Now, Leo sat in the driver’s seat of his father’s 1987 Buick Grand National, the box riding shotgun, seatbelted like a fragile passenger. The route was a crinkled map his father had drawn on a napkin: I-75 to 23, then cut east on backroads no GPS knew. “The M-36 Loop,” his father had called it. “The road that remembers.”
By the time Leo hit the M-36 Loop, dusk was bleeding orange across the cornfields. The last file on the drive was untitled. He pressed play. the cars flac
Leo had been staring at the empty passenger seat, missing the way his father would hum along to the engine’s idle. On impulse, he ripped the tape from the box. Inside was a silver USB drive, no bigger than his thumb. He plugged it into the Buick’s aux port—a janky adapter his father had soldered in himself. Now, Leo sat in the driver’s seat of
“You recorded it,” Leo whispered. “You recorded every single one.” “The road that remembers