They cut down my trees for their view. That’s the short version—the one you tell someone over a drink when they stare at you and say, “You didn’t actually do that.”
But yes, I did.
My name is Eli Morrison. I’m forty-three years old, and I’ve lived on my property in the foothills above Boulder, Colorado, my entire life. And what happened on that Tuesday afternoon set off a chain of events that would teach an entire neighborhood something about respect, boundaries, and what happens when people assume they can reshape the world around them without asking permission.
The longer version of this story begins on a day that seemed perfectly ordinary. The kind of normal day that almost hurts to remember afterward, because you understand how quickly everything can shift when someone decides your land is just an obstacle to their preferred view.

When A Phone Call Changed Everything
I was halfway through a turkey sandwich at my desk when my sister Mara called. Mara never calls during work hours unless something is seriously wrong—bleeding, burning, or about to turn into a legal problem. I answered with my mouth still full, not bothering with the usual pleasantries.
“Hey, what’s up?”
For a moment all I heard was wind and her breathing, like she’d been running. Like she was standing outside, moving around, trying to process something that her brain was still catching up to.
“You need to come home. Right now.”
There’s a particular tone people use when they’re trying not to panic. I’ve heard it in emergency rooms and police stations. I heard it in my sister’s voice that afternoon.
Tight. Controlled. Just barely holding together.
“What happened?”
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