The three of them had perfected the routine long before they stood on that porch. They watched first. They always watched. Patterns revealed weakness faster than threats ever could. The house on the corner had been under quiet observation for weeks—sometimes from a parked car at the end of the block, sometimes from the sidewalk across the street pretending to scroll through a phone. An elderly man lived there alone. He watered the lawn every Tuesday morning, collected his mail at precisely four in the afternoon, and turned off the porch light at ten. No visitors. No grandchildren playing in the yard. No delivery trucks beyond the occasional grocery drop-off.
To men who had learned to see opportunity where others saw routine, it looked like easy prey. They had just come out of prison, each carrying resentment like a second spine. None of them spoke about starting over. They spoke about leverage, about quick wins, about reclaiming what they believed the world had denied them. The old man’s house, solid and well-kept, felt like an answer. They knocked just after sunset, timing it so the street would be dim but not suspiciously dark. When the door opened, they expected hesitation, fear, maybe even pleading.