Wes Hullbrook did not think of Lake Pemquat as property first.
He thought of it as sound.
At dawn, before motors and voices and weekend radios, the lake held every small noise and gave it back slowly.

Water tapped the cedar pilings under his grandfather’s dock.
Rope creaked against old brass hardware.
A loon called from the south cove, and the answer came back thinner, stretched across 420 acres of cold New Hampshire water.
His family had owned that water, and the lake bed beneath it, since 1857.
Asa Hullbrook bought it from a logging company after the trees were gone and the men with ledgers decided the land had no value left.
Asa saw something else.
He saw a place where children could learn wind, balance, patience, and the kind of silence that does not ask permission.
Five generations later, Wes still sailed that same silence every morning.
His father, Cyrus Hullbrook, had built the boat in 1962.
She was a Lightning-class wooden sailboat, hull number 4847, made from pine cut on Hullbrook land and bent by hand in a workshop that smelled of steam, resin, and pipe tobacco.
Cyrus named her Felicity.
Wes was 2 years old when she first touched the lake.
By 1977, he was sailing her every morning at 6:00 from May through October.
After Cyrus died 5 years earlier, at 86, Wes kept the ritual because grief had left him very few instructions.
The lake at sunrise became the closest thing he had to sitting beside his father again.
Connie understood that better than anyone.
She had owned a small bookshop on Main Street in Wolfeboro for 22 years, and she had watched her husband come home from those morning sails with cold hands, clear eyes, and some private piece of himself repaired.
Their sons understood too.
Garrett, 37, had become a marine architect in Portsmouth because his childhood had been drawn in dock lines and sail plans.
Tate, 34, had become an organic farmer in Maine, but he still measured summer by when the loons came back.
For decades, the Hullbrooks shared the lake freely.
When Pemmquat Shores Estates was built in 1998, the buyers paid $1 to $3 million for homes beside a view they did not own.
Hamish Drenan had subdivided 80 acres into 87 luxury properties, and the marketing brochures knew how to photograph water better than they knew how to explain law.
Under New Hampshire common law, the lake bed deed mattered.
The Hullbrook family had never conveyed riparian rights in writing.
Still, Wes let the residents swim.
He let them paddleboard.
He let them anchor small craft off their docks, because neighborliness felt better than enforcement.
That patience lasted until Maline Witcom mistook courtesy for weakness.
Maline arrived in 2014 with her husband Wendell, a retired Boston bond trader, and moved into the largest house in the subdivision.
She wore platinum hair, athletic clothes that looked too new for sweat, and carried a JP Morgan tote bag as if it were a badge.
In 2015, she became HOA president.
By 2018, she had decided Wes’s 6:00 a.m. sail was a community problem.
The first complaint said his sail blocked the morning light for residents drinking coffee on their decks.
The seventh complaint said the boat created visual disruption.
The 23rd complaint, filed in 2024, suggested his decades-old routine was incompatible with modern lakefront living.
None of the complaints worked.
The case law was old, plain, and irritatingly clear.
Smith versus Goffstown, decided in 1934, had already established what Wes’s deed showed.
The owner of the lake bed controlled surface use, access, and easements unless rights were conveyed.
The Hullbrooks had not conveyed anything.
A deed does not shout. It waits.
That was the sentence Wes would later use when people asked how he stayed so calm.
He was not calm because he felt nothing.
He was calm because he had learned from Cyrus that wind punishes panic.
In early July, Maline walked onto the Hullbrook dock for the first time.
She wore a Vineyard Vines sundress over a designer swimsuit, oversized sunglasses, and leather Sperry topsiders with a price tag still stuck to one heel.
She carried a manila folder in her JP Morgan tote.
Wes was on the dock bench in canvas shorts and a faded blue shirt, drinking coffee and watching the water.
She called him Mr. Hullbrook.
He called her Mrs. Witcom.
She asked to be called Maline.
He did not oblige.
That was the first small crack in her performance.
She told him the HOA had received community concerns.
He told her the HOA had received concerns from one resident.
She said the community would appreciate it if he began sailing after 9:00 so residents could enjoy dockside coffee without his sail blocking the sun.
Wes looked at the water, then back at her.
This is my lake, he said.
I sail when I sail.
Maline threatened to take the matter to the next level.
Wes told her the HOA had no next level.
The manila folder she left behind was labeled Morning Sailing. HOA Complaints. Volume 3.
Connie saw it on the kitchen table while making blueberry pancakes.
She lifted one eyebrow.
Coffee deck blocked by sail, Wes said.
For the sixth time.
