Some towns don't hide secrets. They make room for them. Tom Harding is not ambitious. He is competent, observant, and quietly reliable - the sort of man institutions notice precisely because he does not push back. When his life in London begins to thin - a relationship stretched across hemispheres, a career drifting into procedural grey - Tom accepts a small, vaguely defined role in a government outreach programme that prides itself on not asking questions too loudly. It requires nothing dramatic. Just presence. Just observation. Just being there. That "there" is Thame: a market town that functions perfectly well without explanation. Its pubs remember more than they admit. Its committees speak in careful phrases. Its silences feel organised. As Tom moves between commuter trains, briefing rooms, civic dinners, and rented rooms above shops, he begins to sense that usefulness is not neutrality. That being unremarkable can be a form of access. And that once you are quietly relied upon, it becomes very difficult to step away. Stone the Crows: Movement I is a tightly observed, darkly comic novella about institutions that never quite declare themselves, towns that absorb rather than resist, and the subtle danger of being the person who makes things easier for everyone else. Nothing explodes. Nothing confesses. But something has already begun.
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