A Fake HOA President Turned Blue After Breaking Into the Wrong Pool-Ginny

The first time I heard Brenda Whitmore in my pool, I thought a branch had fallen into the water.

It was early, the coffee was still dripping, and the kitchen smelled like dark roast, toast, and the faint chlorine that always drifted in through the window when the filter kicked on.

Then came another splash.

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Not a branch.

A person.

I pulled the curtain back and found Brenda, our 52-year-old HOA president, doing laps across my inground pool in Willowbrook Heights, Colorado, like she had reserved a lane at a country club.

My towel was around her shoulders when she climbed out.

My chaise lounge had been dragged into the sun.

My outdoor fridge was open, and one of my water bottles was sweating in her hand.

I stood there with my mug half-raised, watching a woman trespass on my property with the confidence of someone who had never once been told no and believed it.

Then she walked to my back door, dripping across the concrete, and taped a fine to the glass.

$500.

Unsafe pool chemicals. Fix now.

My name is Nathaniel Fletcher, and I teach high school chemistry.

That matters because pool water is not a mystery to me.

It is pH, chlorine, alkalinity, calcium hardness, cyanuric acid, temperature, sunlight, contamination, filtration, and documentation.

It is not whatever Brenda Whitmore decides it is at 6:00 a.m. with a clipboard.

Six months before that morning, I inherited my grandmother’s 1970s ranch house after she passed.

The house was modest, but the backyard was the kind of place you remember from childhood even if you never had it yourself.

There were rose bushes my grandmother had entered in county fairs, smooth concrete warmed by the sun, and a pool that caught the evening light like a bowl of glass.

After my divorce, that pool became a reset button for me and my 12-year-old daughter, Zoey.

She practiced dives there after school.

I graded lab reports at the patio table.

Sometimes we ate frozen pizza on paper plates while the pool filter hummed and the roses smelled sweet enough to make the whole yard feel forgiven.

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