I didn’t just call a lawyer; I called someone who remembered who I’d been before I ever had land to defend. Laura named it plainly: trespass, destruction, deliberate. In court, the judge did the same. Ethan admitted the fence wasn’t his to touch, was ordered to rebuild it, and then simply…didn’t. Fourteen days passed. The volleyball net stayed. The message was clear: my boundaries were optional in his mind.
So I poured concrete and raised eight feet of steel exactly on my surveyed line. Not pretty, not symbolic—final. Ethan called it hostile. His lawsuit said “retaliatory intent.” The judge called it lawful and made him pay every dollar. Standing on my porch now, Daisy safe inside the yard, the fence is just a dark edge at dusk, holding the world where it belongs. It doesn’t feel like revenge. It feels like refusing to live smaller so someone else can live larger on what’s mine.





