They Cut Down My Trees for a Better View So I Shut Down the Only Road to Their Homes

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The View
The short version is what I tell at bars when someone doesn’t believe me. They cut down my trees for a better view, so I shut down the only road that led to their front doors. That’s it.

That’s the whole thing. People usually set their glass down when I say it and look at me like they’re waiting for the part where I’m joking. I’m not joking.

The long version starts on a Tuesday that felt so ordinary it almost hurts to think about. Blue sky, late September, the kind of afternoon that’s still warm enough to remind you summer isn’t quite done. I was halfway through a turkey sandwich at my desk, doing nothing more significant than reading emails about a permit application, when my sister Mara called.

Mara doesn’t call during work hours. She texts, she leaves voice messages she never fully finishes, she sends photos of things she thinks I might find interesting. But she doesn’t call, not at two in the afternoon on a workday, not unless something is on fire or bleeding or about to become a legal problem.

I answered with a mouthful of sandwich and said, “Hey, what’s up?” and what I heard was wind and her breathing in a way that told me she had been walking fast. “You need to come home,” she said. “Right now.”

There’s a particular tone people use when they’re fighting not to panic out loud.

They make their voice very controlled and steady, which is exactly how you can tell they’re frightened. That was what I heard. “What happened?”

“Just come home, Eli.”

I didn’t even close my laptop properly.

I told my manager something had come up with the family and I’d explain later, grabbed my keys, and drove faster than was strictly safe on the two-lane county road that was already my least favorite stretch of pavement in dry weather. I kept the radio off. I held the steering wheel with both hands and I did not let myself think clearly about what Mara’s voice had sounded like.

Pine Hollow Road turns off the county highway and winds east into a curve of low hills. I’ve driven it a few thousand times over the course of my life. I grew up on the property at the end of it, left for a while, came back when my father got sick, and then just stayed after he was gone because that’s what happens sometimes.

The land holds you without asking. I knew before I turned the last bend. There is a way a landscape feels when something old has been taken out of it.

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