My Family Tried to Steal My Lavender Farm, Then the Deed Exposed Them-eirian

The first thing I saw was not Garrett’s face.

It was the black sedan turning through the gate, its headlights sweeping across the lavender rows like a searchlight.

Garrett still had my arm pinned against the truck, but the pressure of his fingers changed.

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Not released.

Not kind.

Just uncertain.

That was new for him.

All my life, Garrett Fry had moved through rooms as if someone else had already cleared a path for him.

My parents had done that clearing.

Douglas Fry had a banker’s voice, a country-club handshake, and a gift for making cruelty sound like financial advice.

Vivien Fry had the kind of smile people trusted until they realized she had been measuring them the entire time.

Together, they raised Garrett like a project and me like an inconvenience.

When Garrett graduated with his MBA, they filled his life with applause, dinner reservations, and an $847,000 luxury apartment in New York City.

When I graduated with top honors in Environmental Science, my father drove me to the Hudson Valley and handed me twelve acres nobody else wanted.

“Take this barren dirt,” Douglas said, leaning against his car like he was giving me a lesson. “At least you can’t ruin anything important there.”

I remember the way the deed felt in my hand.

Thin paper.

Heavy insult.

The house on that land had been built in 1978 and neglected for so long that the porch sagged when it rained.

There was no heat that first winter, no hot water, and no money left after taxes.

I worked fourteen-hour days between clearing brush, repairing fences, and doing remote data entry under a blanket at the kitchen table.

The windows sweated ice.

The pipes coughed brown water.

Sometimes I slept in my coat because the quilts were not enough.

I should have left.

That is what reasonable people say when they hear the beginning of a story like mine.

But leaving costs money too, and I had none.

Then one April morning, I found a strip of native wildflowers growing along the back fence.

The soil was stubborn there but alive, and I stood in the wet grass staring at those tiny blooms like they had spoken directly to me.

That was the first time the land did not feel like punishment.

It felt like a dare.

Natalie gave me $3,200 from her emergency savings account after making me sign a notebook page that said I would pay her back when “the dirt became famous.”

She was joking.

Mostly.

With that money, I rented a used tiller, bought starter plants, and printed every free soil guide the Hudson Valley Agricultural Extension office had online.

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