I stood up slowly and walked to the front, folder still closed. Gerald smirked and gestured at the podium like he was letting a child speak. Go ahead, sweetheart, he said. Tell us your little complaint. I set the folder down and opened it. The first page was the deed. My name, Marisol Reyes, printed in bold. The second page was the purchase agreement for the entire property management company that ran this HOA. Signed three months ago. The third page was a letter, addressed to Gerald Vance, terminating his position as board president, effective immediately. The room went quiet in that specific way rooms go quiet when everyone realizes at the same time. Gerald laughed once, sharp, like a cough. This is a joke, he said. I slid the last page across the table. A recording transcript. Him, on a private call, calling half the residents in this room trash, immigrants, freeloaders. Names attached. Dates attached. His wife, two seats away, stopped breathing. I looked at him and kept my voice soft. For eight months you fined me for existing in my own building, I said. You told my daughter she looked like the help. You told Mrs. Nguyen her cooking smelled like a dumpster. You told the Hendersons their son was lowering property values by playing basketball in his own driveway. Every fine you wrote, I paid, and I saved. Every email you sent, I archived. Every meeting, I recorded. Gerald opened his mouth. I raised one finger. You have thirty days to vacate the unit you rent from me, I said. Yes. You rent. From me. The room exhaled all at once, and someone in the back started to clap. Then another. Then everyone. Gerald sat down like his legs had been cut. My daughter met me at the podium and whispered, Mom, you were so quiet the whole time. I kissed the top of her head. I said, Baby, quiet people own the building.
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