My neighbors’ house burned down, and the whole town called it a tragedy. Donations poured in. Sympathy everywhere. But I, the retired math teacher next door, knew numbers—and timing—never lie. When the insurance investigator came knocking, they followed with their fake tears. “Don’t waste your time, Eleanor,” the husband sneered. I smiled. “Maybe,” I said softly, “but my new bird-watching camera doesn’t miss a thing… especially at night.”

When the fire trucks screamed down Maplewood Lane that night, I was already awake. Insomnia is a curse of age, but sometimes it lets you see things others miss. Through the lens of my new 4K bird-watching camera—mounted to face the backyard feeders—I saw the first flickers of flame lick across the side of the Johnsons’ house.

It was past midnight.

The sky glowed orange, and within minutes, neighbors poured into the street in pajamas and slippers, their faces painted by the flames. People said it was tragic.

“Such a young couple,” they whispered. “Just starting out.”

I’d always thought there was something performative about Tyler and Madison Johnson.He was too charming, too polished for a man who claimed to manage “property investments,” and she smiled with the brittle tension of someone rehearsing empathy.

They’d moved in six months ago, driving a brand-new black Tahoe and installing a hot tub before the boxes were even unpacked. By morning, the Johnsons were being comforted in blankets by the fire chief. Their house was a smoldering skeleton.The fire department ruled it “suspicious but undetermined.” The Johnsons sobbed on local TV, talking about losing “everything.” Within days, a GoFundMe page popped up, and money poured in—ten thousand, then twenty, then thirty.

I didn’t do it for attention. I did it because numbers, like truth, never lie—and because even when your eyes grow dim, you can still see perfectly in the dark.

VA

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