The first bucket of white paint made the entire town laugh.
Old men leaning against the fence outside Carter’s General Store nearly dropped their coffee mugs when they saw Ethan Brooks walking toward his orchard with a ladder balanced on one shoulder and five buckets of white limewash hanging from the back of his rusty pickup truck.
Looks like the boy finally lost his mind,” one of them muttered.
Another shook his head.
“Poor kid. Guess bankruptcy does that to a man.”
Across the road, a few teenagers pulled out their phones and started recording.
Before lunchtime, photos of Ethan standing on a ladder, brushing thick white paint onto the trunk of every apple tree he owned, had spread through every neighborhood Facebook group in the county.
The captions were ruthless.
“Maybe if he paints them white, they’ll grow snowballs instead of apples.”
“Somebody tell him Christmas is six months away.”
“The ghost orchard.”
Thousands of laughing reactions appeared before sunset.
Ethan ignored every single one.
He dipped his brush into another bucket.
One careful stroke after another.
Every trunk.
Every branch junction.
Every tree.
Three hundred and forty-two of them.
Because his grandfather had once told him something nobody else remembered.
“People laugh at what they don’t understand.”
Three months earlier, Ethan wasn’t thinking about paint.
He was thinking about selling the farm.
The Brooks Orchard had belonged to his family for almost ninety years.
His great-grandfather planted the first apple trees after returning from the war.
His grandfather expanded the orchard until it became one of the largest in the county.
His father kept it alive through droughts, floods, and recessions.
But after his parents died within eighteen months of each other, everything began falling apart.
The equipment was old.
The irrigation system leaked constantly.
The bank wanted its loan payments.
Disease had begun spreading through several sections of the orchard.
Worst of all…
The harvest had become smaller every year.
Most experts blamed climate change.
Others blamed poor soil.
Some simply said the orchard was too old to survive.
No matter the reason, the numbers never lied.
Three losing seasons.
Four overdue loan notices.
One final warning from the bank.
Unless Ethan found a miracle before autumn…
The Brooks family legacy would end forever.
His nearest neighbor couldn’t wait.
Harold Whitmore owned nearly four thousand acres surrounding Ethan’s small property.
Corn.
Soybeans.
Warehouses.
Storage silos.
Processing facilities.
If Ethan lost the orchard…
Harold would buy the land before sunset.
Everyone knew it.
Harold didn’t even hide it anymore.
One afternoon he parked his brand-new black truck beside Ethan’s fence.
He smiled the way wolves probably smiled.
“You know,” Harold said, removing expensive sunglasses, “I’ve already got the paperwork ready.”