HOA Ignored His Landslide Warnings. Then the Mountain Answered-Ginny

I knew something was wrong the moment the ground groaned beneath my boots.

It was not a crack like wood breaking, and it was not thunder rolling over the ridge.

It was deeper than that, a wet, buried sound that seemed to come from the belly of the hill itself.

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The rain had turned the slope slick and dark, and the air smelled of clay, diesel, crushed juniper, and the sharp metal scent of machinery left out too long in weather.

Below me, the Highland Bluffs town homes sat in a crooked row on land my father had warned people about for most of his life.

They were new, expensive, and already wrong.

My family had owned that south face for decades, all 40 acres of steep hillside, granite shelf, old timber scar, and underground water veins that shifted beneath the soil.

My father used to walk it with me when I was small, tapping the ground with a stick and telling me where to step.

“This mountain is alive, son,” he would say.

Then he would point toward the old slide scar from 1974, where half his logging road had vanished after a storm.

I was six when that happened, old enough to remember the sound and young enough to think the earth had opened its mouth on purpose.

Dad did not forget either.

After the slide, he became the kind of man who measured everything because memory alone was not enough.

He photographed soil layers, dug test pits, mapped wet spots, recorded storm dates, and filled notebooks with sketches of the south face.

He wrote in waterproof field books and kept them in a metal footlocker with old rope, maps, a fishing reel, and a compass that no longer pointed true.

The county never cared much for those notes.

To them, Dad was just a stubborn hill man with too many warnings.

To me, he was the only person who had ever listened to the ground before it moved.

When he died, the land became mine.

I did not build on it.

I did not subdivide it.

I did not sell views to people who wanted to pretend a mountain was a blank piece of paper.

I fixed fences when elk broke them, cleared brush before fire season, and walked the old fault lines with coffee cooling in my hand.

That was enough.

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