My Neighbors Dug A Two-Acre Lake On My Land While I Was Out Of State—Then Told Me Their Contractor Said It Was Theirs, And That Was The Day I Learned How Expensive Arrogance Can Be

My Neighbors Dug A Two-Acre Lake On My Land While I Was Out Of State—Then Told Me Their Contractor Said It Was Theirs, And That Was The Day I Learned How Expensive Arrogance Can Be

The first thing I noticed was the color.;

Blue.

There was blue where no blue had ever belonged.

 

I had come over the ridge in my old Ford with the windows down and the late-summer heat pouring through the cab like breath from a furnace. The road back there was not really a road, just two hard-packed tire tracks running between waist-high grass, sweetgum saplings, and a line of pines my grandfather had planted before my father was old enough to hold an ax. I had driven that path thousands of times in my life. I could have done it blindfolded, though my grandfather would have slapped the back of my head for saying so. Every rut had a memory. Every bend had a reason. The land opened at the top of the ridge the same way it always had, rolling down into my southern pasture, dipping toward the spring, rising again toward the old stacked-stone fence that marked the boundary between Mercer land and the property south of it.

Only now, in the middle of that pasture, the sunlight flashed off water.

For a few seconds, my mind refused to understand what my eyes were seeing. I stopped the truck with one boot still hovering over the brake and stared through the dusty windshield. It looked like a mirage at first, one of those heat tricks Alabama can play on a man in August when the air is thick and the horizon shimmers. But mirages don’t have cut banks. Mirages don’t have raw red clay piled in mounds. Mirages don’t have excavator tracks carved deep enough to hold yesterday’s rain.

I killed the engine and listened to it tick itself quiet.

 

The pasture below me had been opened up like somebody had taken a blade to it. A wide basin stretched across nearly two acres of land that had been mixed hardwood and grass when I left nine days earlier. Water had already gathered in the bottom, brown-blue and still, reflecting the sky like it had every right to be there. The banks had been shaped. Straw had been thrown over the edges. A pipe ran from the direction of my spring, diverting the water that had fed our creek for longer than I had been alive. The spring that my grandfather had cleaned by hand with a shovel and a wheelbarrow. The spring my father used to drink from when he was a boy. The spring my wife and I had once walked to on a hot July evening, back before there was no wife to walk with anymore.

I opened the door and stepped out.

The smell hit me then. Diesel, wet clay, cut roots, churned earth. A smell like violence dressed up as improvement.

I walked down the hill slowly because if I moved too fast, I was afraid the anger would get ahead of me. The ground had been chewed by heavy machinery. Young oaks lay snapped and half-buried in the dirt. A white oak sapling my niece had planted five years earlier was gone entirely, nothing left but a torn root ball rolled against a mound of clay. The grass was crushed flat where tracks had turned. The spring channel had been cut and redirected, its clean, cold water feeding the new basin instead of following the shallow line it had followed since before my family owned the place.