The Neighbors John Persons Comics -
Flashback: A moving truck. A young couple— Mark and Lisa —unpacking boxes labeled “KITCHEN” and “LIVING ROOM.” They smile at John Persons, who is watching from his porch. He gives a small, almost invisible nod.
“Mark and Lisa moved out on Thursday. That was their second mistake.”
Mark finds the charter online. Rule 47: “Neighbors shall not engage John Persons in conversation regarding weather, sports, or casseroles.” Rule 48: “Neighbors shall leave one (1) unopened can of sweet corn on their front porch every Friday evening.” Rule 49: “Neighbors who break Rules 47–48 will be ‘neighborly visited.’”
John Persons sits alone in his living room, watching TV. The screen shows a live feed of the empty house two doors down. He takes a bite of a tuna noodle casserole. He smiles. Barely. The Neighbors John Persons Comics
Mark laughs. Throws the charter away. That Friday, no corn. Instead, he leaves a note: “John—let’s talk this out like adults. —Mark”
Want me to continue this as a full serial or turn it into a comic script format?
Here’s a short story based on the fictional comic series The Neighbors John Persons Comics . The Unspoken Agreement Flashback: A moving truck
Mark approaches John Persons at the mailbox. Mark is holding a casserole dish covered in foil. “Hey, we’re new. Just wanted to say hi.” John Persons takes the casserole, looks inside (tuna noodle), hands it back. “No.” He walks inside. Mark stands there, confused.
That night. Mark and Lisa are in bed. Lisa whispers, “He’s weird, but harmless, right?” Mark shrugs. “Just a loner.” From their window, they see John Persons’s silhouette standing perfectly still in his backyard. Facing their house. Not moving for three hours.
Saturday morning. Mark wakes up. His lawn is gone. Not dead—gone. In its place: dark, wet soil. And written in the dirt in six-foot letters: “NO.” “Mark and Lisa moved out on Thursday
“They moved in on a Tuesday. That was the first mistake.”
Mark runs outside. Every other house on the cul-de-sac has a single can of corn on the porch. Gleaming. Untouched. John Persons stands on his own porch, hedge clippers in hand. He clips the air once. Snip.