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I was walking through downtown Texarkana yesterday afternoon, around 4:40 p.m., near Spring Lake Park, when I realized my copy of Wild and Domestic wasn't in my backpack. The book has a tan cover with bold black letters on the spine and a faint coffee stain on the corner from reading on the park bench. I sat by the lake for a minute, and the breeze might have whisked it away as I stood up to stretch. It matters to me because I need it for a class project, and I hope it's somewhere nearby in that familiar circle of trees and path by Spring Lake Park.
I was out for a quick after-dinner stroll on Broad Street at 6:15 PM today when I spotted a tote sitting on a bench outside the Texarkana Public Library. The tote carried holiday decorations—a red garland, a string of warm-white lights, and a little silver ornament in a clear bag. They looked well-loved and clearly not mine, so I picked them up and carried them to the information desk, hoping to reunite them with their owner before the evening chill settled in. It felt good to play holiday helper, like a small moment of kindness in a busy season.
Last Saturday around 4:15 p.m., after a casual pickup game near the Spring Lake Park ballfields, I realized my equipment was missing from the back seat of my SUV. It's a navy duffel with a white stripe, stuffed with gear for several sports and a pair of worn sneakers. I retraced my steps through the Central Mall parking area and along the walking trail, but I came up empty. Losing this stuff feels personal, a reminder of routines I lean on after practice, and I’m hoping someone kept it safe in Texarkana.
On Saturday around 4:10 PM, I found a pile of old photographs tucked behind a bench near Spring Lake Park in Texarkana, Arkansas. They’re a mix of black-and-white portraits and landscape pictures, with handwriting on the backs and a faint smell of old albums. They look like family keepsakes, and I can tell they meant something to someone. I’ve kept them safe, hoping to reunite them with their owner—if these photos mean something to you, please let me know.
I lost two vintage brooches yesterday on State Line Ave in downtown Texarkana, near the Texarkana Post Office. They’re two small pieces, one a silver crescent moon and the other a blue enamel rose, both handed down from my grandmother. They carry a lot of memory, and the thought of them turning up elsewhere makes me anxious but hopeful. If someone has found them or saw them, I’d be grateful to hear what you know through this site.
Sunday morning, around 9:15 a.m., I realized my travel adapters were missing after I packed for a business trip at my hotel and headed to the Texarkana Public Library to pick up a few printouts. I remember taking them out of my laptop bag before I left the room at the hotel on Market Street and then wandering into the library; I must have dropped them somewhere along the path back to the curb on Market Street. The adapters are a compact black case with three different plug types and a red label on the zipper. I’m anxious; I travel for work and those adapters are essential for staying connected.
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