The HOA Chairman Brought Machinery To Crush My Child’s Treehouse, But He Crossed The Wrong Line

Chapter 1: The Notice Nailed Beside The Child’s Ladder

The orange tag was nailed through the lowest rung of the ladder.

Samuel White saw it before he saw the split in the wood, before he saw the bent nail head glinting in the early light, before the words on the paper made sense. The tag fluttered against the tiny treehouse he had built three summers ago, its corner tapping the ladder like a finger that had come to accuse him.

VIOLATION NOTICE.

The letters were black and too large for something attached to a child’s ladder.

Samuel stood in the wet grass with his coffee cooling in one hand and his work gloves tucked under his arm. He had come outside to tighten the railing where the left post had loosened after a week of wind. He had already laid out the small wrench, the sandpaper, the replacement screws, and the tin of weather sealant on the bottom step. His plan had been quiet. Half an hour before the neighborhood woke. Fix the railing. Oil the hinge on the little trapdoor. Pull the grass away from the edge of the metal gate where it always grew too thick.

Instead, someone had driven a nail into the treehouse.

The treehouse was barely taller than Samuel’s shoulder. It sat on four posts at the edge of the front lawn, tucked behind the hand-forged metal gate that framed the narrow walkway. The roof was patched from cedar scraps. The tiny porch rail was crooked in a way Samuel had never had the heart to correct because the child had helped hold it while he drilled. A blue wind chime hung from a hook near the ladder, made from bottle caps, beads, and two bent spoons that rang softly whenever the breeze moved through.

The orange tag covered half of it.

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