The first warning appeared as a slip of paper tucked under our windshield wiper. Written in bold block letters and finished with three dramatic exclamation points, it declared, “One car per house! Move the extra one or else!” We laughed. Our street had no such rule, and both of our cars were parked legally in front of our home. We assumed it was nothing more than a grumpy note from a self-appointed neighborhood enforcer.
Three days later, we woke to the sound of metal chains and grinding winches. Pulling back the curtains, we saw two tow trucks already lifting both of our cars by their front wheels. We rushed outside in pajamas, only to find our new neighbor standing nearby with her arms crossed and a satisfied smile. “Maybe now you’ll follow the rules,” she called out. Her confidence was impressive, considering there were no rules to follow.
Instead of panicking, we stayed calm. I walked over to the cars and pointed to the small etched permit plates on the windshields—official tags tied to a classic-and-specialty vehicle program with strict towing restrictions. The tow operators noticed immediately. Their posture changed as they read the codes, and one muttered something under his breath before unhooking the chains. Our neighbor’s confidence faltered as she realized what was happening. I explained gently that arranging an illegal tow doesn’t punish the vehicle owner—it shifts all fines, fees, and penalties to the person who filed the false complaint.
She asked how much, her voice barely steady. I listed the costs: two trucks, protected vehicles, weekend rates, administrative fines. The number was staggering. Her face went pale. Within minutes, both cars were back on the asphalt and the tow trucks were gone. I told her calmly that we wanted to be good neighbors, but inventing rules and calling for enforcement without checking facts never ends well. Since that morning, our street has been peaceful. No notes. No threats. Just two cars, legally parked, and a quiet reminder that sometimes the best response is patience—and knowing your paperwork.