Barn wood creaked under a blistered roof. Cicadas rasped like torn zippers, gnats frenzied in heat-stung hush.
Pappaw’s tools stood like deacons, rakes, blades, shovels, a rust-bitten vise clung to the bench like a wounded jaw, bolted there decades before I was named. Its grip slick from the sweat of every hand that disappeared. The dust smelled of grease and something sweeter, like old rain hidden in burlap.
Out back, the wheelbarrow slept beside the seed spreader, its mouth open as if to confess. I built stories in those shadows, called it a castle, called it a ship, called it the edge of the world before I knew what endings meant.
I was a boy who heard grief in hinges, saw narrowed eyes in the heads of railroad spikes, spoke aloud to heroic hammers like they might answer. I named everything before I knew what not to love.
It wasn’t make-believe. It was how the world arrived to me, in stories, in gestures, in objects aching to speak.
The *** leaned inward, as if listening. The seed spreader waited like it still had something to offer. The wheelbarrow, tilted, cradling sleeping rain and maybe me, once.