I drove out to Oklahoma expecting the kind of silence that feels like a clean sheet pulled tight over the world. Wind through corn, cattle somewhere beyond the rise, the soft clack of a screen door the way my dad’s place always sounded at dusk. What I did not picture was the metallic roar of bulldozers tearing into soil that still remembered my father’s hands.The sound hit me before I even turned onto the long dirt drive: engines revving, trucks reversing, men shouting over machinery like they were building a highway instead of standing in the middle of a cornfield.
The air smelled wrong before I could see anything. Not just dust and sun-baked grass.