The Blue Glow At 418 Willow Lane Exposed A Secret Under The Grid-Ginny

I was halfway through my morning coffee when Mr. Thompson called, and that alone should have warned me the day was about to become strange.

Thompson did not call people unless he had a theory, a grievance, or both.

He was 72, retired, and convinced that a neighborhood stayed alive only if somebody monitored it with the dedication of a border patrol agent and the imagination of a crime novelist.

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Most mornings, that meant he complained about trash bins, suspicious delivery vans, or whether the Johnsons had painted their shutters a shade too close to HOA gray.

That morning, his voice had a different edge.

“You got a minute?” he asked.

My coffee smelled burnt, the kitchen window was fogged at the lower corners, and my patience had not fully woken up yet.

“What’s up?” I asked, already bracing.

“It’s the power,” he said.

I looked at the ceiling light above my sink.

“What about it?”

“I think someone’s stealing it.”

There are sentences that make you close your eyes before you answer, because you know any response will only encourage more of the same.

That was one of them.

“Thompson,” I said, “I don’t think anyone is stealing electricity from your house.”

“You say that because you haven’t seen my bill.”

He told me his power bill had jumped.

He told me the Johnsons had noticed the same thing.

He told me the streetlight outside his house had flickered the night before, not once, but several times, and then he had heard a hum that he insisted was electrical.

“Not normal humming,” he said.

“How many kinds of humming do you know?”

“Enough.”

I should have ended the call there.

Instead, fifteen minutes later, I was standing in front of his power meter while he held his utility statement like evidence in a murder trial.

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