Messages From the Edge
At first, they thought the messages were weather. Static stitched through the radio after midnight, thin and wavering, arriving between the farm reports and distant gospel stations that faded in from places no one had seen. But there was rhythm inside the noise, pauses that felt deliberate, as though something stood at the far edge of the world speaking through cupped hands. The old men said it was only atmosphere and electricity arguing with one another. The boy listening in the dark did not believe them. He heard loneliness in it. He heard waiting. He began to stay awake for it. The house settled around him with its familiar creaks, pipes ticking softly inside the walls while the dial glowed amber beside his bed. Sometimes the voice almost became words. A woman once, maybe. Or something, remembering how women sounded. Another night it carried music unlike any station he could name, slow and hollow and beautiful enough to make his chest ache. He imagined cliffs at the edge of th...