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The Window

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The crack came first sharp and wrong like a sentence broken in half. Glass let go of itself in a small rain, and the ball finished its long mistake on the living room rug, turning once as if to see where it had landed. Outside, the crowd inhaled, then found its voice again, the game stitching itself back together without apology. Inside, the house stood surprised. Light poured through the new opening, dust lifting into it, each mote a tiny planet caught in sudden daylight. The clock kept time. The chair remembered the shape of a man who wasn’t sitting there. Summer moved through the room as if invited. He picked up the ball carefully, as though it might still be warm from the bat. Somewhere a boy would be counting the seconds, rehearsing an apology, hoping the ball might be forgiven its way back home. He set it on the mantel, a white fact against old wood, and taped cardboard over the hole until evening could decide what to do next. When the cheers drifted in again, softer now, the hou...

A Summer's Enterprise

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They spent the day in the low places where the creek forgot its name, where mud held the shape of bare feet and the air smelled green and alive. The boys moved slowly, crouched and intent, hands quick as thoughts. Frogs burst from the reeds like small, startled prayers, green, brown, spotted, leaping with the wild confidence of things that believed they could still get away. Each one went into a glass jar, lids punched with nail holes, the boys counting softly as if the numbers themselves might frighten the money into being. Fifty cents each, they said. Enough for comic books. Enough for candy. Enough to make the day worth keeping. By afternoon the jars were warm from the sun and noisy with complaint. The frogs thumped against the glass, slick bellies flashing, throats pulsing as if they were practicing arguments. The boys sat on the back porch steps and imagined a man somewhere, anywhere, who would hand over coins in exchange for living things that jumped. They did the math again and ...

If I wanted to Call

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He thought about calling the way a man thinks about opening a door he hasn’t used in years. The handle was still there. The hinges would still work. But he stood in the hallway anyway, listening to the house breathe. The phone lay on the table where the light from the lamp touched it gently, as if not to startle it. He did not want much. Just a voice. Just proof that the line between here and somewhere else was still thin enough to cross. He imagined the sound before it arrived, the pause, the soft clearing of a throat, the way a name can carry warmth without asking for anything in return. He did not rehearse what he would say. He knew better than that. Words practiced too carefully forget how to be honest. He would begin simply. Hello. I was thinking of you. He would let the rest find its own way, the way rivers do, by remembering where they came from. In the end, he did not call. But the wanting changed something. The room felt less alone. The night leaned closer to listen. And somew...

Bird Song

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The birds began before the light did. Not all at once, but one voice testing the air, then another answering, until the dark loosened its grip. Their notes were not announcements so much as reminders that the world had turned again, that breath was still required, that something ordinary and miraculous was underway. The man lay still, listening, the way you listen to rain when you don’t yet want to rise. The song slipped through the screen, through the thin places in sleep, and rested there. Outside, the yard held its breath. Dew clung to the grass like small, borrowed moons. A cardinal cut the silence with red certainty, while sparrows stitched the morning together with quick, nervous sound. The man thought how the birds never worried about the size of the day ahead. They sang because the light had come. They sang because that was the work. Somewhere between one note and the next, the sky softened from ink to blue. When he finally stood, the floor was cool and the coffee unmade, but t...

Plowed Fields

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They walked the plowed fields after the farmer had finished, when the earth lay turned and open, its dark ribs showing under a pale sky. The boys moved slowly, eyes down, boots sinking just enough to make the ground remember them. Each furrow was a promise. The air smelled of clay and iron and something older than fences. They did not talk much. Talking made you miss things. They knew what to look for, how a real arrowhead didn’t shine like glass but held the dull patience of stone. When one of them stopped, the other stopped too, as if the field itself had called them both. A bent knee. A hand brushing soil aside. Sometimes it was nothing, just a broken rock pretending to be important. Sometimes it was the real thing, a small, perfect point shaped by a hand long gone. In those moments, they felt watched, not in fear, but in recognition, as though someone from another time had leaned close to see who had found their work. They pocketed the good ones carefully and kept walking, two smal...

The First

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They chose him because he was steady. Not loud with courage, not reckless with ambition, but quiet enough to hear his own heartbeat. Before this day, the sky had always been a ceiling—blue by habit, black and salted with fire at night. Men had filled it with gods and fears and promises of heaven. As they strapped him into the narrow shell of metal and glass, no one truly knew what waited above. Would the sky thin into nothing? Would breath abandon him? Engineers spoke in numbers. Ministers spoke in prayers. He felt the engines press him back into his seat, felt the earth loosen its grip, and watched rivers lose their names and fields blur into color. The horizon curved, shy at first, then undeniable, and the world he had known all his life began to reveal itself as something whole. Then there was the quiet. Not the quiet of forests or sanctuaries, but an immense and living stillness. The earth floated beneath him—blue, white, tender—without borders, without arguments. He had expected t...

Erased Echoes

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She did not notice the silence at first. Morning came as it always did, light slipping across the kitchen floor, the kettle beginning its small argument with the stove. Her phone lay beside her plate, face up, patient. She reached for it the way one reaches for a habit, a reassurance, a thing done so often it no longer required thought. The message had lived there for months, tucked between weather alerts and unanswered calls. She never played it in public. Only in the early hours. Only when the house felt too large for one person. His voice, steady, almost casual, would say her name like it was a place he could still reach. She told herself she listened for the sound, but really she listened for the space around it, the proof that something once spoken could still stay. That morning her thumb slipped. A confirmation blinked. A second too late. The screen refreshed itself into order, neat and merciless. The message was gone. No echo. No warning. Just absence, clean and complete. She sa...