Some people understand boundaries when you explain them calmly and clearly. Others nod, apologize—and then do exactly the same thing again. My neighbor fell squarely into the second group. After six months of patience, politeness, and steadily rising irritation, I decided it was time for a different approach.
Every morning begins the same way for me. I make coffee—not just for the caffeine, but for the comfort of the ritual. I grind the beans, wait for the kettle to whistle, and stand by the kitchen window with the warm mug in my hands. And every morning, without fail, I look out toward my driveway.
For half a year, that glance has delivered the same frustration.
A silver hatchback, parked directly in front of my garage.
Every. Single. Morning.
Before that car appeared, my mornings were calm. Coffee, bag, garage door, off to work—with time to grab breakfast on the way. Now they began with a sharp sigh, a muttered complaint, and a walk next door to knock like an unpaid bill collector.
Six months of apologies.
Six months of excuses.
Six months of being late.
It started when my neighbor’s son moved back home.
I’m Lila Hartman. I’m thirty-two, single, and—until recently—perfectly happy with my life. I work as a graphic designer downtown, a job I earned through long nights, stubborn persistence, and too much coffee. I make enough to own a small house on a quiet street near a wooded preserve. It’s not fancy, but it’s mine.
Teal accent walls.
Vintage film posters.
More houseplants than any reasonable person needs.
My love life hadn’t been great, but I’d made peace with that. The pattern was always the same—strong beginnings, ignored red flags, messy endings. The last one ended when my boyfriend announced he “needed space” and promptly found it in my best friend’s guest room.
That was enough for me. I put romance on pause, focused on work, my home, and planning a solo trip to New Zealand. For the first time in years, my life felt balanced.
Then the car showed up.
The first morning, I assumed it was a mistake. I knocked next door, polite but annoyed. A tall, disheveled man answered, half-asleep.
“Oh—sorry,” he said. “Am I blocking you?”
“Yes,” I replied. “Just a little.”
He apologized and moved the car immediately. No problem.
The second morning, it happened again.
By the third, I knew it wasn’t accidental.
His name was Rowan Pierce—twenty-eight, recently unemployed, recently returned to his parents’ house. Mrs. Henley down the street filled me in with obvious delight. Apparently, he was “finding himself.”
If his self-discovery hadn’t been blocking my garage, I might have sympathized.
Every morning followed the same routine. I knocked. Rowan answered in pajama pants. He apologized, promised it wouldn’t happen again, and moved the car.
And every morning after that, it was back.
One evening, after a miserable day at work, I saw him washing his dad’s car. I walked over before I could stop myself.
“We need to talk about the parking,” I said.
“I know,” he replied. “I’m really sorry.”
“For today, yesterday, and the past six months,” I added.
He explained he worked nights as a security guard and didn’t like parking farther down the street because he had to walk past the woods.
“There are raccoons,” he said seriously.
“That’s not my problem,” I replied.
He promised to do better. I warned him there would be consequences.
He laughed. “What, you’re going to tow me?”
“Worse,” I said—and walked away.
That night, I accepted the truth: being nice wasn’t working.
So I got creative.
I researched local wildlife. The preserve behind our street was full of animals—especially ones attracted by food. The next day, I bought a huge bag of birdseed and a bottle of animal attractant.
“New pet?” the cashier asked.
“Something like that,” I said.
That night, dressed in dark clothes, I scattered birdseed all over Rowan’s car and dabbed the attractant on the handles and wheels. The smell was awful.
I slept very well.
I woke up to shouting.
From my window, I saw Rowan staring at his car in horror. Bird droppings covered the windshield. Scratches lined the paint. A raccoon sat proudly on the roof.
“Get off!” he yelled.
I stepped onto my porch. “Car trouble?” I asked sweetly.
He looked at me. “Did you do this?”
“Looks like nature likes your car,” I said. “Maybe it’s karma.”
He stared—then laughed. “Okay. I deserved that.”
To my surprise, he wasn’t angry. Just impressed.
He came back with cleaning supplies and handed me gloves. “Help me?”
“I owe you an apology,” he said. “And the truth.”
The truth was worse than I expected.
He’d parked there to have an excuse to talk to me.
“You made me late for work for six months to flirt?” I asked.
“I panicked,” he admitted. “You just seemed… out of reach.”
“That’s the worst plan I’ve ever heard,” I said.
“I know,” he said. “But I’m trying now.”
I sighed and took the gloves. “Fine. I’ll help—but you’re buying me coffee.”
“Deal,” he said instantly.
We spent the morning cleaning, talking, and laughing. He told me about his dreams, his parents, and wanting to open a café someday.
True to his word, he never blocked my garage again.
These days, his car is usually in my driveway.
And honestly? I wouldn’t change a thing.