I ran outside barefoot, my heart pounding as I imagined shattered glass or my son lying hurt in the snow. Instead, I found Mr. Streeter standing beside his car, shouting in disbelief.
His front tire was completely flat, the air hissing softly into the cold morning air.
Just beyond it, scattered across the yard like fallen soldiers, were the remains of Nick’s newest snowman. The head had rolled toward the sidewalk, the carrot nose snapped in two,
and the stick arms were buried beneath tire tracks that cut sharply across our lawn. Snow that had once been smooth and proud was now churned into dirty slush.
Nick stood a few steps behind me with his hands tucked calmly into his coat pockets. “Nick,” I asked carefully, trying to keep my voice even, “what did you do?” He looked up at me with steady eyes. “I made sure he wouldn’t drive over it again,”
he said. Mr. Streeter turned toward us, red-faced and furious. “Do you have any idea what this is going to cost me?” he demanded. Before I could respond, Nick answered plainly.
“I put rocks inside the bottom snowball. Not sharp ones. Just heavy ones. Dad always said cars aren’t supposed to drive on lawns.” The street fell silent, the only sound the faint hiss of the tire losing air.
Mr. Streeter stared at my eight-year-old son, then at the ruined snowman and the edge of our yard he had been cutting across all winter to save himself a few seconds. His anger shifted into something less certain.
“You hid rocks?” he muttered. Nick nodded. “I told you before. That’s our yard.” I knelt quickly beside him. “Sweetheart, we don’t fix problems by damaging someone’s property,” I said gently, even though part of me understood his frustration. He nodded again. “I know. But talking didn’t work. And he kept doing it.”
Mr. Streeter opened his mouth as if to argue, then paused. He looked at the tire and exhaled slowly. “I shouldn’t have been driving across your lawn,” he admitted. “I didn’t think it mattered.” Nick replied softly, “It mattered to me.”
That seemed to settle it. Mr. Streeter rubbed the back of his neck and said he would pay for the tire himself and promised never to cut across our yard again. And he kept his word. From that day on, he parked carefully within his driveway lines.
A week later, he even knocked on our door with a small box containing two bright orange cones and reflective tape. “For the snowmen,”
he said awkwardly. Nick’s snow creations stood proudly for the rest of the winter, and every time I look at that untouched strip of lawn, I’m reminded that respect begins exactly where someone else’s space does.