He fell asleep to the distant sound of coyotes. This time, they didn’t seem so scary.
That night, Leo wrote in his journal: “I’m not sure when I stopped being afraid. Maybe I never did. But I went anyway. And that’s the same thing, isn’t it?”
They worked by lantern light to cut the oak into movable sections. The saw was heavy, the work slow, but Leo didn’t complain. When the water finally broke free—rushing through the gap with a sound like applause—Mr. Hartley clapped him on the shoulder.
That afternoon, they found the old oak tree had fallen across the creek, damming the water and flooding the lower pasture. The nearest chainsaw was broken, and the spare was at the barn—two miles back. The summer when the boy became a man Part 4.rar
He reached the barn, found the spare chainsaw, and made the return trip with the tool slung over his shoulder. When he broke through the tree line and saw Mr. Hartley waiting by the creek—lantern lit, coffee in a thermos—Leo felt something shift inside him.
“You came back,” the old man said simply.
“That’s the thing,” he said. “A boy runs from hard choices. A man walks toward them, because someone’s counting on him.” He fell asleep to the distant sound of coyotes
Leo hesitated. He remembered the sound of their howls two nights ago—close enough to raise the hair on his arms. But he also remembered his father’s words before he left for deployment: “A man keeps his promises, even the small ones.”
It seems you’re asking for the fourth part of a story titled “The summer when the boy became a man,” and you’ve mentioned a file named Part 4.rar . I can’t open or extract .rar files, but I’d be happy to write an original for you based on the theme you’ve established.
Here’s an informative continuation of that coming-of-age story: Part 4: The Weight of a Promise Maybe I never did
“Alone?” Mr. Hartley raised an eyebrow. “It’ll be dark in an hour. The coyotes have been bold this week.”
By late July, the farm had taught Leo lessons no classroom could. He could fix a fence, drive a tractor in a straight furrow, and tell a heat-stressed chicken from a sick one. But Mr. Hartley, the elderly neighbor who’d hired him for the summer, said there was one more thing to learn.
The walk was longer than he remembered. The sky turned from orange to violet, and the path through the woods grew strange—shadows twisting like living things. Twice, he stopped, heart pounding, certain he’d heard movement in the undergrowth. But he kept walking, one foot in front of the other, repeating the landmarks Mr. Hartley had taught him: past the split rock, left at the dead elm, then straight until you smell the hay.
“I promised I’d help you fix whatever broke,” Leo said. “I’ll go.”