When packages started vanishing from my porch, I suspected the stylish new neighbor across the street—Tessa. She’d moved in right when the missing deliveries began. Quiet, aloof, never receiving mail herself. Something felt off.
So I stayed up one night and caught her on my Ring cam. Calm as ever, she walked onto my porch, took a box, and went home like it was hers. I was stunned.
Instead of calling the police, I got petty. I rigged a glitter bomb trap in a decoy package. The next night, she took it—again. But the next morning? No glitter. No blue dye. Just Tessa, humming by her car.
Frustrated, I confronted her. She denied everything, until the police came. We searched her home—spotless. But the basement told a different story.
There, on a shelf, were all my missing packages. Unopened. Lined up like forgotten memories.
Tessa sank to the stairs, crying. “I thought I was done with this,” she whispered. “Sleepwalking.”
Stress from moving had triggered old habits. She wasn’t stealing. She didn’t even remember. My anger melted into something softer—understanding.
I dropped the charges.
A week later, she brought over a homemade pie and an apology. We sat on my porch and talked about loneliness, therapy, and the quiet pain people carry.
Now, every Sunday, she comes over with popcorn. We watch true crime. She leaves sunflowers at my door.
The packages don’t disappear anymore.
But if they did, I’d know where to look. And maybe… I wouldn’t mind.