I tried again to reason with the neighbor, asking for basic consideration. The response was the same—indifference. To him, convenience mattered more than boundaries, property, or a child’s feelings.
One afternoon, my son came inside surprisingly calm. Another snowman was gone, he said, but I didn’t need to speak to the neighbor anymore. He had a plan, he promised—nothing harmful, just something to stop it.
The next day, he built a large snowman near the edge of the lawn where the street met our grass. I noticed flashes of red beneath the snow but didn’t question it.
That evening, a loud crash sent us to the window. Our neighbor’s car had hit the fire hydrant hidden inside the snowman, flooding the street. Once again, he’d driven onto our lawn.
No one was hurt, but the lesson was clear. From that day on, the neighbor never crossed our grass again. My son kept building snowmen—some melted, some fell—but none were crushed. Boundaries, once clearly marked, finally held.