By the time I crested the last hill and saw the clearing, my stomach had tightened into a knot. The trees—our trees—were gone. Not just a few, but nearly everything that had stood between our property and the neighboring estate. Someone had wanted a better view, and they’d taken it. The familiar line of pines and oaks that had framed my childhood, that had shaded summer afternoons and marked winter snowdrifts, now lay in piles of sawdust and stumps.
Mara was already there, leaning on the old fence post, hands gripping the wood like she was trying to anchor herself to sanity. “They didn’t leave a thing,” she said, her voice quieter than I expected, but trembling underneath. I didn’t reply. Words felt cheap here. Actions, I thought, would have to speak.
I pulled out my phone, called the county office, and left a terse message with the clerk I knew: “Temporary closure on Pine Hollow Road. Unauthorized work on private property. Please confirm.” Then I called a locksmith I trusted. Within hours, the gate at the end of the road would be locked, and the road itself would be officially restricted to authorized vehicles only.
Mara looked at me, confusion and awe colliding on her face. “You’re really going to do it,” she said. I didn’t answer. I walked down the road slowly, examining the damage, imagining the view as it had been, the way the light had filtered through the trees, and then the way it would never be quite the same again. This wasn’t just property; it was our history. And I wasn’t about to let someone steal that, even for a better view.
By sunset, I’d placed signs along the road: no trespassing, private property, authorized vehicles only. The gate was locked, and the county had confirmed my temporary closure. I stood back, taking in the hills that had always felt like home, now quiet, secure, and mine once more. Mara stayed behind me, silent, letting the weight of what I’d done settle around her. I didn’t feel victorious. I felt necessary.
