Landman
“Mr. Barlow. We got a problem.”
The next morning, the survey team found a previously unmapped fault line exactly where Clay had said the ground was unstable. No one questioned it. The pad moved. Oil flowed six days later.
He stood up and looked at the big picture. To the north: three million dollars’ worth of drilled but uncompleted wells. To the south: a pipeline easement expiring in seventy-two hours. And here, under his boots, one dead pioneer child who had no lawyer, no lobbyist, and no voice. Landman
Clay knelt. The stone wasn’t a formal marker. It was a chunk of limestone, chiseled by hand. A child’s grave, probably. Maybe a fever took them. Maybe a snake. Out here, a hundred thirty years ago, you dug with whatever you had and you kept moving.
“Move the pad,” Clay said.
The call came at 3:17 AM, which meant either a pipe had burst or someone was dead. Clay Barlow swung his boots off the motel nightstand and grabbed his hard hat. In the Permian Basin, those were the only two reasons the phone ever rang after midnight.
“Neither. Worse.” Luis pointed toward a low ridge fifty yards from the new pad. “We found a grave.” No one questioned it
And every night for the rest of that year, Clay Barlow drove past the little ridge and flashed his headlights twice—once for the living, once for the dead. Because a Landman doesn’t just read the land. He listens to it. And sometimes, the oldest voices are the ones that still have something to say.
“Dead or broke?” Clay asked, cutting the engine. He stood up and looked at the big picture
His truck ate up twenty miles of caliche road, past nodding donkeys and flares that burned like fallen stars. The air smelled of sulfur and money. He pulled up to Site 7-Gamma just as the night shift foreman, a kid named Luis with coke-bottle glasses, came jogging over.