empty. Every decoration I had spent months preparing was gone.

For a moment, I thought I had the wrong house. Then I looked across the street. There they were. My gravestones, my skeletons, my glowing pumpkins, all proudly displayed on my neighbor’s lawn. Even my giant spider perched on her roof as if mocking me.

My neighbor, Heather Collins, was waving to passing parents, accepting compliments on her “incredible” setup. She had never so much as strung a single light before, yet here she was, basking in praise.

Anger flared in my chest. I wanted to march over and demand my things back, but I could already hear the whispers that would follow. “Did you see Lauren fighting with Heather? On Halloween night of all nights?” I swallowed my rage and decided to wait.

When the last group of children went home and the street grew quiet, I sat at my window, staring at the stolen decorations glowing under Heather’s porch lights. My house looked like a ghost of itself, dark and forgotten. I knew I would not sleep until I had done something about it.

At one in the morning, I grabbed my car keys and drove to the twenty-four-hour hardware store. The cashier barely looked up as I bought two cans of bright red paint. I could almost hear my pulse echoing in the silence.

Back home, the air was cold and still. I crept across the street, the gravel crunching softly under my boots. The paint can felt heavy in my hand. With a slow, steady breath, I began to spray thick, angry letters across her perfect white fence.

“I TAKE MY NEIGHBOR’S DECORATIONS TO WIN CONTESTS.”

Each letter dripped with scarlet, a confession written for the entire neighborhood to see. The hiss of the spray echoed like a secret being shouted into the night. When the final word was done, I stepped back and smiled. Justice had never looked so bold.

As I turned to leave, a light flickered inside Heather’s living room. My stomach lurched. Her silhouette appeared at the window. I ducked behind a bush, holding my breath. She shuffled toward the kitchen, poured herself a glass of water, and disappeared again. When the light went out, I slipped quietly back to my house.

The next morning, I brewed coffee and stood at the window, watching the sun rise over Pineview Avenue. Heather’s fence gleamed under the daylight, every letter screaming my message to the world. Parents walking their kids to school slowed down to read it. Some laughed, others whispered.

At nine o’clock, the neighborhood committee arrived to judge the annual Halloween decoration contest. Heather stood frozen on her porch, pale and furious, while the judges examined her fence. They whispered to one another, shaking their heads.

Mrs. Callahan, the committee chair, turned toward my house with a knowing smile. “Lauren, I believe these decorations belong to you,” she said, gesturing toward Heather’s yard.

I lifted my coffee mug and nodded politely. “They seem to have wandered across the street while I was away,” I replied.

Heather sputtered, “This is vandalism! She painted my fence!”

Mrs. Callahan raised an eyebrow. “Did you, or did you not, use her decorations without permission?”

Heather hesitated, caught in her own web. “I borrowed them,” she muttered.

“Then perhaps you should return them,” Mrs. Callahan said firmly. She turned to me with a kind smile. “And as for you, Lauren, your creativity never ceases to amaze us. Congratulations, you have once again won Best Decorated House.”

Heather’s jaw dropped. The judges clapped politely and moved on to the next house.

I watched as Heather began yanking the decorations from her lawn, red paint glinting behind her. My spider, my gravestones, my pumpkins all made their slow return home.

That evening, as twilight settled over Pineview Avenue, I turned on my fog machines and watched the mist roll gently across my yard. The skeletons stood tall again, their hollow eyes gleaming in the orange light.

Halloween was mine once more.

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