They followed the sound until they found him—not a boy, not anymore. His name was Ross, and he’d crawled in seven years ago. His skin had the waxy, translucent quality of something grown underground. His teeth were filed to points by chewing grass stalks for moisture. His eyes had the flat, patient hunger of a creature that has learned the grass provides—if you give something back.
She took one step.
Help. Please, I’m lost. Just one step in. What’s the harm?
She woke later—or earlier—to find Cal gone. Just a Cal-shaped hollow in the grass, and the doll he’d braided, now the size of a man, its button eyes staring. In The Tall Grass
The boy’s voice came again, closer now. “I’ve been here so long. You’ll help me, won’t you?”
And somewhere deeper, a baby made of roots suckles the dark soil, growing fat on time, waiting to be born wrong.
That night—if it was night—Becky gave birth. Not to a child. To a cluster of roots, warm and pulsing, that squirmed from her body and buried themselves in the soil before she could scream. Ross watched with wet, adoring eyes. “The grass thanks you,” he said. “It was hungry for something new.” They followed the sound until they found him—not
She didn’t stay. Because when he was waist-deep, the grass closed over his head like water, and his voice came from twenty feet to the left. Then fifty feet behind her.
“We’re walking in circles,” Becky whispered.
Somewhere in Kansas, a granite stone lists the names of the lost. And if you listen close, past the highway’s hum, you can hear a woman’s voice, patient now, inviting. His teeth were filed to points by chewing
Becky knelt by the stone. Tobin. She traced the letters. The stone shuddered. New letters carved themselves beneath, deep and slow, as if written in bone:
“Help. Please, I’m lost.”
Becky tried to run. She shoved past Cal, tore through the stalks, felt them whip her arms raw. But every path curved back to the stone. Every time she looked up, the sky had shifted—not clouds, but a ceiling of pale green, woven tight.