“The helicopters can’t fly in this storm,” the stranger said at our farm door. Moments later, he revealed something unexpected that completely changed my father’s fate and set events in motion none of us could have imagined.
There are certain sounds that don’t fade with time, no matter how many seasons pass or how many ordinary days you stack on top of them in an attempt to move forward. They don’t haunt you in a dramatic, cinematic way, not like something out of a film where everything echoes louder than it should. Instead, they settle somewhere quieter, deeper, waiting for the right moment—a shift in the wind, a sleepless night, the creak of old wood—to remind you that life can change in a single, irreversible second. For me, that sound is still the same: a splintering crack, sharp and wrong, followed by the heavy, final thud of a body hitting the ground.
It was late October when it happened, one of those in-between days where the air carries just enough chill to remind you that winter is close but not quite here yet. The sky had that pale, washed-out look that makes everything seem a little quieter than usual, as if the land itself is holding its breath. I was crossing the yard with a dented metal bucket of feed swinging against my leg, thinking about nothing in particular—just the small, repetitive concerns that come with farm life—when I saw my father on the barn roof.
