The HOA President Called the Sheriff. She Had No Idea Who Answered-Ginny

When the pounding started at our front door, I thought something had exploded in the street.

It was just after 7:00 a.m., that fragile part of morning when the house still smelled like coffee and sleep.

The first blow shook the frame.

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The second sent a spoon skittering across the kitchen counter.

By the third, coffee had jumped out of my mug and splashed over my hand, hot enough to make me curse.

Then a voice came through the door.

“Open up, Mr. Morrison. Your wife’s under arrest.”

I remember the red and blue lights first.

They painted the glass cabinets, the white tile backsplash, the stainless-steel sink, and the framed photo from our 10th anniversary in colors that did not belong inside a home.

Two patrol cars sat in our driveway.

Beyond them, on the sidewalk, stood Constance Peton.

She was wearing the navy blazer she wore to every HOA meeting, the one with the pearl buttons and the sharp shoulders.

Her leather portfolio was tucked against her chest.

And she was smiling.

Not a nervous smile.

A victory smile.

The kind people wear when they think they finally got the power they were pretending not to want.

My wife, Rita, came out of our bedroom in her bathrobe.

She did not rush.

She did not ask what was happening.

She walked toward the door with the same calm she used when the toaster sparked, when the water heater died, and when my work van threw a belt 40 miles outside Sacramento.

After 18 years of marriage, I knew most of Rita’s looks.

This one was different.

She looked amused.

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