The HOA Built A Pool On My Land, Then Asked Why It Had No Water-Quieen - Chainityai

The HOA Built A Pool On My Land, Then Asked Why It Had No Water-Quieen

By the time the first child asked why there was no water in the pool, Trevor Haskins had already stopped smiling.

That was the detail I noticed first.

Not the balloons tied to the gate.

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Not the folding table covered with lemonade cups.

Not the photographer trying to decide whether an empty pool still counted as a celebration.

I noticed Trevor’s smile slipping, because for six months that smile had been the loudest thing in Ashwood Meadows.

It had been on flyers, in newsletters, at board meetings, and in every little speech about community vision.

It had been aimed at me once, too, right after he told me my survey stakes were making the neighborhood look cheap.

I owned the land beneath his vision.

That was the problem.

Fifteen years earlier, I bought a narrow strip along the back edge of Ashwood Meadows because it was quiet, boring, and useful.

No house sat on it.

No one threw birthday parties there.

It was grass, a gravel path, and a permitted water connection I had installed when I thought I might run a small irrigation project.

The project never happened, but the land stayed mine.

Every year I paid the taxes.

Every few months I walked the boundary.

Every time new houses appeared nearby, I checked the county records because land has a way of becoming interesting the moment other people want it.

For a long time, the neighborhood ignored me.

The first HOA board sent cheerful newsletters and worried about mulch colors.

Then Trevor became president.

He was the kind of man who could turn a parking-space conversation into a speech about standards.

He wore his title like a badge, and he loved the sound of his own certainty.

When the recreation project flyer arrived, I was eating toast at my kitchen table.

The headline promised a brighter future for Ashwood Meadows.

The drawing showed a pool, pavilion, seating deck, equipment room, walking path, and a row of shrubs drawn like little green soldiers.

At first I thought it looked nice.

Then I saw where they had placed it.

The blue rectangle sat directly on my parcel.

I pulled my survey from the filing cabinet.

I put the flyer beside it.

I checked the parcel lines once, then twice, then a third time because I wanted the mistake to be mine.

It was not mine.

The HOA had placed its entire dream on land it did not own.

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