I work long hours, usually get home around 6:30 p.m., and we only get one assigned space at my apartment complex. Mine’s #27. Right outside my building. I earned that spot. So when I came home one Tuesday and saw a black Camry parked in it, I was pissed.
I got out to check (maybe it was a new neighbor or a delivery) and spotted a folded note under the wiper: “Sorry for the spot—call me if I’m in your way: *–**.” I called. A man answered immediately, calm and polite. “Ah, my bad—I’ll move it right now.” Two minutes later, he came out, got in the Camry, and drove off. Hoodie, cap, sunglasses. I barely saw his face.
Weird, but not the end of the world—but then it started happening again. And again. Same car, same spot, same note. 2-3 times a week, enough to feel deliberate. Every time I called, the guy would come out within minutes and move the car.
I started venting to my wife, Amy, over dinner. She laughed. “Maybe he’s just messing with you.” I muttered, “It’s working.” Still, it seemed harmless, just annoying.
Until Saturday.
Amy had brunch plans with her friend, so I decided to run errands. The grocery store lot was packed, and then my eyes locked on something that made my stomach drop: the same black Camry. I checked the plates—exact match. No note this time.
My pulse spiked. Now this guy’s stealing grocery store parking too? Was he following me?
I kept circling for a space, fuming, watching that Camry like it was mocking me.
And then my whole world flipped in a second. The store’s sliding doors opened and they walked out.
Amy.
And the man from the Camry.
She had said brunch with Clara—but there she was, adjusting her sunglasses and laughing with this guy like they knew each other well. Too well.
I ducked behind the wheel, heart thudding in my ears. They didn’t see me, thank God. They stood by the Camry a moment, then hugged. Not just a casual hug—the linger. The kind you only give someone when there’s something unspoken under the surface.
He opened her door like a gentleman, then got in and drove off.
I sat there, frozen, staring at the spot they’d just left.
My wife. The man who kept parking in my space. What the hell was going on?
Back home, I couldn’t concentrate. I kept going over every moment from the past few weeks. Amy had been distant, yes. But I chalked it up to stress. Work had been heavy for both of us. We’d had little tiffs, nothing major. But this?
That night, I didn’t say anything. I just… watched her.
She came home smelling like citrus and lavender. Said Clara recommended a new brunch spot in Midtown. I nodded and pretended to scroll through my phone.
I didn’t sleep much.
Sunday morning, I decided to test something. I left home earlier than usual and parked across the street, watching space #27 from a distance. Around 10:20 a.m., the black Camry pulled in like clockwork.
I waited.
Five minutes later, I called the number.
“Hello?” Same calm voice.
“You’re in my space again,” I said, tone flat.
“Oh—sorry again. I’ll move it.”
He came out, same outfit. Hoodie, cap, sunglasses. But this time, I got out and walked up.
He flinched slightly when he saw me.
“Hey,” I said, stepping closer. “Do I know you?”
He paused. Then, with the faintest smirk, he said, “Not yet.”
Then he got into the car and pulled away without another word.
That line haunted me all day.
Not yet?
Monday morning, I made a call to a buddy of mine, Rafi, who worked IT security at a private investigations firm. I told him just enough to raise eyebrows.
“Can you run a plate?” I asked. “Discreetly?”
He didn’t ask questions. Sent me a text an hour later with a name: Brian Cahill. Age 37. Not married. Registered to a condo downtown.
I didn’t recognize the name.
The next few days, I watched. No Camry. Not a word from Amy. She acted normal—too normal.
That Thursday, I finally cracked.
“Hey,” I asked casually as we folded laundry. “How’s Clara doing?”
“Oh, she’s great,” Amy replied, not missing a beat.
“You guys been seeing each other a lot lately?”
“Yeah,” she said. “Brunch was so fun last weekend.”
She lied. Effortlessly.
That night, I couldn’t take it. I stepped outside and called the number from the windshield notes.
He answered on the second ring. “Yeah?”
“This is the guy from space #27.”
Long pause.
“What do you want?” he asked carefully.
“I want to know what the hell is going on.”
Another pause. Then: “Meet me. Tomorrow. 4 p.m. Clover Park, by the fountain.”
I didn’t tell Amy.
The next day, I showed up. Brian was already there, sitting on a bench in jeans and a grey sweater. No hoodie, no glasses. Just a normal-looking guy in his thirties.
I sat down, arms crossed.
He looked over, then sighed.
“I didn’t mean for it to happen this way,” he said.
“What way?”
“I didn’t know she was married.”
I stared at him. My blood turned cold.
“She told me she was separated,” he said. “Said things had been over for a long time.”
I clenched my fists, but held back. “How long?”
“A few months. We met through a friend of hers. At a gallery thing.”
I rubbed my face. “And the parking space? What the hell was that?”
He looked sheepish. “I… I didn’t know where else to park when I visited her. She told me 27 was always open during the day. I left the note to keep things civil.”
I shook my head, feeling nauseous. “And now?”
“I broke it off. Last week.”
That surprised me. “Why?”
He looked away. “Because I started to feel like the bad guy. And… she didn’t seem honest. Not even with me.”
That night, I confronted Amy.
At first, she denied everything. Got defensive. Threw it back at me. “You’re spying on me?”
Then she broke down. Admitted it.
“I just felt invisible,” she said through tears. “You were always working. I needed something. I made a mistake.”
It wasn’t just the betrayal—it was the ease with which she had lied. The comfort.
We tried therapy. I wanted to salvage what we had. But her heart wasn’t in it.
A month later, I moved out. Got my own place. A little smaller, but peaceful. No one ever parked in my space.
I ran into Brian again a few months after that. At a gas station, of all places. We chatted awkwardly. He looked better. I think I did too.
“You know,” he said before leaving, “I wasn’t trying to ruin your life.”
I smiled faintly. “You didn’t. You might’ve accidentally saved it.”
I never saw Amy again after the divorce finalized. She moved to Chicago for a job. Last I heard, she was dating someone new.
Funny enough, I started dating too. A woman named Lin from my photography class. Kind, warm, thoughtful. Nothing like the drama before.
She always laughed when I insisted we park legally, even if it meant walking two blocks.
Sometimes, life throws curveballs you never see coming. But sometimes, those curveballs land you in a better place than where you started.
If someone’s parking in your spot, maybe they’re just rude. Or maybe, they’re the sign you’ve been ignoring.
Have you ever had something small lead to something life-changing? Share your story below—and don’t forget to like this post if it made you think.