
The cul-de-sac is a perfect circle. Identical houses, clipped lawns, flags on every mailbox. But in every neighborhood, there is one house the children dare each other to touch. In this anthology series, Luna brings you the stories of that house—and the people who lived there before the street went quiet. Each episode is a self-contained tale set on or around the same suburban loop, where the mailman stops delivering, the porch light flickers for no reason, and the grass grows faster in one yard than all the others. These are stories of marriages that ended in the crawlspace, of kids who vanished between the front door and the back fence, of HOA covenants that demand more than a signature. Luna narrates each account in a low, intimate voice—as if she is sitting beside you on a curb, watching the last daylight drain from one particular roofline. No wraparound, no ongoing arc: just a collection of half-remembered addresses where something still answers the door. The bike in the street still has its training wheels. The house at the end has never met a neighbor. Listen once, and you'll start checking your own block for shadows that don't belong.