lost flows
ver wa
it away. The riverbed, once silver and alive, lay bare, its stones exposed like bones under torn skin. Cracked mud snaked acros
ling. She didn't speak. She didn't move. Her heart beat like thunder in her chest, thudding louder than the silwanted to
dream, her brother was reaching for her, his fingers just breaking the surface, eyes wide and terri
ere sh
he river should have been. A
sisters, muttering prayers under their breath. A couple of teenagers from school leaned over the rail, filming videos for their social f
shook her awake. But her mother's eyes had flickered toward Milo's empty bed, and
one. No signal. No
hing over dry twigs and pebbles. The earth beneath her felt hollow, almost false-l
or any sign: a trail, footpr
en she
n, the chain still glinting with fresh oil. A half-empty bottle of lemonade la
t to the bott
o
here. And
chest. She turned slowly, eyes scanning the ba
ressed into it, not indented-drawn, lik
alled, her vo
ing through the reeds and the
choed behind her-sha
ipped
th
r was st
alt now. Not the usual earthy river scent-but something old
e ripple floating above the riverbed like heat haze. It
river pendant she always wore-an old, smoothed blue stone Milo had give
hone
it out of
mess
s before the sil
ct. No trace of whe
as it had appeared,
the screen, ha
the riverbed. At the miss
why, but one thing was
r hadn't
been
o had