They Demolished My Lake House for My Brother—I Made Them Pay
I pulled into the gravel driveway of my lake house just after noon on Friday, already exhaling the week out of my chest. The sound of tires crunching on stone had always been the signal that the real world was falling away behind me. Three days off.
No clients, no calls, no emails flagged urgent. Just me, the Hill Country lake, and the little house I’d spent five years turning into a sanctuary. The drive from Austin had taken exactly two hours and seventeen minutes, the same route I’d taken dozens of times before.
Past the highway exits that grew progressively more rural, through the small towns where gas stations doubled as restaurants, finally onto the winding roads where cedar trees pressed close to the asphalt and the air smelled like limestone and water. I had been fantasizing about this weekend for six weeks, ever since I’d closed the Henderson deal that had consumed every waking hour of my life. Commercial real estate brokerage in Austin was lucrative, but lately the pressure had been suffocating—fourteen-hour days, client dinners that stretched past midnight, negotiations that required the diplomatic skills of a UN ambassador and the patience of a saint.
This lake house was supposed to be my antidote to all of that. When I opened the front door, I thought I had walked into the wrong house. The cream sofas I’d found at an estate sale in Fredericksburg—the ones I’d spent a weekend reupholstering myself, choosing fabric that wouldn’t show stains but still felt luxurious—were gone.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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