Connie poured him coffee and said nothing else.
That night, Wes called Laya Brimblecom.
Laya had been his attorney for 32 years, long enough to know when annoyance had become strategy.
When Wes told her Maline had walked onto his dock with Volume 3, Laya went silent.
Then she said it was time to accelerate the project.
On Monday morning, Wes and Connie drove to Conway with a folder of their own.
Inside were 26 years of HOA correspondence, photographs of dock incursions, a 1956 survey map annotated by Wes’s grandfather, and a copy of Smith versus Goffstown.
Garrett drove from Portsmouth at 5:00 a.m.
Tate joined by speakerphone from Maine.
Laya had coffee, pastries, and a thick blue folder waiting.
The folder was about Pemquat Shores Marina LLC.
The marina occupied a 7-acre parcel on the south shore.
Fifty-one percent was held by the HOA, controlled in practice by Maline and Wendell.
Forty-nine percent was held by Edwina Quirk, 88, and Hyram Quirk, 91, of Tamworth.
The Quirks had founded the marina in 1976 with $2,000 and a handbuilt dock.
They sold controlling interest in 1998 when the subdivision was built, but they kept their minority share.
They also kept the original operating agreement.
Section 12, subsection F was the part no one in the HOA had bothered to fear.
It allowed minority shareholders to petition for forced dissolution and sale if the majority shareholder breached fiduciary duty through self-dealing, undisclosed compensation, or improper diversion of assets.
It also gave the minority shareholder the right of first refusal.
Laya then showed the compensation records.
Maline had collected $84,000 a year in undisclosed consulting fees from the Marina LLC since 2017.
Wendell’s 48-foot yacht had occupied Slip 7 free of charge since 2019.
Slip 7 was worth $2,800 a year.
The estimated improper benefit over eight years was $720,000.
Tate said Jesus through the speakerphone.
No one corrected him.
The Quirks had been collecting documentation for 2 years.
Laya had visited them 11 times.
They were willing to sell their 49% to Wes for $100,000 and file the fiduciary breach petition the same day.
The court-supervised valuation of the HOA-controlled 51% was expected to be about $1.1 million.
That afternoon, Wes drove to Tamworth.
Edwina made tea.
Hyram leaned on his cane and told stories about the first dock they built.
They remembered Cyrus.
They remembered a time when a marina was a place for boats, not status.
They shook hands at 5:00.
The closing was set for Saturday, August 23rd, at 6:15 a.m.
After that, Maline escalated as if she could sense the ground shifting without knowing where.
She organized a flotilla in mid-July.
Six HOA-owned motorboats and three jet skis circled Wes’s dock at 5:50 in the morning.
Wendell led them in a 30-foot Sea Ray, wearing a polo shirt and aviator sunglasses.
Wes launched Felicity at 6:05.
She was 15 feet of wooden patience, and she moved like she knew every breath of that lake.
He sailed straight through the flotilla, rounded the south buoy in 42 seconds, and left their wakes spreading behind him.
A local newspaper published the photograph.
Wes appeared alone in gold morning light, while the motorboats trailed at a respectful distance.
The caption asked who owned the lake.
The following week, Maline filed a reckless-operation complaint with the New Hampshire Department of Safety.
It landed on the desk of Captain Reuben Sutherland, a 61-year-old former Coast Guard chief with the New Hampshire Marine Patrol.
Reuben had graduated with Wes from Kingswood Regional High School.
They had played hockey together.
They had hunted deer together for 28 Novembers.
He drove to Wes’s dock, sat on the same bench Maline had used, and read the complaint aloud.
It claimed Wes endangered swimmers.
There were no swimmers at 6:00 a.m.
It claimed he operated recklessly.
He had not tipped a boat in 50 years.
It claimed he sailed under the influence.
At 6:00 in the morning, Wes said.
Reuben folded the complaint into a paper airplane and threw it onto the lake.
Then he drove to 48 Lakefront Drive and warned Maline about false reports.
She called him a small-town hick bought by the Hullbrook family.
Reuben laughed in her driveway.
That night, he called Wes and told him she would probably call 911 soon.
She will say you are drunk, armed, or threatening, he said.
Probably on a Saturday, before Wendell’s birthday party, with the HOA on the docks to watch.
Wes asked what he should do.
Keep sailing, Reuben said.
I will be on the water.
The week before August 23rd became a quiet operation.
Laya drafted transition orders.
Garrett finished plans for floating composite slips, solar lights, ADA-compliant ramps, and a boardwalk to the public park the Hullbrooks had donated in 1973.
