Rancher Found His Fence Moved 6 Feet. Then the Survey Turned Ugly-Ginny

The first time Wade Holloway noticed the fence was wrong, he thought a cow had done what cows do when a night gets windy and a board gets weak.

He had driven out before the heat settled over Blackwater Ridge, Tennessee, coffee still bitter on his tongue, feed buckets rattling in the truck bed, country radio mumbling under the engine.

Fog clung low to the north pasture, and the grass was wet enough to darken the toes of his boots.

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At first, he saw the white posts through the mist and thought his own tired eyes were playing tricks on him.

Then he stopped the truck.

The old barbed wire fence was gone.

In its place stood a clean white vinyl fence, expensive, straight, and wrong in a way that made his body understand danger before his mind caught up.

It was sitting a good 6 ft inside his pasture.

Wade got out slowly, because sudden movement felt like it might make the whole thing real.

His 32 head of cattle grazed on grass that had belonged to his family longer than he had been alive, only now the new line made it look like they were trespassing.

The morning smelled of mud, cut grass, and diesel from the construction site next door.

The vinyl fence gleamed like teeth.

Wade Holloway’s family had worked those same 40 acres since his granddad came home from Korea with 50 bucks, a borrowed tractor, and a refusal to let hard years beat him.

City people liked to say 40 acres was not much.

Out there, 40 acres could feed a family, bury a family, and become the family all at once.

Every cedar tree had a story.

Every ditch had a use.

Every rusted gate had been opened and shut by men Wade loved and then buried.

He inherited the ranch about 5 years earlier after his dad passed, and the place had come to him in the honest shape of old work.

There was a hay barn that leaned farther every winter.

There was a farmhouse porch that creaked loudly enough to announce visitors before they knocked.

There were fences that needed mending, tractors that needed coaxing, and mornings that began before sunrise whether Wade felt ready for them or not.

For most of his life, the land beside Wade’s belonged to Earl and Dottie Mercer.

Earl was quiet, the kind of man who waved from a tractor with two fingers and never wasted a sentence when a nod would do.

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