He knew my name.
He turned.
That’s when I saw him.
But tonight was different.
And I knew, with absolute certainty, that was a lie. End of Part 1.
I froze, half on the branch, one foot on my sill.
For a long moment, neither of us spoke. Then he smiled—slow, crooked, and dangerous. My Neighbor-s Son PART 1 - Jack Radley Rafael...
Heat flooded my cheeks. “I don’t stare.”
My name is Lena, and I had just turned seventeen. I lived at 42 Maple Street, in the kind of quiet suburban neighborhood where the biggest crime was Mrs. Gable letting her roses choke the sidewalk. The house next door, number 44, had been empty for three years—ever since the old Rafferty woman went to a nursing home. Weeds took over the lawn. The porch swing rusted. I’d grown used to the silence.
“Bad night,” I admitted.
He was perched on his own roof, one knee drawn to his chest, a cigarette burning between his fingers even though he couldn’t have been older than me. The moonlight hit his face—sharp jaw, dark eyes, a small scar cutting through his left eyebrow. He wasn’t looking at me. He was looking at the sky, like he was waiting for something to fall.
I watched from my window as they unloaded: a worn leather armchair, stacks of books in crates, a guitar case with a cracked latch, and boxes labeled Fragile – Records in sharp, angry handwriting. The new neighbor was a woman—sharp-shouldered, dark-haired, always smoking on the porch like she was posing for a black-and-white photograph. Her name, I learned from my mother, was Celeste Rafael. She was a pianist. Divorced. And she had a son.
I should have climbed back inside. I should have pulled the window shut and locked it and forgotten this ever happened. But something about the way he said my name—like it was a secret we now shared—kept me there. He knew my name
Here is of the story. My Neighbor’s Son Part 1: Jack Radley Rafael The first time I saw Jack Radley Rafael, he was climbing out of his own bedroom window at two in the morning.
Tonight, my father had yelled at me for two hours about my “attitude.” Tonight, my chest felt like a clenched fist. I couldn’t sleep. So I did what I always did when the walls felt too close: I slid my window open, swung one leg over the sill, and dropped onto the old oak branch that stretched between our houses.