The Stillness Before
Evening gathered slowly across the Midwest plain, quiet as a breath drawn and held. The air was mild, cool enough that the windows of Eric Davidson’s small house stood open. From the front room, he could see the last of the sunlight folding itself along the top edge of the garage roof. Beyond that roofline stretched the broad field, his field, fifty yards of grass and low weeds that swayed in a gentle, unhurried rhythm.
Eric sat in his usual place beside the large window, elbows on his knees, his coffee mug cooling on the sill. He had not switched on the lamp yet. The light outside was still strong enough to trace every dust mote in the air, and he preferred that thin, honey-colored glow to anything electrical. In it, the world looked suspended, half-real, half-dreaming.
The house was small but tidy, a lifetime’s worth of quiet effort pressed into its corners. A worn jacket hung over the back of the chair. The scent of the evening, cut grass, the faint mineral tang of soil, the distant sweetness of cornfields, drifted through the screen. Somewhere to the east, a dog barked once, and the sound faded quickly, as if the land itself absorbed it.
The property had changed since spring. The field beyond the garage had been wild for years, a tangle of thistle, wild carrot, and creeping vines. That summer, Eric had started reclaiming it. Each week he mowed another strip, steady and deliberate, until the grass lay neat and low, bordered by a fringe of golden weeds. The work had become a kind of meditation, hours of the mower’s low engine and the rhythm of walking in straight lines under the sun.
He told himself it was about the land, but he knew it wasn’t just that. His body had been changing too. For years, weight had clung to him like armor. Then, quietly, the armor began to loosen. The scale’s numbers fell with the passing weeks, each digit a small victory. He had begun to feel light again, as if he were emerging from a fog that had lasted a decade.
Now, in this long dusk, he sat still and listened. The air hummed faintly with insects. A breeze slipped through the trees behind the house and whispered against the siding. The world was calm, perfectly calm, but under the calmness, something else waited, a stillness so complete it pressed against the skin.
Eric’s eyes followed the sky above the garage roof. A thin crescent moon had appeared, pale and early. The color of the sky deepened toward indigo, but even as it darkened, the horizon seemed to hold a strange brightness, like a veil of light refusing to fade.
He watched that brightness for a while, trying to name the feeling that had come over him. It wasn’t fear. Not yet. More a kind of expectancy, a pause between one breath and the next.
Inside the house, the old clock in the kitchen ticked with soft precision. Somewhere in the wall, a pipe clicked as it cooled. Each sound seemed deliberate, placed exactly where it should be.
He leaned back, his reflection faint in the glass. His face looked thinner than it had a month ago. The angle of his jaw caught the last light, sharp and unfamiliar. The pupils of his eyes were wide, gathering the dim. For a moment, he thought he saw movement behind his reflection, something in the sky beyond it, a shift of brightness.
He blinked.
The light outside pulsed.
It was subtle at first, like the afterimage of a flashbulb, but it lingered too long to be imagined. The horizon above the garage shimmered with a white-gold radiance, expanding silently, until the shape of the roof blurred. The air in the room seemed to thicken, heavy with invisible weight.
Eric set his cup down carefully. The ceramic touched wood with a faint clink. He rose, drawn toward the window.
The glow grew brighter, no, closer. It was as though the sun had reversed its course, rising again from the wrong direction. The color changed from gold to a fierce, steady white. The light filled the yard, the trees, the field, and finally the room itself.
And then it condensed.
From within the brilliance, something took form, a pattern, symmetrical, ancient. Lines curved into a circle. Eyes, nose, mouth, all too perfect, all still. It was a face, immense and burning, suspended in the air above the field.
Eric could not move.
The face did not move either. It simply was, watching him through light so bright it erased shadow. The heat pressed against the glass, against his skin. He could hear his own heartbeat. Every hair on his arms stood upright.
He thought of the sun, though it was night. He thought of fire, though the air was cool. He thought of eyes that had been waiting for him longer than he had been alive.
And then, as quickly as it came, the light folded in upon itself, shrinking until it became nothing more than the ordinary blue-black of the evening sky. The field returned. The world exhaled.
Eric remained by the window, his hand flat on the glass. The surface was warm to the touch.
He stayed that way for a long time, listening again to the sounds he knew, the wind in the grass, the ticking of the kitchen clock, the distant crickets tuning their tiny instruments. Everything seemed normal, every piece in its place.
Yet he could not shake the feeling that the world outside had tilted slightly, as if the earth itself had taken a breath it hadn’t meant to.
Finally, he turned off the lamp he had never turned on, walked through the dim hallway to his bedroom, and lay awake long after the house had gone completely dark.
Outside, the field waited, silent beneath the stars.
Next - Part II: The Vision’s Echo
