CHAPTER 5 - GHOST ROCK.
Author: Adina k
last update2025-09-28 05:26:57

The trail narrowed as he climbed, stones loose beneath his boots. The map shook in his pocket, Elia’s words echoing louder than the wind. Don’t stop!! Don’t stop!!

By the time the jagged shape of Ghost Rock rose through the trees, the sky had gone red, burning down toward night. The stone jutted like a crooked tooth, its surface carved with cracks and shadows. They’d named it when they were kids, daring each other to climb its face, swearing it was haunted.

Noah’s chest felt tight. He moved slowly, searching. His fingers traced the edges, pressed into crevices. And then he felt it. A tin box wedged deep between the rocks.

He yanked it free. The lid squealed as it opened, inside: a Polaroid.

Not one he’d seen before. Not from the attic box. This one was newer, colors sharper. It was of the Wishing Tree. And standing at its base elia.

Noah froze. His breath hitched sharply.

Her face was shadowed, half-turned, but it was her. Older. Different. But her.

The photo fluttered in his shaking hands. His mind spun. How? Who took this? When?

A crunch behind him. Heavy. Real.

Noah whipped around.

A figure stepped from the trees.

Male. Broad shoulders. A face he almost recognized in the dim light older, lined, but familiar.

Casey.

Casey from the store. Casey from childhood.

Except his eyes weren’t friendly now. They were flat. Cold.

“You should’ve stayed gone,” Casey said, voice low.

Noah’s mouth went dry. “What is this? Where did this come from?” He held up the Polaroid, his hand trembling.

Casey’s jaw tightened. “Put it back.”

“No.” Noah’s voice cracked, anger bleeding through. “Tell me what happened to her. You know. Don’t you?”

The silence between them pulsed. Then Casey stepped closer, boots crunching on stone. “You don’t want to dig up the past, Noah. Some things need to stay buried.”

Noah’s chest burned. “She didn’t just run away. She left this” He jabbed a finger toward the box. “She left all of this for me. She wanted me to find it. Why? What did you do?”

Casey’s face flickered. Guilt. Fear. Then anger. “Shut up.”

And before Noah could move, Casey lunged.

The impact slammed Noah back against the rock. His shoulder cracked, pain flaring white. The Polaroid slipped from his grip, fluttering to the ground.

Casey’s hands gripped his jacket, shoving, pinning. Noah gasped for air, the stone biting his back. He struggled, arms flailing, fists connecting weakly.

“Stop!” Noah choked, spitting blood where his lip split. “Tell me the truth!”

Casey’s grip tightened. His face hovered inches away, breath hot, eyes wild. “The truth? The truth is she’s gone. And your digging won’t change that. You’ll only get yourself hurt.”

The words broke like glass inside Noah’s chest. But fury rose hotter. He slammed his knee upward, connecting hard. Casey grunted, stumbled back.

Noah shoved free, gasping, scrambling for the Polaroid. His fingers caught it just as Casey lunged again.

They grappled, rolling across dirt and stone, fists striking, breath tearing from lungs. Pain blurred everything. Noah’s head cracked against the ground, stars bursting white.

But he clung to the photo. Clung like it was her hand. Like it was Elia herself.

Casey’s shadow loomed, arm raised, fist ready. Noah braced but then headlights cut through the trees. Both froze, a car at the edge of the woods. Engine low, lights glaring.

Casey swore under his breath, backing off fast. His face twisted with something unreadable ear, fury, warning. “Drop it, Noah, Drop it before it kills you.”

And then he vanished into the trees, swallowed whole.

Noah staggered to his feet, chest heaving, body bruised. He clutched the Polaroid, the photo of Elia, his knuckles white.

He stared toward the headlights, but before he could step closer, the car reversed, wheels spitting gravel, and was gone.

The woods fell silent again.

Noah stood alone, heart pounding, photo trembling in his hands.

And in the fading light, one truth cut sharper than pain.

Elia hadn’t just disappeared.

Someone had kept her hidden.

And now, someone didn’t want him finding her.

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