The HOA President Tried To Sell My Cabin. Then The Trap Closed.-Ginny

I never thought anyone would try to sell my cabin without telling me.

Not rent it.

Not trespass on it.

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Sell it.

The first sign came on a crisp morning at Willow Lake, when the water was flat enough to hold the sunrise in one long golden sheet.

I was on the porch with my first cup of coffee, listening to the dock ropes knock softly against the posts and smelling wet pine in the cold air.

That cabin had never been just a getaway to me.

My grandfather built it with his own two hands, using timber from the woods around the lake, and my father treated it like a living member of the family.

He taught me to fish there.

He taught me to sharpen tools there.

He taught me that land only stays yours if you respect it enough to protect it.

The cabin had weathered storms, snow, broken windows, bad summers, and years when money was tight.

It had never weathered Karen.

Karen was the president of the Willow Shores HOA, a woman who believed a clipboard gave her moral authority over every nail, mailbox, roofline, and driveway within sight of the lake.

My property was not part of Willow Shores.

That fact had been confirmed more than once by maps, deeds, and arguments that left me with headaches and her with a tighter smile.

Years earlier, she tried to fine me over the color of my cabin roof.

She said it clashed with the HOA aesthetic.

I told her the HOA aesthetic ended at the edge of my property line.

For a while, I thought that had settled it.

Then my phone buzzed.

The message was from Jim, an old friend who had known the cabin almost as long as I had.

Congrats on the sale, Jim wrote. Are you finally leaving that old cabin behind?

I read it twice before my hand even moved.

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