A $12 Title Search Exposed the HOA Gate Gloriana Thought She Owned-Ginny

Tuesday morning, my coffee was still hot when I stepped onto the back side of my lot and saw the fence I had built with my own hands sitting seven feet inside my property line.

The cedar looked wrong before my mind understood why.

Fence lines become part of how you read your own home after enough years.

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You stop seeing them as objects and start seeing them as promises.

Mine had been moved.

Fresh dirt sat in rough pale scars where the old posts had been pulled. The air smelled like torn cedar, damp soil, and the metallic bite of early morning.

A laminated notice was stapled to one of the new posts.

Property line adjusted for community aesthetic standards.

I stood there with the mug in my hand, coffee cooling while my jaw locked so hard my teeth hurt.

Then the white Lexus rolled up.

Gloriana Fitch stepped out in a cream blazer with her chin lifted and her expression arranged into the kind of smile people use when they expect obedience to be mistaken for gratitude.

“Mr. Harlo,” she said, “I think you’ll find it looks much cleaner now.”

My name is Decker Harlo, and I had lived on Creassote Ridge Road in Mineral Springs, Colorado, for 11 years by then.

I was not new to that land.

I had bought the corner lot after a decade of contract welding work that took me through oil fields in Wyoming, pipeline corridors in Texas, and frozen truck stops where the coffee tasted like burnt pennies.

When I came home to Colorado, I wanted dirt that was mine and a workshop where I could hear my own tools instead of someone else’s deadline.

The house was not fancy.

It had good bones, a sloping backyard, mature cottonwood trees, and a detached workshop where I still did custom metal fabrication on the side.

Over five years, I rewired the garage, rebuilt the back deck, repaired the drainage behind the workshop, and put up a cedar privacy fence along the full eastern property line.

That fence took three weekends, 42 posts, and about $800 in materials.

I knew exactly where it belonged because I had the property surveyed the summer before I built it.

The orange survey pins were in the ground.

I had seen them.

I had measured from them.

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