For seven years, my neighbor Carl and I battled over a tiny three-foot strip of land between our houses. Lawyers, surveys, endless court dates—it was exhausting. Then, out of nowhere, Carl moved the fence back and gave me a smile, saying he’d “had enough fighting.”
I was suspicious but relieved. Finally, peace. I planted flowers, set up a bench, and started enjoying the space I had fought so long to claim. For the first time in years, the tension eased, and I thought maybe we’d turned a corner.
But one rainy night, trucks pulled up. A crew arrived to dig into a utility line—right under mynewly reclaimed strip of land. That’s when it hit me: Carl hadn’t given up at all. He’d shifted the easement problem onto my side so he could clear space to build a giant garage on his.
What he didn’t know? I had already seen the blueprints weeks earlier and filed a zoning complaint. Two days later, the city shut his project down completely. Carl’s big plans ended before they even began, and he never tried again.
As for me, I kept the strip, filled it with lavender, and made it my little sanctuary. A garden instead of a battlefield. The best revenge wasn’t winning the fight—it was sipping coffee in the quiet peace Carl could never steal.