The Weight of Light
Eric Davidson woke with the strange sensation that his body had forgotten something essential.
It took him several seconds to understand what it was.
He felt lighter.
Not rested, rest had little to do with it, but reduced, as though some invisible measure had been quietly adjusted during the night. His limbs felt hollowed in a way that was neither painful nor weak, just unfamiliar. When he sat up, there was a momentary sway, a brief loss of orientation, like standing too quickly after a long kneel.
He waited for it to pass.
It did.
The morning light filtered through the curtains in thin, pale bars. Outside, the land was calm again, rinsed clean by the night’s rain. No thunder now, no wind. Just the soft sound of water dripping from leaves and gutters.
Eric dressed slowly, attentive to each movement. His clothes hung differently on him this morning, looser, though he could not have said why. The fabric brushed against his skin with less resistance, as if his shape had subtly shifted.
In the bathroom mirror, his reflection looked ordinary enough. Tired eyes. A face drawn thin by weeks of quiet effort and discipline. Yet something in the angle of his shoulders felt changed, as though his posture had adjusted itself overnight.
He frowned, then turned away.
Outside, the field waited.
He crossed the yard and stepped into the grass. The presence was there immediately, as it had been for days now, close and attentive. It felt neither protective nor threatening, simply aware. Eric had begun to think of it less as something that followed him and more as something that moved with him, occupying the same moments from a slightly different angle.
The first stone greeted him with its familiar warmth.
But the warmth was stronger now.
It radiated outward in a shallow gradient, heating the grass around it, drying dew that still clung elsewhere in the field. Eric stood near it and felt the sensation press lightly against his calves, his knees, his hands. The air shimmered faintly above the stone’s surface, though the morning remained cool.
He moved north.
The second carving answered with its own change. The air here felt denser, heavier, pressing inward rather than outward. When Eric breathed, his chest expanded against resistance, as if the space itself had weight.
He stood between the two stones again.
The balance he had felt the day before returned, deeper now, more insistent. The opposing sensations flowed through him, warmth rising, cool pressure settling, meeting somewhere behind his sternum. He became aware of his heartbeat, not loud or fast, but precise.
Measured.
For a fleeting moment, the field seemed to lean toward him.
Eric staggered, catching himself before he fell. The sensation passed, leaving him unsteady and faintly nauseated. He moved away from the stones and sat in the grass, breathing slowly until the world steadied.
The presence did not withdraw. It remained close, its attention unwavering.
He laughed once, quietly, without humor.
“This isn’t right,” he said.
The words felt insufficient.
As the day wore on, the effects became harder to ignore. His movements required less effort. Tasks that would normally tire him, carrying boards from the shed, walking the length of the field repeatedly, left no mark on his breathing. At the same time, a strange fatigue settled into his bones, as though energy were being drawn from him without leaving exhaustion behind.
He drank water, then more water. It did little to help.
By afternoon, the light itself felt different. Sunlight struck the field with greater intensity near the stones, its warmth pooling there as if caught by invisible contours. Eric noticed his shadow thinning when he walked between them, edges blurring unnaturally.
He returned to the convergence point in the west.
The soil there had risen slightly overnight, not enough to call it a mound, but enough to notice. The circle of warmth had expanded, its boundary pressing against the stakes he had placed. When he stepped inside the arc, the air changed instantly.
Sounds dulled. Colors deepened.
Eric felt a sudden, profound awareness of his own mass, how it pressed against the ground, how gravity held him in place. And beneath that awareness came something else: the sense that his weight was being measured.
Evaluated.
He stepped back out quickly, heart pounding.
The presence tightened, its attention narrowing to a sharp point. Eric could almost feel its concern, not emotional, but structural, as if the integrity of the moment mattered.
That night, he ate little. Food sat heavily in his stomach, resisting digestion. He lay awake long after dark, the ceiling fan tracing slow arcs above him.
When sleep finally came, it brought vivid, unsettling images.
He dreamed of standing beneath a sun that did not burn but pressed. Its light pinned him in place, drawing something upward from his body in thin, luminous threads. Around him, stone faces turned slowly, aligning themselves with the pull.
He woke drenched in sweat, gasping.
Outside, the field glowed faintly.
Eric sat up and stared through the window. The glow was subtle, barely perceptible, a soft radiance outlining the stones and the western arc. It faded as his eyes adjusted, leaving only darkness behind.
But the impression lingered.
By morning, he knew with absolute certainty that the changes were no longer limited to the land.
The field was not just responding to the sky.
It was responding to him.
