An HOA Called Him a Trespasser. Then the Deed Hit Court Hard-Ginny

She stepped in front of me before I had taken 10 steps past the gate.

The gravel access road was still damp from the morning air, and every step made a soft crunch under my boots.

Delia Hargrove held a clipboard across her chest like a barrier.

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“This is HOA property,” she said. “You’re trespassing. You need to turn around right now.”

There was no greeting.

There was no question.

There was only the tone of a person who had spent years mistaking obedience for proof that she was right.

Two men stood with her.

Voss had already raised his phone and was photographing my face.

Pruitt stood behind her in a blazer, quiet, watchful, and too comfortable with the whole scene.

I had walked maybe 30 feet down a gravel road beside Crestfield Commons, a 312-home subdivision built along the western edge of land my family had owned for decades.

I had not entered a yard.

I had not touched a gate.

I had not asked anyone for anything.

Still, Delia Hargrove looked at me as though I were a problem that needed to be removed before the homeowners noticed.

“The HOA owns this land,” she said. “It was acquired years ago.”

I felt the folded envelope in my jacket pocket.

Inside it was the kind of paper that does not care about tone.

There was a recorded ground lease from 1987, a title chain, and the first set of records showing the 1,500-acre parcel had transferred to me through inheritance.

I did not pull it out.

A person like Hargrove expects argument, because argument lets her perform authority.

Documentation works better when it arrives late.

“Who holds the ground lease for this subdivision?” I asked.

Her face changed for less than a second.

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