The Water Rights

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The humidity of the Mississippi Delta was a wet blanket that smelled of river mud and decaying magnolia. The Blackwood estate had once been the crown jewel of the county, but by 1890, it was a skeleton of its former self. The drought had turned the lush lawns into cracked clay and the cornfields into a graveyard of yellow stalks.

Julian and his cousin Clara sat on the porch, the silence between them as heavy as the air. They were the last two heirs of the Blackwood line, and they hated each other with a purity that only family can achieve. They were fighting over the deed to the land, a piece of parchment that promised wealth but delivered only dust.

"The river is a mile away, and it's a trickle," Clara said, her voice a dry rasp. "We'll be dead before the lawyers finish the probate."

They spent their days in a state of mutual hostility, each hoping the other would succumb to the heat first. But then came the dog—a stray, brindled cur that had wandered onto the property. The dog began to exhibit a strange behavior, digging obsessively at the roots of a dead, blackened oak tree in the center of the courtyard.

Driven by a shared, desperate curiosity, Julian and Clara approached the tree. For the first time in years, they worked together. They spent a week digging, their hands blistering, their hatred momentarily paused by the biological imperative of thirst.

When the water finally surged up—a cold, clear spring that tasted of deep earth—they didn't embrace. They didn't thank the dog.

Instead, they looked at the water and saw a boundary.

"This is on my side of the property line," Julian claimed, stepping forward to claim the spot.

"The tree is centered," Clara countered, her eyes narrowing. "The water belongs to the estate, and I am the primary heir."

The discovery of the water didn't save the Blackwood family; it ignited a war. The spring became the center of a legal and physical battle that lasted years. They built fences, hired guards, and eventually, in a fit of madness, Clara attempted to poison the spring to keep Julian from having it.

By the time the rains finally returned, the spring had been contaminated by arsenic and the estate was a ruin of lawsuits and hatred. The brindled cur had long since disappeared, leaving behind a legacy of water that had turned from a gift into a weapon.

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