A satellite fell on a county road in 1986, and Colton Boyd was fifty yards away when it hit.It wasn't a meteor. It wasn't a weather instrument, whatever Sheriff Sawyer said when he arrived in under three minutes with a crew that already knew exactly where to stand and what to open. The wreckage had Cyrillic lettering and a Soviet star, and the people of Gardenville County had a story ready before the smoke cleared.Colton notices things. So does Siobh n, who reads people the way others read rooms. So does Jonathan, whose father keeps containment kit diagrams in a chest in the garage. The three of them start pulling the thread - quietly, carefully, the way you do in a town where everyone seems to already know their lines.What they find isn't a conspiracy. It's something older and stranger than that.Gardenville County has been managed for decades. Roads rerouted. Access quietly closed. A population that protects its own continuity without being told to, because belonging does most of the work that surveillance never could. There's no villain at the center. Only generations of people maintaining a structure until the systems outlived the reasons they were built.The satellite was just the thing that made Colton look south for the first time.Set in upstate New York in the winter of 1986, Gardenville is a literary coming-of-age novel about a teenager who learns to see the place that made him - and discovers that understanding it doesn't set you free of it.
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