Michelle Harlan has built her career on making the impossible explainable. As a soil scientist buried in the basement of a federal building, she specializes in anomalies-data that doesn't make sense, maps that don't align, systems that shouldn't work but somehow do. Her job is simple: find the boring explanation, close the file, move on.
So when a rural Nebraska county reports over a century of uninterrupted agricultural yield-no drought losses, no flood damage, no failed harvests-Michelle knows it has to be wrong.
But Brasov County isn't wrong.
The numbers are perfect. Too perfect. The soil is impossibly rich. The temperature beneath the ground rises instead of falls. And scattered across every field are scarecrows-identical, deliberate, positioned with mathematical precision in a pattern no natural system could produce.
The deeper Michelle digs, the less the land behaves like land.
What she uncovers isn't a mistake-it's a design. A system built in 1885 by a group of Czech settlers who brought something with them from the old country: not just seed, but knowledge. A way to map invisible structures beneath the earth. A way to feed something that lives within them. A way to ensure the harvest never fails.
At the center of it all is the Polednice-the Noon Woman. Not a ghost. Not a myth. A presence bound to the fields, to labor, to heat, to the thin boundary between what the land can give and what it is forced to endure.
For generations, the people of Brasov County have maintained a fragile balance-feeding the system, honoring the boundary, keeping the land productive and the thing beneath it contained.
Until Michelle breaks it.
What begins as investigation becomes contamination. What begins as skepticism becomes exposure. As the carefully engineered grid begins to fail, the land starts to change-subtly at first, then all at once. The fields stop responding. The patterns collapse. And something that has been held in place for over a century begins to move freely again.
Now Michelle faces a reality she cannot reduce, cannot file, cannot explain away:
The system was never the problem.
It was the solution.
And she is the one who destroyed it.
The Scarecrow Tithe is a literary horror novel about ecological balance, hidden systems, and the cost of forcing the land to give more than it ever should.
For readers of Annihilation, The Fisherman, and House of Leaves.