He Sold Access To My Private Dock Until The VHS Tape Played Out Loud-Ginny

The first time I heard a man shouting from my dock, I thought someone had fallen into the lake.

It was early enough that the kitchen still smelled like coffee, and I was standing at the sink in the robe I wore when I did not plan to be seen by anyone except the trees.

Then I looked through the window and saw a pontoon boat tied to my cleats, a cooler sitting on my boards, six strangers holding fishing rods, and Big Frank Delaney sitting in my folding chair as if he had been born there.

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He wore a red baseball cap, bare feet, and the easy smile of a man who had never been asked to move twice.

“Go ahead, folks,” he called to the men in the boat. “This one belongs to the association.”

That was a bold thing to say about a dock I had bought forty-three days earlier.

The house at the end of Willow Bend Road was supposed to be the first peaceful thing I had owned in years.

The divorce had left me with savings, an old car, and a strange quiet that followed me from room to room.

My ex kept the larger house and most of the furniture, but I kept the part of myself that still knew how to sign for something and mean it.

The cedar lake house was small, drafty, and badly in need of paint.

Still, the deed listed the dock, the boathouse, and the shoreline as part of Lot 18, and I had read that line so many times I could have recited it in my sleep.

I stepped outside and told Frank he was standing on private property.

He looked me up and down, smiled wider, and said, “Morning, sweetheart. You must be the new lady.”

I said I must be, and he must be the man on my dock.

The fishermen behind him shifted in that uncomfortable way people do when a free morning suddenly develops a legal problem.

Frank did not shift.

He leaned against my railing and told me the old Haverson dock had been community access for years.

I told him there was no community access in my deed, no easement in my closing papers, and no line on the county plat map that turned my backyard into his launch service.

He laughed softly and said a dock on a shared lake was like a church pew.

Nobody owned it just because they got there early.

I told him I had not gotten there early.

I had gotten there with a mortgage, a deed, and a key.

He told his friends to pack up because the newcomer liked rules.

Then he pointed at the planks under his boots and said he had put half those boards down himself.

I said he should have asked the old owner for reimbursement, not a kingdom.

He stared at me long enough for the morning to feel colder than it was.

“You will learn,” he said.

I drove that afternoon to the small office beside the community ramp and asked the association president, Lester Pruitt, to explain why strangers were being sent to my dock.

He read my closing papers, rubbed both hands together, and told me Frank had been around the lake a long time.

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