Observation Log 0349 â Anomaly Report
Location: Outpost perimeter, 200 meters east of the main building
Weather: Variable (clear, then storm, then clear again)
Dates: See below
Over the past couple of weeks, something odd has been happening out by the fence line.
The first night it happened, everything was routineâcoffee, paperwork, a dog barking at shadows. Around midnight, the static on the radio changed. Not louder, just⊠off. I went out to check the generator and caught a brief flash of light by the far fence. Couldâve been a headlamp, a coyoteâs eyes, or just a trick of distance. At that hour, every possibility feels reasonable.
I approached slowâflashlight in one hand, mug in the other. The light flickered and faded before I got close. When I checked, the only thing different was a patch of scuffed-up dirt, nothing that made sense, nothing to explain what Iâd seen. I took photos, but chalked it up to fatigue.
A few nights later, the light showed up again, but this time a storm had rolled in. No way to investigateânot in that wind and rain. By morning, any trace of what might have been out there was gone, if it had ever been there at all.
About a week after the storm, it happened once more. The dog saw it firstâhead up, tense, not scared, just alert. I followed her gaze and saw the light, same place as before. This time I decided to check it out. As I got closer, I heard somethingâmovement, maybe, or just the wind through the brush. When I reached the spot, there was nothing: no sound, no light, just the dogâs nose working overtime as she sniffed the air and circled the area.
Thatâs when I noticed the tracksâjust a few, in the softer edge of the dirt, close to where the light had been. They didnât match anything I usually see around here. Too long to be a coyote, too narrow for a stray dog, and spaced just strangely enough to stick in my mind. I looked around for any other evidenceâmarkings, hair, anything to explain what left themâbut there was nothing. I took more photos, made a note to compare them to my field guide later.
Over the next week or so, I noticed something else: the dogs and the smaller wildlife started avoiding that patch of ground. No rabbits in the grass, no dogs sniffing or lingering near the fence lineâjust a quiet little circle where nothing seemed interested in passing through.
Now I find myself standing on the porch most evenings, watching that stretch of fence line. Iâm not sure what Iâm waiting forâor even if Iâm waiting for anything at all. Still havenât found a match for those tracks. I try not to think about it, but some nights are harder than others.
Thatâs the thing about this placeâsometimes, it leaves you watching the dark, wondering if you missed something important or if you are simply losing your mind.