My Neighbor Disappeared After Asking Me to Watch His Cat – Then I Discovered a Key Hidden in Its CollarMy quiet neighbor asked me to watch his cat, then he disappeared. Weeks later, when I found a key hidden inside the cat’s collar and a note instructing me to go to an apartment. What I found there made me call 911 — and accuse an innocent man of something unforgivable.
I lived in a quiet but friendly neighborhood.
People didn’t just live here; they belonged here.
But Mr. White was different. He moved into the house across from mine three years ago.
He looked to be about 50, maybe 10 years older than me.
On his first day, I decided to be the welcoming committee. I walked over with a loaf of banana bread and knocked on the door.
It creaked open just enough for him to stare at me like he’d just seen a ghost.
“Welcome to the neighborhood. I’m Anna.”
He didn’t smile back.
He mumbled a “thank you” so low I barely heard it, then he shut the door.
I knocked again. “Your banana bread!”
The door opened briefly enough for him to take the plate and smile awkwardly at me.
I never saw that plate again.
I figured he was just shy… extremely shy.
Still, I felt his presence.
One day, soon after he moved in, I was planting white tulips when I felt like someone was watching me.
I looked up suddenly.
He was standing by his car, holding a grocery bag. His cat was weaving around his ankles.
When our eyes met, he lifted his hand in a stiff, awkward wave.
“My name? It’s… uh, tu-no… White!”
“White, or Tunowhite?”
“White.” He smiled awkwardly. “Just White.”
He turned on his heel then and hurried indoors.
***
That evening, as I dragged my empty trash bins up the driveway, a voice drifted across the street.
I stopped.
“Yes?”
He walked to the very edge of his driveway. The cat followed him, sitting like a small sentry at his feet.
I let out a short laugh.
“Thank you. It’s the only thing I can keep alive.”
A tiny smile touched his lips, gone as quickly as it appeared. He scooped the cat up into his arms and hurried back inside.
Months turned into years, and Mr. White remained awkward and solitary. He was never rude to anyone, but he didn’t attend Fourth of July BBQs for longer than 15 minutes, and just left a bowl of candy on his steps for Halloween.
Then came the day everything changed.
I was reading when a knock sounded at my door.
When I opened it, Mr. White was standing there, looking more anxious than usual. A thin layer of sweat coated his forehead, and his skin was the color of old parchment.