The black sedan glided silently through downtown traffic, passing mirrored towers and luxury boutiques as if it owned the skyline. In the back seat sat Ethan Hayes, thirty-six, composed and immaculately dressed. His charcoal suit fit him like authority. His briefcase carried contracts worth millions — documents that could turn entire streets into investment portfolios.
“Mr. Hayes,” his driver murmured, “we’ll reach Maple Street shortly.”
“Good,” Ethan replied.
He hadn’t visited in nine years.
A real estate firm wanted the entire block — demolish the aging homes, replace them with sleek storefronts and parking structures. Ethan still legally owned his old house. Signing the sale would be simple.
Smart. Efficient.
Yet as the car left the city’s shine behind, something tightened in his chest.
The buildings grew shorter. Paint peeled. Sidewalks cracked. Maple Street looked worn but alive — fruit vendors on corners, kids bouncing a deflated basketball, windows patched instead of replaced.
And at the end of the block stood his house.
Smaller than memory. Fence sagging. Weeds reclaiming the yard.
Nine years earlier, a police officer had called him.