A traveler arrives in the United States and accepts a temporary place on a rural farm in Kentucky. The setting appears stable: work, routine, generosity, space. The days move forward without urgency. Nothing seems wrong.
Yet the order depends on silence. Events reset. Words lose continuity. What felt solid begins to repeat itself, slightly altered each time. Staying requires adjustment-not to the work, but to the unspoken rules governing what may be noticed and what must be ignored.
This memoir traces the slow erosion of certainty inside a place that insists it is whole. There is no single rupture, only accumulation. What finally surfaces is not a secret, but a structure-one that cannot survive being seen.