Tate harvested tomatoes, basil, and zucchini for the cafe he suddenly wanted to run.
Connie contacted residents who had been embarrassed by Maline for years.
The most important was Eleanor Tisdale, a 66-year-old retired schoolteacher with a sun hat, a faded denim shirt, and a notebook full of incidents.
She had documented three years of HOA intimidation.
She had 41 residents ready to vote Maline out.
When Wes asked if she knew how ugly the morning might become, Eleanor did not flinch.
She said she had a master’s degree in education and 32 years of classroom de-escalation.
She was ready.
On Friday evening, Maline walked onto the Hullbrook dock again.
This time she wore tennis whites and a Pemquat Shores Yacht Club polo.
She carried a typed letter on HOA letterhead.
The letter demanded that Wes cease all sailing on Saturday, August 23rd, from 5:30 a.m. until 9:00 p.m. for community harmony during the Witcom family celebration.
Wendell’s 52nd birthday party was scheduled that afternoon.
There would be 200 guests, white tents, a caterer from Wolfeboro, a live band, and champagne on the lawn.
Maline wanted Wes out of the picture.
Wes handed the letter back.
He said he would sail at 6:00, exactly as he had sailed every Saturday in August for 47 years.
She said he would ruin her husband’s party.
He told her he was going to sail his boat, and if that ruined the party, the party was not well planned.
She walked away with her face hard and her shoes scuffing his grandfather’s cedar planks.
Connie came out 5 minutes later with two glasses of Maker’s Mark.
She said Maline was going to call.
Wes said she would call at 6:12.
They sat in the dusk and listened to a loon call once.
Neither of them slept much.
At 5:30 the next morning, Reuben’s patrol boat slid into position 200 feet off Maline’s dock.
At 5:45, Officer Cassidy Wyman arrived in an unmarked Marine Patrol pickup and walked down to the Hullbrook dock.
Connie brought coffee.
Cassidy nodded and said nothing.
The sun rose at 5:42.
Wes launched Felicity at 6:05.
The wind was seven knots out of the north.
The lake was glass flat near the eastern shore.
He passed Maline’s dock at a respectful 120 feet.
She stood there with coffee in one hand and a cell phone in the other.
At 6:12, she lifted the phone.
Cassidy’s body camera was already running under one-party consent rules.
Maline told the dispatcher that a man was sailing a wooden vessel recklessly, without safety equipment, under the influence.
Then she added that he had threatened to ram another boat, yelled profanities at her son, and endangered swimmers.
There were no swimmers.
There was no son on the dock.
Wes had not yelled.
At 6:14, Cassidy motioned Wes in.
He tied Felicity to the cleat and stepped onto his own dock.
Cassidy told him Maline was filing her third false 911 report in 71 days.
Reuben would process it on the official patrol log.
Then Wes’s phone vibrated.
It was Laya.
The closing had finalized.
As of 6:15 that morning, Wes was the majority owner of Pemquat Shores Marina LLC.
The fiduciary breach petition had been filed in Carroll County Superior Court.
Across the water, Reuben tied his patrol boat to Maline’s dock and stepped out with a clipboard.
He waited until she finished with the dispatcher.
Then he introduced himself as the responding officer.
Maline pointed at the white sailboat.
Reuben calmly described what he had observed since 5:30.
He had seen no swimmers.
He had seen no threat.
He had seen no reckless conduct.
He had seen her place the call at 6:12 and 40 seconds.
He identified four specific false statements.
He told her the third false report in 71 days made the matter a Class B felony under the applicable statute.
Maline’s face went the color of Felicity’s mainsail.
At 6:25, Laya’s gray Volvo turned into the marina lot.
Tucker Plimpton, the 38-year-old marina manager, was unlocking the office when she handed him the documents.
He read them once.
Then he read them again.
By 7:15, he had walked every slip and verified that ownership had changed effective 6:15.
By 7:32, he emailed his resignation to Wendell.
Wendell did not answer the phone.
He was still sleeping off the previous night’s bourbon at 48 Lakefront Drive.
At 9:00, Wes drove to the marina with Connie.
Garrett was on his way from Portsmouth.
Tate was driving down from Maine.
Laya had three boxes of stationery and a draft operating policy waiting.
The office still looked like Maline.
Photographs from HOA fundraisers were on the walls.
An old Pemquat Shores Estates logo plaque hung behind the desk.
The bulletin board listed HOA-only access rules.
Wes took the photographs down.
He took the plaque down.
He removed the bulletin board.
Connie hung a new hand-painted sign.
