A fugue of static and soil—petrified shadows where light fractures into granular decay. No markers, no names; only the geometry of absence, carved by wind that carries the scent of rusted iron and wilted stems. The earth hums in a register below mourning, a subsonic hymn to collapse. You trace contours that aren’t there: the brush of lichen on stone, the sigh of roots threading through marrow. It’s not a place. It’s an equation—where gravity bends toward silence, and every breath becomes a relic. The closer you listen, the clearer it grows: the dead don’t rest. They resonate.