HOA Ignored a $30K Dam Warning, Then Their Private Lake Vanished-Ginny

The first thing people noticed was the smell.

Wet mud rolled over the patios before anyone understood what was happening.

Dead weeds came next.

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That swampy sourness spread across Silver Ridge while Patricia Thornwell stood on the HOA clubhouse stage smiling into a microphone like she had rehearsed for applause all morning.

She had the flags out.

She had the golf carts lined along the shore.

She had children waving little HOA banners near the water as if the lake itself belonged to her committee.

“Welcome to our annual lakeside summer celebration,” she shouted.

Then somebody screamed.

It was not the kind of scream that comes from excitement.

It was panic.

“Why is the lake moving?”

Every head turned.

The waterline was dropping so fast that the shoreline seemed to breathe backward.

You could hear it pulling through the spillway, a low sucking roar beneath the bright chatter of a summer party.

The docks began to creak.

One pontoon boat struck mud with a hollow wooden crack that made people jump.

Patricia’s smile vanished.

Residents rushed toward the water with their phones raised, filming their private lake sliding away from the beach areas, boat lifts, and polished composite decks they had paid too much money to admire.

Two hundred yards away, I stood beside the old concrete spillway gate with a clipboard in one hand and a thermos in the other.

My name is Grant Holloway.

Sheriff Boon stood next to me with his hands hooked through his belt loops.

He did not say a word.

He did not need to.

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