He Removed The Bridge They Demanded Gone, Then The Flood Came-Quieen - Chainityai

He Removed The Bridge They Demanded Gone, Then The Flood Came-Quieen

The first time anyone crossed my bridge without asking, I almost said something.

It was a Tuesday morning, just after sunrise, and a woman from three houses down was pushing a stroller toward the park trail.

She waved like we had made an agreement.

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I lifted my coffee in return and let it go.

That was how most bad arrangements begin.

Not with a contract.

With one person being decent and everyone else slowly forgetting it was decency.

When I bought my house in Brookstone Ridge, the back of my lot sloped toward a narrow drainage creek.

On dry weeks, it looked harmless, just a shallow channel lined with weeds, stones, and a few stubborn sycamores.

After a hard rain, it rose fast.

The creek separated my street from the park, the walking trail, and the emergency access road that led toward the state highway.

The public way around was legal and clear, but it added almost twenty minutes on foot and longer by golf cart.

I was a civil engineer, so I built a better answer.

I did it the boring way, which is usually the right way.

I paid for a survey.

I applied for the county permit.

I had the plans inspected.

I used pressure-treated lumber, deep-set posts, steel brackets, and a walking surface wide enough for pedestrians, bicycles, golf carts, and small utility carts.

The county signed off.

The original developer knew about it.

My property lines were clear.

The bridge was mine.

For years, that was enough.

Neighbors used it because it was convenient.

Parents crossed it with strollers and lunch boxes.

Teenagers rode bikes over it on the way to the basketball courts.

Dog owners passed through with leashes and travel mugs.

During summer events, people moved across my yard as if the whole thing had been planned by the subdivision.

I had rules, but they were small ones.

No litter.

No parties on my lot.

No heavy motorized vehicles.

If I closed the bridge for repairs, people waited.

Most of them thanked me.

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