My HOA President Stole My Packages. The Camera Exposed Everything-Ginny

I knew something was off when my new hiking boots never showed up.

That was not the first package to vanish from my porch, but it was the one that finally made me stop making excuses for the neighborhood.

I am Parker Lane, 39, divorced, no kids, and I work from home as a freelance systems engineer in a quiet cul-de-sac in northern Arizona.

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The place looked peaceful from the outside.

Pale stucco houses.

Desert gravel landscaping.

Mesquite shadows crossing sidewalks in the late afternoon.

People moved there because they wanted order, and for a while, I thought I did too.

Then Cheryl Whitmore turned order into a weapon.

Cheryl was our HOA president, late 50s, bleach-blonde bob, oversized sunglasses, pastel cardigans, and a clipboard that might as well have been a sheriff’s badge.

She fined people for inappropriately patterned curtains.

She sent warnings about trash bins being visible eleven minutes too long.

She once stood in my driveway without being invited and told me, “Pickup trucks are not in accordance with the community aesthetic.”

I remember looking at her sunglasses and seeing my truck reflected in both lenses, like she had already judged it twice.

For months, I tried to keep my head down.

I worked.

I paid the dues.

I waved when people waved first.

I told myself Cheryl was just one of those people who needed a title to feel tall.

That changed when Amazon sent me a delivery confirmation for the hiking boots, and the porch was empty when I opened the door.

The air smelled like hot dust and sun-baked wood.

There was no box.

There was no note.

There was just the delivery photo showing the package exactly where it should have been.

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