Curvy Cougar Street File
“You must be the new one,” she said, leaning against the frame. Behind her, he could see a wall of framed photographs—her at a protest, her on a motorcycle, her laughing with a glass of red wine. “Walk this street enough, kid, and you’ll learn two things.”
“What’s that?” Leo asked, nervous. curvy cougar street
Curvy Cougar Street was a half-mile stretch of asphalt that refused to be straight. It dipped and swelled like a lazy river, each turn revealing a new set of houses—older colonials, renovated bungalows, all with porches deep enough to hide a secret. The street had been laid down in the fifties by a surveyor who either had a great sense of humor or a terrible drinking problem. No two lots were the same. No two driveways lined up. “You must be the new one,” she said,
One summer evening, a new family moved into the cul-de-sac at the far end. Their son, a lanky sixteen-year-old named Leo, was tasked with returning a misdelivered package to Number 17. He walked down the street as the sun set, the shadows long and crooked. At Number 17, a woman with silver-streaked hair and a leather jacket over a floral dress answered the door. Curvy Cougar Street was a half-mile stretch of
She smiled. “That curves are more interesting than straight lines. And that a cougar doesn’t hunt—she waits for something worth her time.”