The Silent Companion
The next morning came without ceremony. No mist this time, no dramatic light. Just a pale sun and a sky scrubbed clean of clouds.
Eric Davidson woke before the alarm he no longer needed, his body rising from the bed as if pulled upward by habit rather than rest. Sleep had come in fragments, thin dreams that slipped away the moment he reached for them. He lay still for a few seconds, listening to the house settle, to the distant rustle of leaves beyond the walls. Everything sounded ordinary.
It was that ordinariness that unsettled him most.
He dressed slowly and moved through the kitchen, pausing by the window out of reflex. The field lay unchanged at first glance. The mowed grass still followed its neat lines. The shed leaned in its familiar way, gray boards weathered and soft at the edges.
But the stone remained visible. A dark, circular interruption in the green.
Eric poured coffee and did not sit down to drink it. Instead, he stood at the counter, eyes fixed on the field, as though the stone might shift when unobserved. It did not.
When he stepped outside, the air carried the dry scent of late summer, dust, sun-warmed grass, the faint sweetness of distant crops. Cicadas rattled in the trees, their sound rising and falling like static.
He crossed the yard and entered the field again. This time, he noticed the sensation immediately.
It was not a sound or a sight, but a subtle pressure, as though the space around him had grown more attentive. The feeling followed him as he walked, keeping pace just behind his shoulder.
Eric slowed. Then stopped.
The sensation remained.
He turned slightly, half-expecting to see someone standing there, an early jogger, a neighbor cutting across his land. But the field was empty.
He exhaled and continued forward.
At the stone, the feeling intensified. The air seemed denser, heavier, as if layered. He knelt again and brushed his hand across the carved face. The warmth was unchanged. The stone felt patient, enduring.
“This wasn’t here,” he said aloud.
The words did not echo. They simply disappeared into the open space.
He stayed there longer than he meant to, tracing the grooves with his eyes, memorizing the angles. The carved rays around the face were not evenly spaced. They formed a pattern that suggested intention rather than decoration.
When he stood, he became aware, suddenly, unmistakably, that he was not alone.
Not in the sense of being watched from afar, but accompanied. The presence was close, nearly overlapping him, yet entirely without form. It did not move independently. When he shifted his weight, it shifted too.
Eric’s heart beat harder. He scanned the field again. Nothing. No movement.
“Hello?”
The word felt foolish the moment it left his mouth. The presence did not respond. It did not retreat either.
He took a few steps away from the stone. The pressure followed. He turned back toward it, and the sensation aligned with his movement, as if tethered to him rather than the object.
It dawned on him then, not as a thought, but as a quiet certainty, that the presence was not something that had arrived from outside. It had always been there. He had simply never noticed it before.
He walked the length of the field, the presence beside him like a shadow that refused to cast itself. Each footstep felt slightly amplified, as though the ground were paying attention.
Near the northern edge of the mowed grass, something caught his eye.
Another rise.
Smaller than the first, but unmistakable.
Eric stopped several yards away. The presence beside him seemed to lean forward, attentive.
He approached slowly. This second mound lay closer to the shed, partially hidden by grass that had not yet been cut. When he cleared it away, the familiar shape emerged once more, another face, carved into stone.
It was the same. And not the same.
The features matched exactly, but this face was oriented differently. Where the first had aligned with the rising sun, this one faced north, its eyes angled toward the cooler, darker stretch of sky.
Eric sat back heavily, the grass prickling against his palms.
He looked between the two locations, measuring the distance. The stones were not randomly placed. They marked points, deliberate and precise.
As he rose, the presence remained close. He found himself turning slightly, gesturing without thinking, as if explaining something to someone just out of sight.
“It’s the same one,” he said quietly. “See? Just… turned.”
The presence offered no reply, but the act of speaking felt necessary, grounding.
The rest of the day passed in fragments. Eric paced the field, marking distances with fallen branches, sketching rough lines in the dirt with the toe of his boot. He did not know what he was mapping, only that his hands moved with purpose.
At times, he forgot about the presence. At others, he was acutely aware of it, especially when he stood between the two stones. In those moments, the air hummed faintly, like a wire pulled taut.
By late afternoon, clouds began to gather. The light flattened, shadows dissolving into gray. Eric stood near the center of the field, looking west, where the grass grew taller and more unruly.
He could sense something there. Not a carving, not yet, but a suggestion, a weight pressing upward from beneath the soil.
The presence beside him seemed to hold its breath.
Eric did not move closer.
The first drops of rain fell, darkening the grass in scattered patches. He turned back toward the house, the field stretching behind him, patient and expectant.
That night, he dreamed of walking the field again, the stones glowing softly under a sky that rotated slowly overhead. The presence walked with him, silent and steady. When he reached the place beyond the mowed grass, the earth stirred, but before anything could rise, he woke, heart pounding, the image unfinished.
Outside his window, the field lay dark and unmoving.
But somewhere beneath it, something waited.
