Gorge ❲Pro❳
“Another one. This one smells of anger, not fear. Interesting.”
“You want a story?” she shouted into the humming dark. “Then listen to mine.”
“You see,” the voice said, now coming from everywhere and nowhere, “I am old. Older than the hills. I have seen continents drift and seas drain. But I have no eyes. You children bring me pictures. Memories. Your little lives—so bright, so brief. They are my only light. Your brother had a lovely one about a birthday cake with a blue dog on it. I am savoring it.”
“I gave it a story it couldn't digest,” she said. “And for once, it had nothing to give back.” “Another one
“It’s real,” Lena said, stepping forward. Her feet were free. “You want light? This is the other side of it. The shadow. The price. You can’t have the birthday cake without the empty chair the next year. Now swallow that .”
She reached into her pocket and pulled out her most precious thing: a smooth, gray river stone, perfectly flat. It was the last gift from her mother, who had died the previous winter. She held it up.
They climbed. The rocks cut Lena’s palms. Theo scrambled behind her, clumsy but alive. When they finally tumbled out onto the grassy lip of the gorge, the afternoon sun was so bright it hurt. “Then listen to mine
The gorge was a scar on the land, a deep, jagged cut through the emerald hills that surrounded the village of Oakhaven. Generations of locals had told their children not to go near it. They spoke of strange lights flickering in its depths at midnight, of a wind that seemed to whisper names it had no right to know.
The hum faltered. The polished walls of the chamber seemed to shudder. The voice, for the first time, sounded uncertain. “This is... not a bright memory. It is cold. It burns.”
The hum laughed, a gravelly cascade of stones. “He is here. He is... comfortable. He asked for a story, and I am a patient teller.” But I have no eyes
Behind them, the depths were silent.
Then she heard it. Not a whisper. A low, resonant hum, like a cello string plucked deep within the earth. It vibrated in her teeth, in her ribs. And woven into the hum was a voice. Not hostile. Curious.
A few yards further, the gorge opened into a small, impossible chamber. The walls were smooth, like polished glass, and in the center sat Theo, cross-legged and wide-eyed. He was unharmed. He was also staring at a point in the empty air, his lips moving silently.
A low, agonized groan rippled through the gorge. The hum became a screech, then a whimper, then a sigh—not of grief, but of a full stomach forced to eat something bitter.
And she told it. Not the happy parts. She told the gorge about the night her mother died—the beeping machines, the smell of antiseptic, the final, rattling breath. She described the silence in the car ride home, the way her father’s hands shook on the wheel. She described the hollow, gnawing week after, when she had to pretend to be fine for Theo’s sake, swallowing her own grief until it turned to stone in her gut.