I used to wave at my neighbor every morning like we were living in one of those quiet suburban commercials. Her name was Linda Parker, a retired elementary school secretary in her late sixties who always wore pastel cardigans and kept wind chimes on her porch. I’m Megan Brooks, thirty-four, a freelance bookkeeper, divorced, living alone in a narrow duplex outside Columbus, Ohio. For almost two years, Linda and I had the kind of relationship people call “pleasant but distant.” We borrowed packages from each other’s porches, brought in trash cans if one of us was away, and exchanged the usual, “Morning, how are you?” Nothing deep, nothing messy, and definitely no fights.
That’s why the first rat felt unreal.
It started at 12:47 a.m. with a scratching sound under my sink. At first I thought it was a pipe knocking. Then I heard something metallic rattle, followed by a sharp thump. I turned on the kitchen light and saw a brown rat dart across the floor and disappear behind the stove. I screamed, jumped onto a chair, and stayed there with a broom in my hand like that was going to save me. The next morning, pest control found droppings near the shared wall between my kitchen and Linda’s laundry room. They sealed what they could and told me to watch for more activity.
Three nights later, I woke up thirsty and walked into the kitchen barefoot. The second I flicked on the light, the floor seemed to move. Roaches. Big ones. At least a dozen scattered toward the baseboards and under the dishwasher. I gagged so hard I had to run to the sink. By sunrise, I had thrown out a toaster, two bags of groceries, and every ounce of peace I had left.
Then I started noticing things that made my stomach turn colder. Small tears in the screen by the side vent. A faint trail of pet food near the foundation, even though I didn’t own pets. One afternoon, while dragging my trash bins back from the curb, I caught Linda kneeling near the narrow strip of dirt between our homes. She stood up too quickly when she saw me.
“What are you doing?” I asked.
“Just pulling weeds,” she said, brushing dirt off her gloves.
There were no weeds. Just a paper bowl tucked half under my siding.
That night, another scratching sound came through the wall. Then I heard Linda’s back door close softly. I yanked open my kitchen curtain and looked out just in time to see her standing in the dark with a flashlight and something in her hand. I flew outside in my slippers.
“You think I don’t know it’s you?” I shouted.
Linda turned toward me, pale and stiff, and for the first time since I’d known her, she didn’t look harmless.
“You need to go back inside,” she said.
Then the paper bag in her hand moved.
I froze under the porch light, staring at that bag like I already knew what was inside. Linda gripped it tighter, her knuckles white, and took one step backward toward her door.
“Open it,” I said.
“It’s none of your business.”
“It became my business when rats started showing up in my kitchen.”
Her face hardened. “Lower your voice.”
That answer made me angrier than if she’d yelled back. It was calm, cold, almost offended, like I was the problem. I walked closer, my heart pounding so hard I could hear it in my ears.
“Did you put food by my house? Did you tear my screen?”
Linda looked past me instead of at me. “You don’t understand.”
“Then explain it.”
For a second, I thought she might. Her mouth opened, then shut. She clutched the bag against her chest and said, “You need to stop asking questions and mind your own home.”
I called the police the next morning. Without proof, they treated it like a neighbor dispute. They took notes, told me to document everything, and suggested I install cameras. I did exactly that. Two cameras by the front porch, one aimed down the driveway, and one covering the side yard near the shared wall. I also paid for a second pest treatment, sealed every crack I could find, and started sleeping with the kitchen light on because darkness made every tiny sound feel alive.
The footage gave me proof within forty-eight hours.
At 11:18 p.m., Linda stepped out her side door in a raincoat and latex gloves. She crouched by the gap near my foundation and placed something there. Then she sprinkled what looked like birdseed or dry cat food in a line leading toward my vent. At 11:26, she came back carrying a small cardboard box. She tilted it, tapped the bottom twice, and several dark shapes scattered into the shadows.
I watched the video three times before my hands stopped shaking.
