The HOA Flooded My Workshop, Then Learned Who Owned Their Water-Quieen - Chainityai

The HOA Flooded My Workshop, Then Learned Who Owned Their Water-Quieen

The smell arrived before the sight did.

That is the part I still remember first.

Not the water across the floor.

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Not the table saw standing in a brown pool.

Not the toolboxes nudging the wall like tired boats.

It was the sour smell of wet wood, machine oil, mud, and something old being ruined faster than a man could save it.

I had pulled into my driveway just after sunrise on a Tuesday, holding a paper cup of coffee and thinking about a walnut table waiting on my bench.

The storm the night before had been hard, but it had not been the kind of storm people tell stories about.

It had rattled windows, knocked leaves down, and moved on.

I expected my shop to smell like sawdust.

Instead, the first breath through the door made my stomach tighten.

Water covered the whole floor.

It was not a puddle near the door or a drip from the roof.

It was everywhere.

It came up around my boots and made a soft sucking sound when I stepped in.

My table saw, the one I bought after my first big cabinet job, had water around the motor housing.

My planer sat there like a drowned animal.

The tool chest my father had painted red when I was twenty-one was tipped half open, drawers swollen and catching.

Boards I had stacked carefully for months were floating at crooked angles.

The cabinets along the back wall had already begun to split at the joints.

My wife, Karen, came out in her robe, took one look past my shoulder, and stopped.

She asked what happened, and I hated that I had nothing to give her.

For a few hours, I blamed the storm because blaming the sky is easier than blaming people.

I checked the roof.

It was sound.

I checked the walls.

They were wet at the bottom but not breached.

I checked every pipe on my property.

Nothing had broken.

By noon, the anger had not arrived yet.

Only disbelief had.

I walked behind the shop in rubber boots and followed the line where the mud had been pushed against the grass.

My property slopes toward a wooded strip, and beyond that sits Fairway Pines, the gated golf community with white fences, polished mailboxes, and a clubhouse that looks like it has never heard the word no.

I had lived beside it long enough to ignore it.

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