Will Harper May 2026
—A Friend
The drive to Stillwater took nine hours. Will did not listen to music or podcasts or audiobooks. He drove in the same silence he had built his life around, but now the silence felt different—less like a shield and more like a held breath. The landscape changed from freeways to two-lane roads to gravel paths lined with pines. By the time he saw the sign— Stillwater, Pop. 312 —his knuckles were white on the steering wheel. Will Harper
Last chance. The cabin burns on Thursday. —A Friend The drive to Stillwater took nine hours
Inside, the cabin smelled of pine and dust and something else—something sweet and cloying, like old perfume or decay. The furniture was covered in white sheets. The fireplace was cold. But on the kitchen table, where he and Sam used to eat Froot Loops out of the box, lay a fourth letter, this one propped against a mason jar filled with dead fireflies. The landscape changed from freeways to two-lane roads
At forty-seven, he’d mastered the art of it—the slight nod, the noncommittal hum, the way his eyes would drift to a middle distance that suggested deep thought but was actually just a parking lot. He worked as a claims adjuster for Meridian Mutual, a job that rewarded quiet men who could read fine print and say “per our policy” without flinching. His apartment was beige. His car was silver. His life was a series of carefully muted tones.
The letter arrived in a cream-colored envelope, no return address, postmarked from a town called Stillwater that Will had never heard of. Inside was a single sheet of heavy paper, the kind you might use for a wedding invitation, and on it, in handwritten script:
He did not come home.