The HOA Wanted My Cabin Until My Father's Survey Closed Them In-mdue - Chainityai

The HOA Wanted My Cabin Until My Father’s Survey Closed Them In-mdue

I was on the dock with a pry bar in one hand and a new cedar step under my boot when I heard heels strike gravel behind me.

That sound did not belong on my lake road.

It was too sharp and too practiced for a neighbor bringing tomatoes.

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I turned and saw Marian Chadwick standing at my gate in a silk dress, gold-rimmed glasses, and a smile that looked less like kindness than procedure.

Her son Bryce stood behind her, thirty years old, clean-shaven, and already looking past me as if I were temporary.

My father, Douglas Scott, built that cabin in the 1970s with his own hands.

He was an engineer, which meant nothing in the place was fancy, but everything had a reason.

The windows faced the morning light.

The dock sat where the water stayed calm.

The front steps were a little uneven because he always said perfect things made people careless.

When I inherited it eleven years earlier, I did not remodel it into something slick.

I replaced boards, sealed leaks, repainted trim, and kept the shelf near the door exactly the way he had left it.

Above that shelf hung a framed 1973 land survey with yellowed edges and a county stamp.

I used to think it was one of his engineer habits.

I did not yet understand that the most sentimental object in my house was also a weapon Marian Chadwick had never noticed.

She did not ask to come in.

She did not ask how I was doing.

She stood at the gate and said, “You will sign the transfer papers next week. My son needs a recovery space.”

I thought the lake wind had bent the sentence.

Then Bryce gave the porch a slow look, and I knew she had said exactly what she meant.

I asked what transfer papers.

Marian explained that the HOA board had reviewed a community reallocation framework for underused assets within the Cedar Lake Association.

She used those words like language was a gate she owned.

She said Bryce had been through a difficult period and needed a recovery-oriented living environment.

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