The early morning fog hung low over Blackwater Creek, cloaking the town in a veil of eerie silence. Evelyn Hart sat in the diner’s corner booth, her laptop open in front of her. The smell of burnt coffee mingled with the faint scent of rain-soaked earth. It was just another mundane morning in the quiet, forgotten town she’d grown up in—the kind of place that swallowed ambition whole.
The ding of her phone jolted her out of her thoughts.
“SINKHOLE OPENS NEAR ROUTE 12. AUTHORITIES BAFFLED.”
The text was from her editor, followed by: “You’re covering this. Head over now.”
Evelyn sighed, throwing her notebook into her bag. It wasn’t the Pulitzer-worthy assignment she had hoped for, but at least it was something. The last few months have been a monotonous blur of covering community bake sales and county fairs. She was desperate for a story with teeth.
The site was easy to find—half the town was already gathered there, their pickup trucks parked haphazardly along the roadside. Yellow police tape cordoned off a section of the forest where the earth had caved in, revealing a jagged black hole that seemed to descend into endless darkness.
Sheriff Dunne stood near the tape, his broad-brimmed hat pulled low over his weathered face.
“Morning, Sheriff,” Evelyn called, flashing her press badge.
He gave her a wary glance. “Morning, Miss Hart. Don’t get too close. The ground’s unstable.”
“What’s the story here?” she asked, pulling out her recorder.
“Damn thing opened up overnight,” he muttered. “Some hikers reported hearing strange noises near the woods last night—like growling or rumbling. Thought it was a bear until they came back this morning and found... that.” He gestured at the sinkhole.
Evelyn peered closer. The edges of the hole were jagged, as if the ground had been torn apart rather than collapsed. A faint hum seemed to emanate from the depths, barely perceptible but impossible to ignore.
“Anything down there?” she asked.
“Not sure. Sent a drone in earlier, but the feed cut out after a few seconds. Something’s messing with the signal.”
Her curiosity piqued. “Mind if I take a look?”
Dunne hesitated but eventually nodded. “Fine, but don’t go past the tape. Last thing I need is a reporter falling in.”
Evelyn stepped closer, her boots sinking slightly into the soft earth. As she crouched near the edge, she noticed something glinting among the debris—a small, silver pendant tangled in the roots of an upturned tree. She carefully pried it loose, brushing off the dirt. It was an old locket, tarnished with age, but the initials engraved on the back made her blood run cold.
Her sister, Amelia Hart.
Fifteen years ago, Amelia had vanished without a trace during a camping trip in these very woods. Evelyn had never stopped searching for answers, but this—this was impossible. The locket had disappeared with her.
The hum grew louder, almost as if responding to her discovery. The ground beneath her feet seemed to vibrate slightly, and Evelyn scrambled back, her heart pounding. Sheriff Dunne was at her side in an instant.
“Are you okay?” he asked.
She nodded, clutching the locket tightly. “Yeah. Just… thought I felt something.”
Dunne gave her a skeptical look but didn’t press the issue.
As the crowd began to disperse, Evelyn lingered, staring into the abyss. The darkness of the sinkhole seemed to pulse, almost alive. She didn’t know what lay at the bottom, but one thing was certain—she was going to find out.
Clutching the locket, she whispered under her breath, “Amelia, if you’re down there... I’ll bring you back.”