Summary
In the red clay of Georgia, retired pastor Eli "Preach" Perkins tends his crumbling church, built over a grave. When a smooth-talking outsider arrives with high-tech gear, he awakens a buried power: the "Black Psalm," a devastating song of grief from Moses, a wronged man with a profound connection to the earth. As machines fail and the land itself rebels, Preach must move from defender to listener, leading his small community in a final, desperate act of bearing witness. It's a story of history's echo, the cost of exploitation, and the healing power of truly being heard.