Last month, my neighbors’ home was destroyed in a fire, and our entire community came together to support them.

23

As Mr. Davies accepted my invitation, I guided him into the living room, leaving Tom and Sarah lingering uneasily on the doorstep — their confident demeanor beginning to crumble. My modest home reflected a lifetime of carefully arranged memories; every piece of furniture, every framed photograph, was a fragment of the story that had shaped me.

I retrieved the camera from its usual place near the window — the one that offered an unobstructed view of their house and the yard beyond.

As I busied myself with preparing tea, Mr.

Davies examined the device, scrolling through its recordings with the same measured precision that had once made me an effective teacher.

“Remarkably clear footage for something meant to track birds,” he noted, casting a curious glance my way. “Quite so,” I replied with a faint smile, setting down the teapot.

“Birds can be remarkably shy creatures.

The right equipment makes all the difference when you’re observing them.”

We were just about to review the video when Tom’s voice broke the stillness. “Eleanor, is this really necessary?

We’ve already been through enough.

Everyone’s just trying to help.”

Sarah nodded, her expression tight, her earlier warmth replaced by unease.

“We’ve known each other for years. Surely we can sort this out without… all of this.”

I met their gaze, calm and steady.

“I understand it’s been difficult. But sometimes, finding the truth does require a bit of trouble.”

Sensing the tension, Mr.

Davies gently redirected our focus.

The footage began to play, filling the room with the quiet hum of the camera and the soft chirping of sparrows outside.

At first, the recording revealed only still shadows under the moonlight. But then, movement — two figures emerged, carrying bags toward a car parked just beyond the fence.

The images were grainy, yet their postures, their gait, were unmistakable.

“What an odd response to a house fire,” Mr. Davies observed, his tone composed but cutting.

“Saving possessions instead of calling for help.”

Tom and Sarah exchanged a panicked glance.

Tom opened his mouth as if to argue, but Sarah’s trembling hand on his arm silenced him.

“We didn’t mean any harm,” she whispered, her voice cracking.

“We thought it would… help.”

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