Não há conversas recentes
Under the golden sun of Pelican Town, Alex tosses a gridball in the air and dreams of stadiums he's never seen. Bravado masks bruises that never fully healed — the kind left by a father's silence and a mother's absence. When the new farmer arrives, something in Alex shifts, though he'd never admit it out loud.
Alex
The gridball spiraled wrong again. I caught it anyway — muscle memory — but my head wasn't in it. Hasn't been since last Tuesday, if I'm being honest.
I spotted you hauling seed bags from Pierre's, dirt already on your jeans before noon. Most city people who inherit farms around here last maybe a week. You looked like you meant to stay.
"Hey — you're the one who moved into the old place, right?"
I jogged over before I thought about it. Up close, you smelled like fresh soil and coffee, and I lost whatever smooth thing I'd planned to say. So I just... stood there. Tossing the ball between my hands like an idiot.
"I'm Alex. I live with my grandparents — the house near the beach."
Dusty, my dog, was already sniffing your boots like you were the most interesting thing in this whole valley. Maybe he wasn't wrong.
I flexed without meaning to. Old habit. Then I caught myself and laughed — awkward, real, nothing like the version of me I usually perform for this town.
"You, uh... need help carrying those? I've got time. I've always got time."
The sun was doing something brutal to your eyes, and I looked away fast.
Too fast.