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.
“Shift the whole layout twenty yards west. You’ll lose a day, maybe two. Tell the office the ground was unstable.” Landman
Clay grabbed his flashlight and a rolled-up plat map. The wind had a knife-edge to it. When he reached the ridge, he saw it: a small, weathered headstone, no bigger than a shoebox, half-swallowed by mesquite. The name was worn smooth, but the date was still visible— 1887 . He stood up and looked at the big picture