A Piedmont Lantern Story
The state trooper did not call it in immediately.
He stood there a full thirty seconds longer than he needed to, just to be sure he was seeing what he thought he was seeing.
The glint lay half-obscured beneath brush and fallen limbs, a muted curve of metal dulled by clay and weather. Not shiny. Not dramatic. Just wrong.
He slid down another careful step, boots shifting in the loose earth. The gully was deeper than it looked from the road. The slope narrowed at the bottom, collecting runoff in a way that could hide something for months if the rain had been heavy enough.
He brushed aside a limb.
Tan paint.
He exhaled slowly.
The car had settled nose-first, angled into the slope, half-buried in brush. From the highway above, it was nearly invisible. The guardrail ended too soon, just as Earl had said it did. The shoulder dipped without warning. Rainwater had carved channels that disguised slide marks long ago.
The trooper stepped closer.
The driver’s side window was shattered inward.
The windshield was cracked but intact.
No smoke. No scent of anything recent. Just damp earth and old leaves.
He circled carefully.
The driver’s door stood slightly ajar.
That was the detail that made him reach for his radio.
⁂
Sheriff Reeves arrived within twenty minutes.
He didn’t hurry down the slope. He took his time. Men who have worked long in small towns learn to respect gravity.
At the bottom, he stood beside the trooper and looked.
“Well,” he said quietly. “That’ll do it.”
The license plate was caked in clay, but readable once wiped clean.
Tan Buick.
Registered to Vernon Tate.
The sheriff closed his eyes briefly, not in grief, but in calculation.
“Any sign of a body?” he asked.
The trooper shook his head. “Not in the vehicle.”
Sheriff Reeves nodded once.
The driver’s door hung open.
That meant something.
He stepped carefully around the front, scanning the brush beyond.
If Vernon had crawled out, he would have moved downhill. The gully curved, narrowing into a shallow run that fed toward the creek.
Rain would have washed blood.
Rain would have blurred footprints.
Rain would have taken most things that needed taking.
But rain does not erase everything.
The sheriff crouched near the driver’s seat.
No wallet visible.
No obvious personal effects.
A scattering of glass on the seat and floor.
He straightened.
“Call it in,” he said. “Search the gully in both directions. Check upstream toward where it feeds.”
⁂
Back in Piedmont, the word had not yet traveled.
Pearl was refilling coffee.
Beulah Mae was telling Mrs. Hollis that she didn’t intend to imagine worst-case scenarios.
Oliver Kinzalow was reviewing a revised projection schedule for Mary Magdalene Methodist Retirement Village.
At Babbling Brook Road, the Tate house remained quiet.
The porch light didn’t flicker.
Then the sheriff’s cruiser rolled slowly into town.
Not with a siren.
Not with urgency.
Just steady.
Sheriff Reeves stepped into the diner first.
It was instinct. Information belongs where speculation began.
Pearl saw his face and set the pot down.
“You found something,” she said.
He nodded.
“Car’s been located,” he replied evenly. “Down 78. Timber bend.”
Silence swallowed the room whole.
Beulah Mae gripped the edge of the counter.
“And?” she asked.
“And the vehicle’s empty.”
That word changed everything.
Empty.
Earl blinked. “Empty?”
“No body in the car,” the sheriff clarified. “The door was open.”
Pearl inhaled sharply.
“So, he got out,” she said.
“Looks that way,” the sheriff replied.
“Alive?” Beulah Mae asked.
The sheriff did not answer immediately.
“We’re searching the gully,” he said. “Rain was heavy that week. Hard to read what happened after impact.”
He looked around the room at faces that had built a week of memory and worry.
“I’ll say this,” he added carefully. “If he walked away, he walked hurt.”
That settled like a stone dropped into still water.
In Oliver Kinzalow’s office, the phone rang.
He listened to the sheriff’s summary without interrupting.
“Empty?” he repeated.
“Yes,” Sheriff Reeves replied. “Which means this isn’t as simple as folks feared.”
Oliver set the receiver down slowly after the call ended.
Empty meant relief.
Empty meant complication.
Empty meant Vernon had survived the impact.
What had happened after that was an entirely different question.
Out on Highway 78, deputies moved through brush with flashlights as evening approached. The gully wound farther than it appeared from above, narrowing and widening again in uneven stretches.
Near a cluster of tangled undergrowth, some twenty yards downstream from the vehicle, one deputy stopped.
There was fabric caught on a broken branch.
Dark.
Weathered.
But not natural.
He knelt and pulled it free.
A torn strip of shirt, stiff with dried clay and something darker beneath it.
He looked toward the direction the gully curved.
“If he climbed,” he muttered softly, “he didn’t go far.”
The light was fading fast.
The sheriff called it for the night.
“We’ll resume at first light,” he said.
Back in town, the air had shifted entirely.
Speculation was gone.
In its place stood fact:
Vernon Tate had wrecked.
He had gotten out.
And he had gone somewhere.
The porch light on Babbling Brook Road remained dark.
But now the darkness meant something else.
Not departure.
Not choice.
Possibility.
And in a town that had already begun connecting rain and road and meeting, possibility was more unsettling than certainty ever could be.


Empty does mean something, Good one, Jim.
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Thanks, John.
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😊
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It’s good to see they may finally find out what happened to Vernon, Jim.
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It sure gives hope, doesn’t it?
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Yes, indeed, Jim.
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