scheba's avatar
https://www.youtube.com/embed/7lPIuMxwp-c?feature=oembed

The North Field

Set in Riverbend Springs

When Grandpa Walter handed me the farm, he had one piece of advice: “Don’t plough the north field.”

Riverbend Springs was a peaceful place—rolling hills, creeks winding through green meadows, and fields that stretched out like a painter’s canvas. I’d just arrived to take over Grandpa’s legacy, but his advice lingered in my mind. He didn’t explain why, just repeated those six words whenever I asked about it. "Don’t plough the north field."

At first, I thought it was just a superstition. After all, it was a beautiful piece of land, and it seemed like a waste to leave it barren. Sure, it hadn’t been worked for years, but it had rich soil, the kind every farmer dreams of. The field was thick with overgrown grass, knee-high in places, with wildflowers poking up here and there. It looked like it had been left untouched for decades—like nature had slowly reclaimed it. Still, there was something about it that made me feel it could be revived with a little work.

I started getting to work on the rest of the farm, picking up a few contracts to get some cash flowing. With a new Fendt tractor and a used combine, I figured I was on track to make this place thrive.

But the north field still called to me. It was hard to ignore, especially with the season starting to shift toward planting.

One crisp morning, I hooked up the plough and decided to take a crack at it. I figured there was nothing to lose, and maybe Grandpa was just being overprotective. As the plough cut into the soil, something didn’t feel right. The earth turned a little too easily, as if it hadn’t been disturbed in years—but that wasn’t the strange part.

No, the weird part came after I hit a small patch near the center of the field. The soil… it wasn’t the same. It was almost like it was sticky. The plough didn’t slide through as it should have, and I had to apply extra pressure to get it moving.

I tried to shake it off, telling myself it was just an odd patch of ground. But the more I worked, the more I realized the soil was actually starting to clump together—strangely, almost like it was absorbing moisture out of thin air. My tractor started to overheat, too, for no reason. The cooling system was fine, but it kept running hot. I checked the hydraulics, the engine, everything. Nothing was wrong, but the tractor struggled with each pass.

I decided to call it a day and leave the rest for tomorrow.

But when I came back the next morning, something was off. The soil… it was like I had never been there. The clumps I had created the day before were gone, and in their place, there was fresh grass—short, not as thick as before, but covering the ground like the land had healed overnight. It wasn’t the tall, wild grass that had grown there before, but the field was far from empty. The soil was still firm, but it looked like the land had just covered itself up as if trying to erase all signs of what I had done.

I couldn’t understand it. I had spent hours working the ground, but now it seemed like none of it had happened. I tried ploughing again, but the tractor slipped more than before, and the soil still felt oddly resistant. The compacted spots from the day before? They were gone. The land had practically reset itself, covering over any trace of my work.

That’s when I started to feel uneasy.

I called Grandpa.

When he answered, his voice was tight. “You ploughed it, didn’t you?”

I told him what I’d found, and his silence on the other end told me everything I needed to know.

“That field was never meant to be worked,” he said. “It was part of an old research project, some government experiment. They used it for testing soil treatments—chemical treatments that no one ever finished. I thought I could just leave it alone and keep getting paid, but once you stir it up, that’s it. The soil reacts. It’s like it’s been waiting for someone to disturb it.”

He went on to explain how the researchers had left the land in a state that was… unstable, to say the least. The soil treatments had altered the ground in ways that couldn’t be reversed. Ploughing it only triggered the soil to begin reacting, pushing out the chemicals that had been buried in the dirt.

Now I had no choice. The north field was dead. It was a mess that couldn’t be fixed—not with a plough, not with a tiller, not with anything.

I fenced it off, posted a sign, and made sure no one would go near it again. The rest of the farm was fine. The other fields thrived, my animals were healthy, and the crops were good. But that patch of land? It was a constant reminder.

Whenever I passed by, I could feel the weight of Grandpa’s warning. Something about that soil was unnatural, and I’d made the mistake of disturbing it.

So, I keep my distance. I’ll plant everywhere else, harvest all the crops I need, but the north field? That’s one place I’ll never touch again.

projectazone's avatar

The Secret of the Lake

When my grandfather left me the farm, he left me only one piece of advice, to never go to the lake at night. He never explained why and I tried never to think about it... but then something echoed in my mind. As time went by, that phrase seemed to chase itself in my mind and it's as if that warning, in addition to being mysterious, was also an invitation to learn more. My days on the farm were long and intense, tiredness was always one thing they had in common. Waking up early in the morning, my grandfather on the porch with a mysterious manner always lost with his eyes towards the horizon. Every day like the other and every day that thought seemed to recur. The farm is my world, listening to the animals, the rustling of the grass when I pass with my tractor and when I walk through the fields at dusk. I liked my daily routine.

One day, after a hard day spent in the fields, I decided to take a break. I took my motorbike and like an arrow I went to the Central Cafe where I met my dear friend Brie. I felt oppressed and I couldn't help but tell her the story of my grandfather. She listened to me but without saying a word... it's as if she also wanted to tell me something but maybe she didn't have the courage. My curiosity didn't stop. I go back to the farm to start my day again the next day. I see my lambs jumping and the bees producing their honey. Clear sky and seagulls flying high as if something inside me pushed me to follow them. That night I get out of my bed and reach a remote place near the lake, an immense accumulation of beehives, nothing normal but I hear a noise and I run towards the lake. On the deck of the boat I glimpse a familiar figure: it looks like my grandfather, but younger. My heart beats wildly. I try to focus on that vision, but everything dissolves suddenly, like a dream that vanishes at dawn.

The surface of the water is still and I remain watching a strange house on the other side of the water and I see orange lights appear mysteriously until those same birds that had fascinated me return to fly free in the sky.

The next morning, the sun shines on my house. I take a coffee, go down the steps and listen to the silence that I love in the early morning. I watch the birds fly high again and I think that maybe grandpa was right, some mysterious things must remain a mystery. Maybe the lake holds something that must remain hidden.

https://www.youtube.com/embed/otjglAREn_8?feature=oembed

Merlinux74's avatar
https://www.youtube.com/embed/4t-sdfb5XW4?feature=oembed

 It was a day like many others in that small town where I lived. A small town with the necessary things, my bakery, shops, factories and everything I could need.  I turned on the outside lights of the bakery, before going home, I wanted it to illuminate the area of my business and show the bread I had left. I usually left it outside so that anyone who needed it could take it.  I closed the wooden door and headed towards the vehicle that would take me home.  It wasn't a special night, I just wanted to go home but something went differently. With the vehicle loaded with still warm loaves of bread that I wanted to take home, I drove along the road to my rest made of narrow streets immersed in the countryside. It wasn't a short trip, I had to spend some time before reaching my destination.  The headlights cut through the darkness revealing only brief glimpses of fields and sleeping trees. I was driving absorbed in my thoughts when something caught my attention. That nightfall wasn't like all the other times. As soon as I got home, I noticed the light on on the porch. I didn't remember leaving it on but I didn't think much about it and went inside. I took off my hat and threw myself into a chair, or at least that's the last thing I remembered.

When I woke up, the day had begun and also ended. I found myself in a strange field, it wasn't my house. It was snowing and it was night. And then it suddenly stopped and it was day, there was a large colored ball with a series of signs that said "This Way".

I followed the signs, I passed by an abandoned tractor, I saw a scarecrow... everything was very disturbing. I felt very dizzy, my heart was racing, I could only see dry leaves. Something was changing. I closed my eyes and when I opened them again there I was again in front of the bakery as if I hadn't experienced anything I said. Did I dream? Did I experience something from the future? I'll never know.

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