HOA Locked My Cabin Road, Then Learned Who Owned The Gate Strip-Quieen - Chainityai

HOA Locked My Cabin Road, Then Learned Who Owned The Gate Strip-Quieen

The gate was new enough that the concrete around the posts still looked wet.

Daniel Mercer sat in his truck with the heater blowing at his knees and stared at the thing like it had grown out of the road overnight.

It was black steel, tall enough to make a person feel accused, with cameras on both sides and a keypad glowing blue in the cold morning.

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Beyond it sat Brier Lane, the gravel road that led to his uncle Raymond’s cabin.

Beyond that road were thirty acres of scrub pine, laurel, creek water, and an old cedar cabin that smelled like wood smoke even in July.

Daniel had inherited it in 2019, along with his uncle’s rusted tools, dented coffee cans full of screws, and the metal file box Raymond kept under the sink.

Nothing about the place was grand.

The roof leaked when rain came sideways.

The porch listed to the right.

The creek was shallow enough to cross in boots, except after storms when it went brown and fast.

But it was Raymond’s place, and now it was Daniel’s.

So when the gate blocked the only road in, Daniel did not feel inconvenienced.

He felt erased.

The sign on the keypad said Silver Ridge Estates Residents And Approved Visitors Only.

Daniel was neither, according to the HOA.

He called the number on the post and got voicemail.

Then he called the office number from the HOA website.

Richard Holloway answered on the second ring.

Daniel knew Richard by reputation before he knew him by voice.

Richard was the new HOA president, a former Marine with mirrored sunglasses, a tight haircut, and a gift for making neighborly issues sound like security threats.

In three months, he had installed speed bumps, cameras, reflective markers, and a discipline system that made grown adults whisper about trash cans.

One woman had been fined because her bin sat out too long after pickup.

One man got a warning because his Christmas decorations were considered excessive.

Silver Ridge had started looking less like a neighborhood and more like a place where mailboxes stood at attention.

“This is Daniel Mercer,” Daniel said. “Your gate is blocking the road to my property.”

Richard did not ask which property.

That was Daniel’s first clue that this had not been an accident.

“You are not a resident of Silver Ridge,” Richard said.

“I never said I was.”

“Then you can apply for temporary access.”

Daniel looked past the gate toward the trees.

Temporary access was the phrase that made the morning sharpen around him.

Not a code.

Not a mistake.

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