The Marina Ribbon Cutting That Exposed An HOA President’s Big Lie-mdue - Chainityai

The Marina Ribbon Cutting That Exposed An HOA President’s Big Lie-mdue

By the time the ribbon was supposed to be cut, the lake already knew something was wrong.

The caterer noticed first.

A faucet at the new kiosk gave one sharp cough, spat a little air into an ice tub, and went dead.

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Then a server looked at the champagne station, looked at the empty pitcher in her hand, and whispered to another woman in black that the water had stopped.

That tiny whisper moved faster than the summer heat.

It reached the people in linen shirts near the dock.

It reached the row of homeowners standing under the balloons.

It reached Brenda Holloway right as she was adjusting the angle of the satin ribbon so the county lifestyle photographer could get her good side.

Across the parking lot, Caroline Mercer stood beside the service post with one hand around a metal thermos and the other inside the pocket of her faded jacket.

She did not look like the person who could stop a $3 million marina.

That was exactly why everyone missed her.

She wore muddy work boots, jeans with lake silt at the hem, and an old navy baseball cap from a bait shop that had been closed so long most of the new Laurel Ridge homeowners thought it was just a vintage logo.

It was not vintage to Caroline.

It was her grandfather’s cap.

Thomas Ellis Mercer had worn it behind the counter of Mercer Bait & Tackle when Caroline was a child, back when the road by the lake was still two lanes, the dock boards were gray, and the regulars paid for nightcrawlers in quarters.

He used to let Caroline sit on a milk crate near the register and stamp paper bags while he told people where the crappie were biting.

He had also taught her one rule that mattered more than fishing.

Water remembers who respects it.

Caroline had thought about that sentence all morning.

She thought about it when she parked her pickup where the valet workers told her not to park.

She thought about it when she walked past the balloon arch, past the shrimp trays, past the sign welcoming people to Holloway Bay Marina.

She thought about it when she saw Brenda’s name bolted onto a brass plaque as if the woman had created the lake herself.

The banner said the marina was a private luxury amenity of Laurel Ridge Estates.

The plaque called Brenda Holloway the HOA president and visionary founder.

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