The river didn't ask for permission when it shifted course three decades ago; it simply left behind a massive, sun-bleached scar on Elias’s back forty. To anyone else, it was a wasteland of "bank gravel"—that raw, unsorted mix of fist-sized river rock, pea gravel, and sharp sand. But to Elias, it was a retirement fund.
The river had taken his land years ago, but in the end, it had paid its debt in stone. bank gravel
"It’s the clay," the foreman told him, spitting a stream of tobacco juice into the dust. "Modern crushed stone is clean, but it doesn't pack. Your bank gravel? It’s got just enough silt and clay to act like glue. Once we roll it into the sub-base of that highway, it’ll be harder than the asphalt we put on top of it." The river didn't ask for permission when it