They Cut Down My Trees for a Better View So I Shut Down the Only Road to Their HomesTwelve.  “And the road?” he asked.  “When the first tree goes in,” I said.  He agreed.  Three months later, the new trees arrived.  Tall, mature sycamores, lowered carefully into place by crane.  Twelve of them.  Stronger. Denser. A new beginning.  When the last one was planted, I unlocked the road.  Cars passed again.  Some drivers glanced over.  Some nodded.  Richard didn’t look at all.  The new trees stood there—young, but steady.  They weren’t my father’s trees.  Those were gone.  But these… would grow.  And someday, they’d become something just as strong.  Now, when I sit on my porch in the evening, the view is different.  Filtered.  Layered.  Alive.  I think about what happened—not as revenge, not as victory.  Just as a lesson.  Know what you have.  Know what it’s worth.  And don’t let anyone take it from you without consequence.  Because some things, once lost, never come back the same.  But sometimes… you can grow something new in their place.

They Cut Down My Trees for a Better View So I Shut Down the Only Road to Their HomesTwelve. “And the road?” he asked. “When the first tree goes in,” I said. He agreed. Three months later, the new trees arrived. Tall, mature sycamores, lowered carefully into place by crane. Twelve of them. Stronger. Denser. A new beginning. When the last one was planted, I unlocked the road. Cars passed again. Some drivers glanced over. Some nodded. Richard didn’t look at all. The new trees stood there—young, but steady. They weren’t my father’s trees. Those were gone. But these… would grow. And someday, they’d become something just as strong. Now, when I sit on my porch in the evening, the view is different. Filtered. Layered. Alive. I think about what happened—not as revenge, not as victory. Just as a lesson. Know what you have. Know what it’s worth. And don’t let anyone take it from you without consequence. Because some things, once lost, never come back the same. But sometimes… you can grow something new in their place.

And beyond it—glass houses staring down from the hill.

Hannah stood by the fence, arms crossed, her expression tight.

“I tried to stop them,” she said.

“What do you mean, tried?”

She told me everything. Two trucks. Workers with chainsaws. A work order. When she asked who sent them, they said Cedar Ridge Estates HOA.

I stared at her, trying to process it.

Cedar Ridge Estates had been built about five years ago on the ridge above my land—big homes, polished lawns, expensive views. But my property wasn’t part of their development. It had been here long before them.

A business card had been left under my windshield.

Evergreen Land & Tree Services.

I called immediately.

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