🎃 Pumpkin Field Harvest
The Chalice Pub always smells like wet leaves and old whiskey when October hits. I was halfway through my pint, gold shorts sticking to my thighs after practice, when they walked in—two farm boys with that kind of calm confidence that feels older than the city itself. The taller one smiled at me like he already knew I’d follow.
They said they were in town for the “harvest.” The way they said it—soft, deliberate—made the air between us change. Their hands were rough, eyes too green, like something growing wild inside them. I laughed it off, of course. Xavi Boy #39 doesn’t scare easy.
Izzy,@isaac-gold-45 ,the bartender, gave me that look. “Careful, Master,” he said quietly. “Something off about those two.” (Izzy knows that when his Master’s in Xavi Boy mode, he’s gotta keep an eye on him. Dude’s always finding trouble somehow). I waved him off, finished the beer they’d handed me, and let the warmth crawl down my throat.
Next thing I knew, we were driving out past the edge of the city. The lights disappeared behind us, replaced by the orange glow of jack-o’-lanterns dotting a field that went on forever. The air smelled of smoke and something sweet, something rotten.
They led me between the rows. Pumpkins everywhere—huge, swollen, glimmering under the moonlight like they were breathing. The taller one whispered, “It’s not about taking. It’s about becoming.”
The ground pulsed under my boots. I swear it did. My head spun, heartbeat syncing with the rhythm of the wind, with the whisper of dry vines brushing my skin. The world started to tilt—amber light washing over everything, shadows moving even when nothing else did.
I don’t remember falling, but I remember the warmth that caught me. Their hands. The soil. The whisper that said, “You’re part of the harvest now.”
When I woke up, dawn was bleeding over the horizon. The field was empty, silent—except for the faint rustle of vines against my leg. I brushed them off and walked away, heart still pounding. But every Halloween night since, I catch my reflection in the pub’s mirror and swear there’s an orange flicker behind my eyes.
Maybe it’s just the lights. Maybe it’s the harvest calling me back.
The field’s still out there. Still waiting. Come see it for yourself—if you’re brave enough to stay when the pumpkins start to breathe. contact our recruiters: @polo-drone-001, @franco-gold94, @polo-drone-166 or @polo-drone-125








