A Piedmont Lantern Story
By Tuesday, the town had moved from noticing to placing.
There is a difference.
Noticing is casual.
Placing is work.
“Let’s think about this thing, now,” Beulah Mae said, as if calling a meeting of minds over scrambled eggs. “When was the last time anyone actually saw Vernon?”
That word actually shifted things.
Actually meant with eyes.
Actually meant in person.
Actually meant not guessing.
Pearl leaned against the counter and considered. “He was in here,” she said slowly. “That much I’m sure of.”
“How sure?” Earl asked.
Pearl shot him a look that suggested he might want to tread carefully.
“He sat in that booth by the window,” she said. “Drank coffee. Didn’t order much.”
“Did he say anything?” Beulah Mae asked.
Pearl paused.
“He mentioned the construction out on the bypass,” she said at last. “Said it was coming whether we liked it or not.”
“That sounds like Vernon,” Earl replied.
“Did he sound upset?” Beulah Mae pressed.
Pearl hesitated. “No. Just… settled.”
That word hung there.
Settled.
Across town, Mrs. Hollis had taken to looking through her February calendar as if the answer might be written between appointments.
The pages told her she’d had a dentist visit and a casserole to prepare. They did not tell her whether she’d seen Vernon.
She called her sister again.
“I keep thinking it was before that rain,” she said. “The long one.”
“That week did stretch,” her sister agreed. “Creek was near the top of its banks.”
“And Highway 78,” Mrs. Hollis added, though she wasn’t sure why she was adding it.
Highway 78 had begun to occupy space in people’s thoughts like a piece of furniture that had always been there but suddenly seemed oversize.
Down at the bank, one of the clerks mentioned casually, “He came in that Monday before it rained.”
Oliver Kinzalow’s head lifted slightly.
“You’re sure?” he asked.
“Well, pretty sure,” the clerk amended quickly. “It was the week the storm settled in.”
“What did he come in for?” Oliver asked, careful to sound disinterested.
“Just routine. Account matter. He asked a question about property valuation.”
Oliver folded his hands.
That had been before their meeting.
Or after?
He replayed it in his mind.
The meeting had been on a Tuesday.
Rain began on Wednesday afternoon.
Heavy by Thursday.
He remembered Vernon stepping out into a gray sky.
“I don’t drive the interstate,” Vernon had said.
“I know,” Oliver had replied, distracted.
Why had he remembered that detail now?
Because everyone else had begun remembering too.
By midday, Babbling Brook Road saw more passing traffic than usual, though nobody would admit to making a special trip.
The Tate house remained unchanged.
No sign in the yard.
No moving truck.
No estate sale.
No note on the door.
Just absence.
Beulah Mae, who had decided thinking alone wasn’t producing results, knocked on the Tate door that afternoon.
She didn’t really expect an answer.
She didn’t receive one.
The sound echoed oddly in the quiet.
She stood there longer than necessary, feeling foolish.
“You’ve always kept to yourself,” she said softly toward the door. “But that don’t mean you get to vanish.”
She stepped back and looked down at the edge of the driveway.
If a car had left during that week of rain, tracks would’ve been swallowed quickly. Babbling Brook Road was clay beneath the gravel. Clay remembered rain, but it did not preserve detail.
“Since when?” she muttered again.
That phrase had become less rhetorical.
That evening, the bypass construction came up again at the diner.
“They’re pushing for early summer movement,” Earl said. “Investors don’t like delay.”
“Who does?” Pearl replied.
“They’ll need that last strip,” Earl added without thinking.
The table grew quiet.
Nobody said Vernon’s name.
But it hovered.
Pearl wiped down a table and said, “He was always mighty particular.”
“That he was,” Beulah Mae agreed. “Didn’t seem the sort to leave without straightening things.”
That observation landed harder than the others.
Vernon Tate was not a man who left loose ends.
And yet:
Porch light dark.
Mailbox gone.
Buick absent.
No word.
No sighting.
No farewell.
By nightfall, the town had reached an uncomfortable conclusion.
They could not confidently place the last time Vernon Tate had been seen alive and well in Piedmont.
That thought, once admitted, changed everything.
It did not mean something terrible had happened.
It only meant something had happened.
And the rain, steady and relentless in memory, had begun to wash away the edges of certainty.
Out beyond the bend of Highway 78, where gullies ran deep, and the land dipped without warning, the earth held its silence.
Piedmont, at last, had begun to listen.


Piedmont had begun to listen. Super, Jim
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They’re slow, John, but they do poor work.
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😊
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It’s amazing to me, Jim, that folks in Piedmont still hadn’t found what had happened to Vernon, though they were seriously trying to figure it out, hearing what others had to say.
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Yessir, slow to action. I reckon we’re about to begin getting some answers, now. Thanks, Tim.
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😊
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