The police took it more seriously after that. An officer came by, watched the footage, and finally knocked on Linda’s door. She denied everything at first, said she was feeding stray animals and that the box had held “yard supplies.” But later that afternoon, I saw a man in a county pest-control truck parked outside her unit. He stayed for almost two hours.
That evening, another neighbor from across the street, Carolyn Hayes, caught me while I was checking my mail.
“I heard there were police here,” she said quietly. “I didn’t want to interfere, but… I think you should know something.”
I turned toward her, every nerve in me still live.
Carolyn glanced at Linda’s house before lowering her voice. “Linda’s son moved back in about eight months ago. His name is Evan. He doesn’t stay there every night, but when he does, there’s yelling. A lot of yelling. I called in a welfare check once.”
I had never seen a son. Never heard his name.
Carolyn leaned in closer. “A few months ago, I overheard Linda arguing with someone in the driveway. She kept saying, ‘I can’t let them inspect my place. If they come in here, he’s done.’”
My mouth went dry.
That night, I opened my email and found the police incident update. They were requesting access to inspect the crawl space and utility line between our duplex units due to possible code violations and pest harboring.
At 2:03 a.m., my phone buzzed with a motion alert from the side-yard camera.
Linda was back outside.
Only this time, she wasn’t alone.
A tall man in a hooded sweatshirt stood beside her, pointing directly at my kitchen window.
I called 911 before I even put my glasses on.
The dispatcher stayed on the line while I watched the live feed from my bed, my thumb shaking so badly I almost dropped the phone. Linda stood with her arms folded tightly across her chest, while the man beside her—Evan, I assumed—kept pacing in short, jerky circles. He looked unstable, the kind of angry that never fully settles. Then he disappeared off camera for a second and came back carrying a pry bar.
That was the moment my fear turned into something sharper.
I locked myself in the bathroom with my phone and waited. I could hear footsteps outside, then a metallic scrape near the kitchen side door. Not an attempted break-in exactly, more like a warning. A message. Stay quiet. Stay scared. Let it go.
When the police arrived, everything unraveled fast.
Evan ran before they got to the backyard, but they caught him two streets over. Linda didn’t run. She just sat down on her porch steps and started crying. I watched from behind my living room curtain as officers moved in and out of both units until dawn. By the next afternoon, I finally had the answer I’d been chasing, and it was worse than any petty grudge I had imagined.
Linda hadn’t targeted me because of some secret resentment. She had done it because she was desperate.
Her son had been living illegally in her basement after getting out on probation for burglary and drug charges. He wasn’t supposed to be there, and he had turned her unit into a disaster—food rotting in containers, trash piled in corners, filthy blankets, and, according to the report, a serious infestation that had likely started months earlier. Exterminators or housing inspectors would have exposed everything: the probation violation, the drugs, the condition of the property, maybe even Linda’s role in hiding him. So instead of fixing the infestation, they tried to redirect it.
Toward me.
The food trails. The torn screen. The boxes. The late-night drops near the shared wall. It had all been deliberate. If my unit became the obvious problem, maybe management would blame me first. Maybe inspectors would focus on my side. Maybe Linda could buy enough time to protect her son, even if it meant turning my home into a nightmare.
I moved out six weeks later.
People ask whether I ever felt sorry for her, and the truth is complicated. I do think Linda loved her son. I think fear made her irrational, then cruel. But love doesn’t excuse what she did. Every time I opened a cabinet and flinched, every night I slept with lights on, every dollar I spent trying to reclaim my home—that was real too.
The last time I saw Linda, she was standing by an empty moving truck, looking twenty years older than when I first met her. She opened her mouth like she wanted to say something. Maybe sorry. Maybe nothing useful at all. I got in my car and drove away.
So that was the reason behind the rats, the roaches, and the silence through the wall: not hatred, not revenge, but panic hiding in plain sight.
And honestly, that may be the most unsettling part.
Because sometimes the people smiling and waving at you every morning are already making choices you can’t imagine.
If this story made you wonder what you would’ve done in my place, let me know—would you have confronted Linda sooner, or waited for proof like I did?




