Friday, May 15, 2026

The Waiting Place


The place had no walls, yet it felt arranged.

White mist drifted in every direction, luminous and soft, concealing distance rather than defining it. Vision did not end so much as it gave up, dissolving gently into brightness. The ground, if it could be called that, was firm beneath the feet, smooth and pale, like polished marble remembered from a dream.

Scattered throughout the open expanse were pieces of furniture: desks, chairs, low tables, all pristine and white, elegant in a way that suggested purpose rather than comfort. They stood as if part of a waiting area, an office of sorts, though there were no doors to pass through, no counters to approach, no clocks to consult. Nothing here measured time.

Sound was muted. Not silent, but softened, as if every noise had to pass through layers of cloud before being allowed to exist.

Seated among the furnishings was a soul.

It was shaped like an adult human, upright and composed, hands resting loosely in its lap. Its features were smooth and unfinished, suggestive rather than specific, as though identity had not yet settled into place. There was no age to it, and yet there was history, an accumulated weight that did not burden, but informed.

The soul remembered other lives. Many of them. Each one distinct, each one folded neatly into memory. It remembered decisions made too confidently, moments where pride had spoken before wisdom had time to arrive. Not with regret exactly, but with awareness.

This life would be different.

“I wondered if you would choose now,” a voice said.

The soul looked up.

Gabriel stood nearby, his presence calm and immediate, as though he had always been there and had simply waited to be noticed. He was radiant without being blinding, authoritative without force. His expression held something between kindness and inevitability.

“Yes,” the soul said. Its voice carried clearly, untouched by echo. “It is time.”

Gabriel inclined his head slightly. “You have been at rest long enough.”

The soul nodded. “I have considered it carefully.”

“I know.”

They waited together in the mist, surrounded by the quiet geometry of white desks and chairs, all of it suspended in a space without edges.

“You understand,” Gabriel said, “that this is the final meeting.”

“I do.”

“The life you have chosen is not an easy one.”

The soul smiled faintly. “None of the worthwhile ones ever are.”

Gabriel regarded it with something like approval. “You know the conditions of your birth. The place. The mother. The circumstances.”

“Yes,” the soul said. “I know her name.”

“And you accept the challenges you will face there.”

“I do.”

A pause settled between them, not empty, but reverent.

“You have chosen this life,” Gabriel continued, “to temper what once hardened.”

The soul lowered its gaze. “Pride,” it said quietly.

Gabriel did not correct it. “Experience,” he replied instead. “Perspective.”

The mist shifted, brightening almost imperceptibly.

“You also know the cost,” Gabriel said.

The soul’s expression did not change, but something in its posture tightened.

“I will forget,” it said.

“Yes.”

“All of it.”

“Yes.”

Gabriel’s voice remained steady. “Your memories of this place. Your memories of other lives. Your certainty. Your clarity.”

The soul closed its eyes, not in sorrow, but acknowledgment.

“You will enter the world innocent,” Gabriel said. “Unburdened by knowledge that would bend your choices. You will not remember why you are there.”

“But I will still be drawn,” the soul said.

“Yes.” Gabriel stepped closer. “Direction remains, even when memory does not. The lesson you seek will follow you quietly.”

Another pause.

“What if I fail again?” the soul asked.

The question was not dramatic. It was honest.

Gabriel looked at it for a long moment. “You have failed before,” he said gently.

The soul met his gaze.

“And you are still here.”

The mist around them began to glow, light swelling from every direction, soft but insistent.

“It is time,” Gabriel said.

The soul rose from the chair. The furniture around them seemed less solid now, its edges blurring into brightness.

“I am ready,” the soul said, though unease flickered briefly beneath the words.

Gabriel placed a hand over his heart. “Go,” he said. “Live.”

The light expanded.

Mist thickened, then dissolved.

White became everything.

And then…

A newborn baby cried.

Friday, May 8, 2026

The Man on the Road


A man walked home by a moonless mile,
Where the road lay thin and old.
No wind spoke there, no owl cried out,
And the dark was deep and cold.

He heard a step beside his own,
Soft boots upon the stone,
And found a man of common face
Walking there alone.

“Good evening,” said the stranger mild,
“Do you know how far it goes?”
The traveler nodded, answered plain,
And spoke of familiar roads.

They walked a while in borrowed peace,
Two shadows side by side,
Till the stranger smiled and gently said,
“Home’s a door few reach alive.”

The man then saw the eyes were wrong,
Too patient, dark, and wide,
And the road behind them bent and curled
Where no road ought to lie.

The smile grew sharp, the face grew thin,
The voice like earth below,
“I walk with those who walk too long
And welcome who say hello.”

The man ran hard, the night tore past,
His breath a burning flame,
And dawn found him at his own door
Still whispering God’s name.

And travelers say, when roads grow quiet
And strangers walk too near,
The devil wears an ordinary face
And waits for friendly ears.

Friday, May 1, 2026

Faces in the Field - Part IX

(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”