Day 8: The Train That Waited near Mirabello’s Crossroads
The Station at Mirabello’s Crossroads
The station was empty except for the lone conductor, who barely looked up as I stood on the platform. The train, its deep blue exterior reflecting the morning sun, was waiting—just like it always did at noon at Mirabello’s Crossroads.
This wasn’t just any station. The air felt charged with something unspoken, as if time itself paused for those who dared to board. The conductor finally turned his gaze toward me, his eyes unreadable. “Are you ready?” he asked.
I hesitated. What lay beyond the tracks was unknown, yet familiar. And as the whistle blew, I knew this was a journey I couldn’t refuse.
The ticket in my pocket felt heavier than it should. Lucia’s words echoed in my mind:
“Some travelers leave and forget. Others stay and become part of its legend.”
I hesitated. My foot hovered over the first step into the train, but before I could board, a voice called out.
“Not yet.”
I turned. Lucia stood at the far end of the platform, holding something in her hands—a book, wrapped in timeworn leather.
Day 9: The Book of Forgotten Travelers
Back in the old bakery, we sat at a quiet corner table. Lucia placed the book between us.
“This is Mirabello’s memory,” she said. “Every traveler who has ever found this town—those who stayed, those who left.”
I flipped through the pages. Some names were faded, almost erased, as if time had swallowed them whole. Others shone in bold ink, their stories detailed in exquisite handwriting.
“Those who leave,” Lucia continued, “often forget Mirabello. Their memories fade, and they believe it was just a dream, a passing thought. But those who stay… well, they become part of the town’s heartbeat.”
I found my name on the last written page. Unlike the others, mine was incomplete, the ink smudged.
“What does this mean?” I asked.
“It means your story isn’t finished yet.”
Day 10: A Door That Shouldn’t Exist
That night, I couldn’t sleep. The town was unusually quiet, the air thick with something unspoken. I stepped outside and found myself wandering toward the clock tower, its hands now frozen at 11:59 PM.
And that’s when I saw it.
A door.
Standing alone in the center of the square. No walls, no building—just a weathered wooden door, slightly ajar, with a faint golden light spilling through the cracks.
I approached cautiously.
Behind me, the town remained unchanged. The familiar streets, the scent of fresh bread, the glow of lanterns.
But beyond the door… was something else. A world unseen. A choice unmade.
I reached out. My fingers brushed the handle.
And then, the clock struck midnight.
Final Thoughts
The door is still there. The train is gone. And as I stand on the edge of a decision, I wonder—what happens when you step into a place that doesn’t exist?