HOA President Cut My Gate, Then My Ranch Records Took Everything-mdue - Chainityai

HOA President Cut My Gate, Then My Ranch Records Took Everything-mdue

The sound came before the shouting.

Metal bit into gravel, tires gasped all at once, and Cordelia Lancaster’s white Range Rover dropped like something in it had finally understood gravity.

I was still on the phone with 911 when it happened.

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From my porch, I could see the open gate, the cut chain, the bolt cutters on the ground, and Cordelia standing beside the SUV with her phone in one hand and fury all over her face.

She looked at me as if I had personally offended the laws of nature.

Maybe, to her, I had.

People like Cordelia get used to doors opening when they speak in the right tone.

My gate did not open because she persuaded it.

It opened because she cut my chain.

That mattered.

It mattered more than the Range Rover.

It mattered more than the damage estimate that would later land around eighteen thousand dollars.

It mattered because everything that followed had already been written down.

My grandfather bought those forty acres in 1958, back when the west side of the county was more pasture than subdivision.

He cleared the first road by hand and kept every receipt in a tobacco tin my father later kept in his shop.

When my father passed the place to me, he gave me the deed, the surveys, and one sentence.

“Know every inch.”

I took him seriously.

For thirty-five years, I worked as a civil engineer, which means I spent a life watching small measurements become very expensive when people ignored them.

A boundary line is not an opinion.

A recorded easement is not a rumor.

A private drive does not become public because someone wealthy finds it convenient.

After my wife Margaret died, I came back to the ranch full time and rebuilt the old gravel road myself.

It ran from the county blacktop through my gate and up toward the house, two hundred meters of white limestone bordered by pasture and fence line.

I liked the quiet of it.

Then one March morning, Cordelia’s Range Rover came through the gate without permission.

It moved too fast for a wrong turn.

I walked down and found the chain still hanging, but the hasp bent just enough for a person to work it loose by force.

I did not accuse anyone that day.

I photographed it.

Then I wrote the time in my pocket notebook.

Tom Briggs, my closest neighbor, told me he had seen the same SUV several times already.

He said the driver was Cordelia Lancaster, president of the Magnolia Estates HOA, the subdivision that bordered my western fence.

He also said she was an attorney.

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