(Epilogue) What the Land Remembers
No one noticed at first.
Eric Davidson had
always kept to himself. A man who waved politely when necessary, who mowed his
field in careful, patient lines, who lived without noise or visitors. When his
lights failed to come on one evening, it meant nothing. When his mailbox filled
slowly, it was assumed he’d simply lost track of the days.
It was the field
that drew attention.
By late autumn,
the grass behind the garage no longer grew. Not dead, not burned, but arrested,
as if the season had passed it by without leaving instructions. Frost touched
everything else in the area, silvering lawns and fields alike, but the
rectangle of land behind Eric’s house remained dark and bare, absorbing the
cold without changing.
The shed still
stood, gray and leaning. The garage remained closed. The house looked intact,
though empty, its windows reflecting the sky without comment.
A neighbor
eventually crossed the property line, intending to check on things. He walked
the familiar path Eric had always used, boots crunching softly on gravel, then
stopped short when he reached the field.
At its center
lay a stone.
It was broad
and flat, embedded flush with the earth as though it had always been there. Its
surface was smooth, weather-resistant, untouched by frost. In the fading light,
the neighbor thought he saw a carving, something faint, almost worn away, but
the angle was wrong, and he could not be sure.
He did not step
closer.
There was
something about the air above the stone that discouraged it. Not fear exactly.
More a sense of finality, like a door already closed.
Word spread
quietly.
Some said Eric
had moved on. Others suggested illness, or a sudden decision to leave the
state. A few mentioned the stone, though they could not agree on its shape or
size. No one stayed long enough to examine it closely.
By winter, snow
fell everywhere except the field. It gathered at the edges, outlining the space
where the grass no longer grew, where the land refused covering.
In spring,
wildflowers bloomed around it, but not within it.
By summer,
birds avoided it.
And through all
of it, the stone remained unchanged.
Sometimes, at
dusk, when the light struck just right, the surface seemed to reflect more than
it should. Some claimed they saw a face there, calm and still, watching neither
sky nor ground but the space between.
Others felt
only a strange sense of balance when they stood at the edge of the field, a
fleeting moment where warmth and weight seemed perfectly aligned, where the
world felt briefly complete.
The house was
eventually sold. The new owners fenced off the field and left it alone.
The stone was
never removed.
The land, it
seemed, had found what it needed.
And it did not
ask again.
End of “Faces in the Field”