Leo reached into his pocket and pulled out the folded document. He laid it on the worn wood of the table. "They want to build a shopping center and three hundred homes. They are offering five million."
"He built it from the timber of the old barn that collapsed in the flood of ’55," Rosa said, her voice steady and steel-strong. "Every scratch on this wood is a memory. This one here is from when your uncle dropped a cast-iron skillet. This one is where your father used to tap his ring when he was thinking. This house isn't made of wood and stucco, mijo. It is made of us." Casagrande
For eighty years, the Casagrande family had worked this soil. They had weathered droughts, economic crashes, and the slow, relentless march of time that threatened to turn their fertile fields into suburban sprawl. Leo reached into his pocket and pulled out