My father called three days after my graduation. I remember because I was sitting outside my tiny off-campus apartment in New Paltz, eating leftover pasta from a plastic container while looking at job listings I could not afford to relocate for. The May air smelled like wet grass and gasoline from the road nearby. My phone buzzed across the metal patio table, and when I saw “Dad,” my stomach tightened automatically. Douglas Fry did not call to chat. Every conversation with my father felt like a performance review from a manager who already disliked you. “I’ve got something for you,” he said without greeting. “Drive up Saturday.” No congratulations. No mention of my degree. Just instructions. Their main house sat outside Rhinebeck on fourteen manicured acres bordered by old stone walls and maple trees. Garrett’s black BMW was already in the driveway when I arrived. Through the open kitchen windows, I could hear laughter. My mother kissed my cheek when I walked in but kept one hand on Garrett’s shoulder the entire time, like she was physically drawn toward him by gravity.
My father waited until coffee before finally sliding a thin manila folder across the table toward me. “Your inheritance advance,” he said. Garrett smirked into his espresso cup before I even opened it. Inside were property papers. Tax records. Survey maps. My name. A place called Briar Hollow Farm. Two hundred acres outside Hudson Valley with a collapsing farmhouse, dead soil, broken fencing, and unpaid property taxes dating back nearly a decade. I looked up slowly. “You’re giving me a farm?” My father shrugged. “Not much good for anything else.” Garrett laughed openly then. “Honestly, Siena, it’s probably perfect for your environmental thing.” Environmental thing. Four years of study reduced to two dismissive words. My mother gave me the same sympathetic smile people use when handing children consolation prizes. “Sweetheart, the city apartment made sense for Garrett’s career. This place… well, maybe you can turn it into some little hobby business.” Hobby business. That phrase stayed with me all night. I drove out to the property the next morning alone. Briar Hollow looked abandoned by hope itself. The main house sagged slightly on one side. The barn roof had partially collapsed. Weeds swallowed the gravel driveway. Rotting fence posts leaned drunkenly into dead grass. But behind all that decay stretched fields. Acres and acres of open rolling land beneath the pale blue sky. And something happened to me standing there in the silence. Not inspiration exactly. More like stubbornness. Everyone in my family already believed this land represented failure. A discard. Something unwanted enough to hand to me. Fine. Let it be mine then. Completely mine. I moved in two weeks later with a mattress, borrowed tools, twenty-seven thousand dollars in savings, and absolutely no idea what I was doing. The first year nearly destroyed me. The plumbing froze in winter. Raccoons nested in the attic.
Rain leaked through the kitchen ceiling into pots I arranged across the floor at night. I worked mornings at a garden supply store in Kingston and spent afternoons rebuilding fences, clearing invasive weeds, and teaching myself soil restoration through library books and YouTube videos. My hands blistered constantly. My back hurt so badly some nights I cried in the bathtub where no one could hear me. Garrett visited once that first summer wearing loafers that sank into the mud near the barn. He looked around like someone inspecting a landfill. “You’re seriously living here?” he asked. “For now.” He shook his head slowly. “Dad says you’ll probably sell within the year.” I looked out over the dying fields. “Maybe Dad’s wrong.” Garrett laughed softly, pityingly, like I had said something embarrassingly naïve. Then he climbed back into his BMW and drove away without offering to help lift a single board. By October, my parents stopped asking how the farm was going. Not because they cared less than before. Because they had never really cared at all.
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