They didn’t just cut trees. They erased a father’s shade, a family’s history, and called it a “view.” Neighbors smiled over stumps they never earned,
waving permits like absolution. By the time I saw the damage,
the chainsaws were silent—but something older had woken up. Roots. Memory. Boundaries. They thought the law was on their side. They forgot it was also in m… Continues…
They believed the story began with their view and ended with my loss. It didn’t. It began decades earlier, with my grandfather’s pen on an easement that gave passage,
not permission to erase what grew on our side of the line. While they boasted about legality, I read the fine print they’d never bothered to see.
Grief steadied my hand where fury might have shaken it. I didn’t answer their arrogance with shouting; I answered it with distance measured in detours and fuel receipts.
The road they’d treated as theirs folded quietly back into mine.
When the county map caught up with the truth, their confidence shrank to fit the facts. They had to come to my table, not as victors but as debtors,
and reckon tree by tree with what they’d taken. Money can’t regrow a lifetime of shade, but it can mark the cost of ignoring consent.
The saplings I planted are thin, their shadows small,
yet they stand on a boundary made visible—each leaf a quiet verdict that what is convenient is never the same as what is right.