Life on our family farm used to be filled with noise—laughter, running feet, and my younger brother Leo’s endless energy. That changed last fall. The boy who once sprinted through fields and climbed fences grew quiet and withdrawn, as if sound itself had become dangerous.
The change came after one afternoon near the woods at the edge of our land. Whatever happened there, Leo never spoke of it. Instead, he refused to sleep in our shared bedroom—or even in the house. He moved into the old barn, curling up each night in the hayloft beside Daisy, our aging Jersey cow. My parents dismissed it as imagination or comfort, but I knew better. The barn wasn’t a choice. It was a refuge.