Fake HOA Police Stopped a Soldier. Then the Real Convoy Arrived.-Ginny

I had been back from 3 weeks of desert field training for exactly 8 minutes when Copper Ridge Estates reminded me that exhaustion does not protect you from stupidity.

My truck still carried the desert on it.

Sand clung to the wheel wells, the mirrors, the trailer hitch, and every seam of the doors like the training range had followed me home.

Image

My uniform smelled like smoke, sweat, dust, and the kind of protein bars that make a person question every life choice leading up to them.

All I wanted was a shower, my mother’s casserole, and maybe ten minutes on my parents’ porch listening to my dad complain about rabbits invading his tomato garden.

Copper Ridge Estates had been my parents’ neighborhood for nearly 20 years.

It was polished in the way HOA neighborhoods like to be polished, with trimmed hedges, matching mailboxes, clay-tiled roofs, and lawns that looked too nervous to grow freely.

I grew up there before I grew into a uniform.

I learned to ride a bike on those streets.

I learned how quiet a house could feel before deployment on those sidewalks.

I learned that home is not a place because it is perfect.

It is home because people keep choosing to be decent in it.

Brenda Lockwood had been testing that theory for 5 years.

She was the kind of woman who turned small authority into theater.

When she was on the HOA board, she left warnings on doors for grass height, mailbox paint, porch decorations, trash bin placement, and once, according to my dad, a garden gnome that looked “non-compliant in posture.”

The neighborhood had once trusted her with a board seat, a printer, and access to official letterhead.

She turned all three into weapons.

Earlier that year, the residents finally removed her from the board.

It was not close.

Linda Chavez became the actual HOA president, and my dad emailed me the news while I was overseas with the subject line, “The dragon has fallen.”

So when I drove into Copper Ridge that afternoon and saw flyers taped to lampposts, I knew before reading them that Brenda had not fallen far enough.

Neighborhood Patrol Authority Active.

Enforcement Checks in Progress.

Report Suspicious Vehicles Immediately.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *