He posted online that I ‘stole’ the mountain from our family. When he broke into my shed with two hired men, he learned what trespassing really costs. My deputy made sure of that.
They forgot to invite me to Christmas. Again.
It wasn’t the first time my family “forgot” to include me in things. Growing up as the quiet middle child between my golden-boy older brother, Nathan, and the baby genius, Emma, I was used to being overlooked. But after Mom died last year, the divide turned into a canyon. I didn’t even get a call.
So, while they all posted photos of hot cocoa, snow-covered porches, and matching pajamas from our childhood home in Colorado Springs, I took a different route. I used the bonus from my latest case—I’m a contract lawyer—and bought myself a mountain. Not just a cabin. Not just a plot. An entire mountain: 480 acres in the San Juan range. Unincorporated land. Untouched. Mine.
It was petty, sure. But I needed something untouched by them.
That was two months ago.
Today, they showed up. My brother Nathan, his new wife (who’d never even spoken to me), and a locksmith. They didn’t know the cameras were running. They didn’t know I’d been living there full-time for three weeks, quietly moving legal titles, installing systems, finalizing deed restrictions.
Nathan didn’t even knock. He marched up to the gate with the arrogance of a man who thought the world still owed him something. The locksmith hesitated at the keypad. Then the deputy walked out from behind a snow-covered pine.
“Afternoon, folks,” said Deputy Clay. “Can I ask what you’re doing on private property?”
Nathan gave a charming smile—he’d always been good at that. “This used to be family land,” he lied, already spinning his version. “We’re just accessing what should rightfully belong to us.”
“That’s interesting,” I said, stepping out onto the porch with a mug of coffee and my lawyer, Angela, right behind me.
Nathan froze.
Angela stepped forward, holding up a folder. “All legal documents are registered with the San Miguel County Clerk. The land was privately purchased in December by my client, Leah Porter.”
That’s me. Leah.
Deputy Clay crossed his arms. “Any attempt to enter this property without permission will be considered criminal trespassing.”
Nathan’s jaw worked. His wife whispered something. The locksmith had already backed toward his truck.
They thought I was alone. They thought I was weak.
They had no idea….To be continued in C0mments 
The next day, the emails started. First from Nathan.
“Leah, don’t do this. Mom would want us to share everything.”
Then from Emma.
“This is insane. You can’t just buy a mountain and lock us out of our own childhood.”
Funny. They hadn’t said a word when I was left off the group chat. Forgotten. Again.
Angela warned me they might try a legal angle. She was right.
By Friday, a cease and desist letter landed in my inbox—signed by a family estate lawyer hired by Nathan. The claim? That our parents had “verbally agreed” the San Juan land (which they never owned, nor visited) would be divided between siblings as part of a non-existent “family legacy.”
Angela laughed when she read it. “They don’t have a foot to stand on. You didn’t buy family land. You bought foreclosure property from a private seller, with a clean title and zero encumbrances.”
But Nathan didn’t care about law. He cared about image.
When he couldn’t win through the courts, he went to social media.
He posted photos of the mountain—ones he must’ve taken when he trespassed—captioned with things like “Family land stolen by greed,” and “My sister, the snake.”
It didn’t get the sympathy he expected. Turns out, people don’t like a rich man whining about not getting land he didn’t pay for.
Then came the escalation.
One night, I came back from town to find tire tracks in the snow. The cameras showed Nathan and two guys breaking open one of the sheds I’d just stocked. They took gear, tools, even a generator.
Angela moved fast. She filed for a restraining order and pushed the DA to press charges.
Deputy Clay personally delivered the paperwork to Nathan’s front door. I watched the footage later—he looked stunned, betrayed, furious. Like he truly believed I was supposed to let it all slide because we shared blood.
But I didn’t slide.
I doubled down.
Within a week, I’d installed solar-powered floodlights, expanded the perimeter cameras, and upgraded the gate with biometric locks.
This mountain was mine. And no one—no brother, no lie, no nostalgia—was going to take it.
Winter melted into spring, and the case Nathan tried to build against me evaporated under scrutiny. His lawyer quietly withdrew. The judge dismissed their claim without a hearing.
Meanwhile, I kept building.
Not just structures—though I did add a glass-walled studio and a greenhouse—but a sense of peace. For the first time in my life, I wasn’t Leah the overlooked, or Leah the backup plan. I was Leah the owner. Leah the architect of her own damn story.
Emma tried to patch things up. She called in April, her tone hesitant.
“I didn’t know Nathan would go that far. I just… didn’t want us to break apart completely.”
I listened. I didn’t hang up. But I didn’t make promises either.
Nathan, on the other hand, went silent. The last I heard, he’d sold his SUV to cover legal costs. He’d even tried to sue the locksmith for “incompetence.” It didn’t go anywhere.
That summer, Angela and I hosted a retreat on the mountain—just six people. Writers, lawyers, thinkers. No siblings. No apologies.
One evening, as the sun dipped behind the ridge, she turned to me on the deck and said, “You know, this place—what you did—it’s not about revenge.”
I sipped my wine and smiled.
“No,” I said. “It’s about memory. And what happens when you finally decide who gets to write it.”
In the end, it wasn’t the mountain they wanted. It was control.
But you can’t take what was never yours.
And you sure as hell can’t take it from me.