Gorge -

The village elder asked what she had done. Lena just looked back at the scar in the earth, now just a hole in the ground, emptied of its mystery.

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 village elder asked what she had done

She descended at dawn, not at midnight. The first hundred feet were a scramble of loose shale and stubborn roots. The air grew cooler, damper, and the cheerful chirp of forest birds faded into a hushed, echoing drip of water. The walls of the gorge, once red with clay, deepened to a bruised purple, then to a black so absolute her headlamp seemed to carve only a timid hole in it. Generations of locals had told their children not

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. The first hundred feet were a scramble of