Rancher Jack’s morning began like any other—coffee steaming in his hand, boots pressing into the dry soil. But when he reached his cornfield, his chest tightened. The stalks had withered overnight, and scattered across the earth were smooth, pale eggs unlike anything he had ever seen. Instinct told him to smash them with his shovel, but his daughters clung to his arm, pleading for him to wait.
Soon, the unease spread across the farm. The chickens refused to leave their coop, and one disappeared without a sound. The pigs paced their pen, restless and agitated, as if the air itself carried a warning. At night, a low hum rolled from the fields, deep and steady, rattling the windows and Jack’s nerves alike.
The signs grew harder to ignore. A barn cat limped home, trembling and wild-eyed, as if it had brushed against something it should not have. Later that day, Jack’s youngest tugged at his sleeve, whispering that the eggs were moving. Against his better judgment, he followed her into the rows of brittle stalks, drawn by equal parts dread and a strange sense of duty.
By sundown, Jack stood surrounded—dozens of shells glowing faintly beneath the dimming sky, each pulse of light syncing with the hum that filled the air. He couldn’t explain it, but he knew one truth in his bones: the land was no longer his. Something older, stranger, had claimed it.The farm wasn’t dying—it was being reborn. And when those eggs finally opened, Jack understood, the world he knew would end, and another would begin.