The sun was sinking, drenching Eldridge in this honey-colored glow that made everything feel sort of... magical, but also a little like the world was catching its breath. Clara Hayes sat out front on their old porch, sneakers propped up on the battered steps, the kind that creak for no good reason. Out in the garden, her little sister Lily—seriously, this kid never ran out of battery—was skipping and twirling around like she’d mainlined a gallon of lemonade. Wildflowers everywhere, the air sweet as syrup, just about everything felt alive. At least for a moment, it was easy to pretend there weren’t any monsters lurking in the dark.
“Clara, c’mon!” Lily yelled, her voice all singsong and full of trouble, and man, how could you say no? Clara grinned—couldn’t help it. Lily was twelve and already acted like the Queen of Curiosity, no stone unturned, no fantasy left unexplored. Today? Instead of a boring old yard, the garden was—what? The sss? The final frontier? Pick your favorite.
“I’m coming, geez,” Clara tossed back, trying not to sound too sappy. Eighteen was supposed to mean responsible, right? She tried to pull off the big-sister thing. Which mostly meant worrying so Lily didn’t have to.
Lily tripped into a patch of purple blossoms, plopping down, scowling at her dirty knees, then poking her nose into a flower like it might tell her a secret. Clara snorted. “Watch out—don’t spook ‘em,” she teased.
“They’re flowers, not rabbits,” Lily said, but she was laughing too. Then her face scrunched up, deadly serious. “Do you think there’s, like, fairies in the woods?”
Clara caught herself glancing at the thick fringe of trees past the fence. The Whispering Woods. People in town got all jittery about them—old stories, ghosts, the usual. Clara rolled her eyes at the superstition, but honestly, even she felt a little weird about those woods after dark.
“Could be,” she said, trying for a game voice, “but they only pop out at night. So, shhh. Don’t go poking the hornet’s nest, y’know?”
But of course, Lily’s eyes went extra sparkly, because danger was basically an invitation to her. “We should sneak out later! For real! Just us.”
Clara groaned, but there was a flicker of “hey, why not?” in her chest. “Tonight? We’d get grounded for life.”
“Puh-lease! Just a teeny adventure. Pinky swear I’ll be careful.” No one could out-plead Lily, fact.
Clara tried to keep it together, fiddling with her hair so Lily wouldn’t see her half-smile. “Yeah, maybe in, like, ten years.”
Evening sneaked up on them, and they shuffled back inside, laughter trailing behind like the scent of dinner. Homework time was just this mess of books on the carpet, both of them sprawled everywhere—Clara supposed that’s what home was supposed to feel like. But she kept zoning out, the creepy stories about the woods circling her thoughts.
At one point Lily piped up, voice low: “What do you think happens to the ones who go missing?” Bang—just drops that outta nowhere. Clara’s gut clenched. The stories, the gossip—missing people, weird stuff from way back. “Eh... probably just lost their way. Most folks make it home again,” she managed, not exactly convincing.
“But what if they don’t?” Lily wasn’t buying it.
Clara gave her a ruffle, aiming for brave-big-sis mode. “They find their own way back, trust me. Just gotta hang onto a little courage.”
But lying in bed that night, Clara couldn’t switch off her brain. The woods, the rumors—yeah, maybe it was all make-believe, but her stomach said otherwise.
Next morning? Sky was blue, sun was up, everything looked normal. But between you and me, something was off. Lily barely spoke, dragging her feet. The air felt thick—like trouble was squatting right outside the door, waiting.
“Ready for school?” Clara tried her best fake enthusiasm. “We can walk, avoid the morning zombie crowd.” Lily just nodded, eyes focused a million miles away. And walking through town? Creepy old clock tower with hands stuck forever, storefronts looking like nobody wanted to blink first—Eldridge felt frozen, like the whole town was holding its breath.
At school, Clara was hopeless at paying attention. The whispers and pencil taps faded; all she could think about was the woods, that old fear curling again in her gut.
Home after school, and the dread? Peaked. She called for Lily. Nothing. House felt too quiet—never a good sign. “Lily!” she yelled, voice bouncing off the walls. Dead silent.
Wide-eyed panic set in. Clara bolted outside, heart working overtime. Flowers swaying, garden untouched, everything wrong. She charged to the woods’ edge—those trees brooding like they’d been waiting for her. “LILY!” she screamed, voice cracking now.
Time did some weird, stretchy thing as she pushed past branches, feet catching roots, shadow pressing all around. “Lily!” Clara kept calling, deeper and deeper into the stuff of nightmares, the whole world holding its breath, waiting for something. Someone. Or maybe—just maybe—it was already too Late she screamed Lily’s name ’til her throat felt like sandpaper—honestly, she’d never shouted so much in her life.
Tripping into this weird little clearing, she squinted through the trees. Sharp rays of sunlight slashed through all that green, and smack in the middle sat that purple flower. The same kind Lily totally obsessed over. Clara forgot to breathe.
“Lily!” Her voice tore out again. Just...nothing. Silence. The kind that stings your ears when you’re desperate for anything else. And that was it. Like a punch in the gut—the ugly truth, her sister was gone.
Sun dipped away like it was clocking out for the night. Now shadows pressed in, thick and mean, wrapping ‘round her ankles. Every tree seemed to whisper. Fear? Yeah, it gnawed at her bones. Sorrow, too. Heavier than her old winter coat. She stood there, biting back tears, and promised herself—swore it, even—she’d find Lily, come hell or high water.
Not that she had a clue what she was about to stir up. Secrets, darkness, all that creepy Eldridge stuff? Oh, she’d learn. The hard way.