The Garden That Remembered Too Much
Where People Learned to Bloom Into Silence
Rachel did not laugh.
The word crystals hung in the air
with a calmness that felt rehearsed—
as if it had been spoken too many times
to still carry shock.
She watched Linda’s hands instead.
Careful. Steady.
Pressing seeds into the soil
with the tenderness of someone
who had buried more than plants.
“You’re joking… right?” Rachel asked,
but her voice betrayed her.
It was not disbelief—
it was hope.
Linda looked up, smiling.
Not the kind of smile
that hides something—
the kind that has already accepted it.
“No, sweetheart,” she said softly.
“That’s just how things work here.”
Rachel felt something shift inside her.
Not fear—
fear would have been easier.
This was something quieter.
A discomfort
that did not know where to settle.
Around them,
the garden continued as if nothing had changed.
People laughed.
Someone hummed a song.
A man carried a basket of tomatoes
like it was the most important task in the world.
Normal.
Everything looked
perfectly, disturbingly normal.
“How?” Rachel asked.
She didn’t realize
which part of the question she meant.
How do people turn into crystals?
Or—
how do you accept it so easily?
Linda placed another seed into the earth.
“It doesn’t happen all at once,” she said.
“It begins slowly. You don’t even notice at first.”
Rachel swallowed.
“That’s not… comforting.”
“It’s not supposed to be,” Linda replied gently.
“It’s just supposed to be true.”
There it was again.
That tone.
Not defensive.
Not apologetic.
Just… certain.
Rachel looked down at her hands.
They were dirty now—
covered in soil,
small traces of green clinging to her fingers.
Real.
Grounded.
Alive.
“What does it feel like?” she asked.
Linda paused.
For the first time,
her hands stopped moving.
“Like becoming lighter,” she said after a moment.
“Like something inside you
stops resisting.”
“That sounds like dying.”
Linda shook her head.
“No. Dying is sudden.
This is… gradual.”
Rachel didn’t like that answer.
Gradual meant waiting.
Watching.
Knowing.
“Do people try to leave?” Rachel asked.
Linda smiled again.
“They all ask that in the beginning.”
“And?”
“And then they stop asking.”
Rachel felt a chill,
despite the warm sun resting on her back.
“Why?”
Linda looked at her—
really looked this time.
Not at her face,
but through her.
“Because leaving requires certainty,” she said.
“And certainty… doesn’t last long here.”
Rachel frowned.
“That doesn’t make any sense.”
“It will,” Linda said,
returning to the soil.
“Eventually.”
Silence settled between them.
Not empty—
but full of something Rachel couldn’t name.
She glanced around again.
Twenty people.
Maybe more.
Working. Talking. Living.
Waiting?
Her eyes stopped on a man
standing at the far edge of the garden.
He wasn’t moving.
Just… standing.
Still.
“Who’s that?” Rachel asked quietly.
Linda didn’t look.
“You’ll see,” she said.
Rachel stood up.
“I think I already do.”
She walked toward him.
Each step felt heavier
than the last.
Not physically—
but like something inside her
was beginning to notice
what she had been avoiding.
The man didn’t react as she approached.
Didn’t blink.
Didn’t breathe.
Up close,
Rachel saw it.
His skin—
it wasn’t skin anymore.
It shimmered.
Faintly at first,
like light catching on water.
But then—
clearer.
Harder.
Crystal.
She reached out instinctively,
then stopped.
Her hand hovered in the air,
just inches away.
“Don’t,” Linda’s voice came from behind her.
Rachel turned.
“Since when were you standing there?”
Linda didn’t answer.
“What happened to him?” Rachel asked.
“He finished,” Linda said simply.
“Finished what?”
Linda stepped closer,
her expression unreadable.
“Himself.”
Rachel shook her head.
“No. That’s not—
that’s not a thing people do.”
Linda tilted her head slightly.
“Isn’t it?”
Rachel opened her mouth—
then closed it.
Because suddenly,
she wasn’t sure.
Haven’t people always been
becoming something?
Chasing something?
Changing into something else?
What if this was just…
the final version?
“No,” Rachel whispered.
“This is wrong.”
Linda didn’t argue.
“It feels wrong,” she said,
“because you’re still in between.”
“In between what?”
Linda looked at her hands.
At the dirt.
At the seeds.
“Between who you were
and what you’ll accept.”
Rachel stepped back.
“I’m not accepting this.”
Linda nodded.
“Of course not.”
“But you did.”
Linda smiled—
not proudly,
not sadly—
just honestly.
“Yes.”
“Why?”
Linda looked toward the garden.
At the people.
At the man
who was no longer a man.
“Because fighting it
didn’t change it,” she said.
“It only made the waiting harder.”
Rachel felt something crack inside her.
Not belief—
but resistance.
“And your sister?” Rachel asked.
“You said she’s coming here.”
Linda’s smile softened.
“She wants to understand,” she said.
“Like you.”
Rachel laughed.
A short, hollow sound.
“No,” she said.
“I want to leave.”
Linda didn’t respond immediately.
Then—
quietly—
she said:
“Everyone does.”
Rachel turned away.
Back toward the dorms.
Back toward something familiar.
Something normal.
But as she walked,
she noticed it.
The garden.
The people.
The air itself—
It all felt… still.
Too still.
As if the world here
was not moving forward—
but settling.
And for the first time,
Rachel wondered—
not how to escape—
but how long it would take
before she stopped trying.
About the Creator
Ibrahim
I'm a creative writer in the way that I write. I hold the pen in this unique and creative way you've never seen

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