The spider knows the world through tension. Every strand carries information. Every vibration means something. The fly is frantic. The moth is heavy thunder. Gnats are nervous tremors. This one is wrong. It has weight, but no panic. Movement, but no struggle. The spider approaches slowly, legs barely touching the silk. Then the air changes. The warning spreads across the strands - sharp, bitter, chemical. The spider stops. Not food. Never food. The spider withdraws. And begins cutting. The stink bug knows the world through surfaces. Warm means light. Cool means shadow. Vertical means climb. It pushes forward slowly, deliberately, the threads tightening around it. Movement nearby. Presence. Predator. The stink bug releases its defense. The stench spreads. Warning. Stay away. The tension loosens. The surface collapses beneath it. The stink bug climbs. Stink bugs are just nasty. Even the cat knows this. The cat sometimes investigates anyway. Instinct is stronger than judgment. ...
He had never disliked owls. In fact, he had always found them fascinating. Quiet hunters. Ancient eyes. Something old in the way they watched the world. Still...he'd had issues with them. The first time was at his father’s place near Tappan Lake. A storm had blown through the night before. He drove out late in the afternoon to check on the place. The house sat quiet beneath black walnut trees, their branches still creaking slightly in the residual winds. The broken window was easy to spot. A walnut had punched through the bedroom glass. He boarded it up as dusk settled in. The woods behind the house were already dark. The kind of dark that arrived early and stayed. Inside, the house felt colder than it should have. Still. He heard something moving in the bedroom. Small. Quick. He moved toward the lamp near the bunk beds. The floor creaked. The sound stopped. He flipped the light. The owl exploded into motion. Huge wings filled the room. Air rushed against his face. The bird launche...