Neighbor Used My Driveway For Renovations Until The Permit Betrayed Him-Quieen - Chainityai

Neighbor Used My Driveway For Renovations Until The Permit Betrayed Him-Quieen

The morning the first truck used my driveway, I was barefoot in my kitchen, watching coffee drip into a mug I suddenly forgot to pick up.

The work van rolled in from the county road, bounced over my gravel, and swung around near my garage like it had done it a hundred times.

It had not.

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The farmhouse next door had sold only days earlier.

Derek and Melissa had arrived with a moving truck, two SUVs, and the kind of excited energy people have when they think a house is about to become a dream.

I wanted to like them.

I really did.

The farmhouse was old, tired, and beautiful in the stubborn way old homes can be beautiful.

The porch sagged a little.

The siding had peeled in strips.

The barn roof looked like one hard storm might finish it.

So when crews started showing up, I told myself to be patient.

Renovations bring noise.

They bring dust.

They bring workers who do not know which driveway belongs to whom.

One wrong turn did not feel like war.

Then there was a second wrong turn.

Then a third.

Then a roofing crew parked two pickups on the edge of my gravel and ate lunch there like my place had become the break area.

I walked outside that day and waited for one of them to notice me.

One man nodded with a sandwich in his hand.

He did not move the truck.

That should have told me plenty.

My driveway is not complicated when you look at the survey.

It curves in from the road, crosses my land, runs toward my garage, and passes near the neighboring farmhouse because the two properties sit close together at the front.

From the road, a stranger might assume the gravel served both houses.

A stranger would be wrong.

The previous owners knew it.

The survey knew it.

The county records knew it.

I knew it.

Derek and Melissa either did not know or had decided not to care.

At first, I gave them the kindest possible version of events.

Maybe the contractors were confused.

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