Autumn Falls Round And Robust //top\\ [2027]

Elias nodded.

He spent the rest of that week harvesting like a man possessed. He didn’t pick the apples gently—he shook the branches and let them fall in booming drifts. He hauled pumpkins two at a time, staggering under their weight, laughing like a fool. He made pies with crusts so thick they could have been roof shingles. He pressed cider until the press groaned. He invited neighbors he hadn’t spoken to in years, and they came with their own round, robust offerings: jars of pickled beets, loaves of bread like golden cannonballs, a stew that simmered for two days and tasted like the earth’s own marrow. autumn falls round and robust

He walked to the orchard. The apples—Northern Spies, his father’s favorite—had not just grown. They had become obscene . Round as cannonballs, their skins flushed red and gold, each one so heavy it dragged the branch down to a graceful, yielding arc. He plucked one. It didn’t come off the stem—it fell into his palm, as if it had been waiting for him. He bit into it. Elias nodded

That’s when Elias understood.

It was the year’s answer to death. Loud, round, and so ripe it was almost obscene. He hauled pumpkins two at a time, staggering