It read Hullbrook Family Marina, open to all Carroll County residents.
Below the words was a small drawing of Felicity with hull number 4847.
Wes picked up the marina phone and called the local newspaper.
He said the marina was under new ownership.
Slip rates were reduced 28%.
The marina was open to every Carroll County resident, not just Pemmquat Shores Estates.
A free junior sailing program would begin for any child who wanted to learn.
The editor sent a reporter.
On Sunday morning, the headline said Hullbrook buys Pemquat Marina, opens to all, rates slashed, free lessons for local kids.
Maline did not attend Wendell’s birthday party.
Wendell did not attend either.
The 200 guests stood beneath white tents, drank champagne, and watched a 62-year-old wooden sailboat tack lazily across the cove.
Most of them figured out the story before the cake was cut.
The receivership petition was granted in 19 days.
The Pemmquat Shores Estates HOA was placed under court oversight for 18 months.
Maline eventually pleaded guilty to three false 911 reports, one count tied to fiduciary breach, and one count of tax evasion.
She was ordered to repay $720,000 to the Marina LLC and received 28 months in state prison.
Wendell cooperated.
He testified against her in exchange for a misdemeanor plea on the tax matter and received 6 months of home confinement.
He served it on a boat moored in Mystic, Connecticut, because Maline refused to speak to him.
Eleanor Tisdale was elected HOA president 3 weeks after the closing.
The vote was 61 to 9.
The nine no votes were Maline’s bridge club.
Eleanor’s first act was to send Wes a handwritten note thanking the Hullbrook family for decades of patience.
Her second was to repeal 27 Maline-era HOA bylaws.
Her third was to amend the HOA covenants to formally recognize the Hullbrook family’s lake ownership.
The Hullbrook Family Marina opened fully the first weekend of September.
Slip rates stayed 28% below the old HOA rates.
Tate ran the cafe and put a Caprese salad on the chalkboard made with tomatoes he had brought from Maine that morning.
Garrett’s dock plans were approved for spring construction.
The junior sailing program enrolled 41 local children in its first season.
An adaptive sailing program for veterans with PTSD enrolled 11 in partnership with American Legion Post 18 in Wolfeboro.
The first annual Pemquat regatta was held on the last Saturday in September.
Forty-seven boats registered.
Felicity, 62 years old and handbuilt by Cyrus Hullbrook, led the start.
Connie crewed.
Wes called every tack.
They won by four boat lengths.
The trophy was a small bronze loon Garrett had cast in Portsmouth.
That winter, Wes established the Cyrus Hullbrook Sailing Trust.
The trust was endowed with 20% of the marina’s annual revenue.
It paid for sailing lessons for any child in Carroll County, regardless of family income, ability, or HOA membership.
In the first year, 24 kids enrolled.
In the second, 67.
Edwina and Hyram Quirk came to the regatta.
They sat in lawn chairs at the south end of the dock and waved at every boat that passed.
Hyram told Wes three times that they had picked the right partner.
Edwina gave Connie a Wedgewood teapot that had belonged to her mother.
She said her mother believed you only give a Wedgewood teapot to people who understand what a kitchen is for.
Connie kept it above the coffee maker.
The morning after the regatta, Wes sat on the dock with Cyrus’s old coffee mug in his hand.
Mist rose from the lake.
A loon called from the south cove.
Felicity rested at the cleat.
Connie came out with coffee and sat beside him.
She said his father would have liked the regatta.
Wes said Cyrus would have called every tack himself and told him he was doing it wrong.
Connie laughed, and the lake carried the sound away slowly.
The Hullbrook family had been listening to that kind of echo for five generations.
Maline Witcom had never once been willing to be there at 6:00 in the morning long enough to understand it.
That was the part she missed.
The story people repeated later sounded simple: HOA Karen called 911 when he sailed his boat on his lake, and 15 minutes later he bought her HOA’s marina.
She thought money on a dock was the same as a deed in a courthouse.
It was not.
She thought a view could become ownership if enough people agreed to pretend.
It could not.
She thought a 911 call could turn an old sailor into a trespasser on his own lake.
It did the opposite.
It put the record in motion.
Justice did not arrive as a speech, a shout, or a courtroom outburst.
Sometimes justice looks like a wooden sailboat moving slowly in a straight line at 6:00 in the morning.
Sometimes it looks like an 88-year-old woman keeping documents in a kitchen drawer.
Sometimes it looks like an attorney’s gray Volvo turning into a gravel marina lot at 6:25.
And sometimes the strongest thing a family can do is remember what was already theirs.