Deserted Hope

in The Ink Welllast month

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The air hung heavy with the tang of salt and the desperate prayers of a thousand souls. Phoebe, her weathered face mirroring the cracked desert floor, squinted at the horizon. It was a tapestry of dying orange bleeding into a bruised purple, the sun a cruel reminder of another day stolen by the scorched sand.

"There's nothin' out there, Phoebe," rasped Joe, his voice as parched as the wasteland. "Just sand and mirages."

Phoebe ignored him, her gaze fixed on a flicker in the distance. It could be a trick of the dying light, a cruel joke played by the wind-whipped dunes. But hope, a tattered ember in her heart, refused to be extinguished. "Look closer, Jeb. It might be the signal fire."

Joe, a man hardened by years of scraping a living from hard labor and his innate survival instincts.

"Hope'll get you killed out here, Elara. It's a luxury we can't afford."

Phoebe wasn't listening. Hope, for her, wasn't a luxury, it was a lifeline. Ten days ago, the Great Sandstorm had swallowed their village whole. Phoebe, separated from her family in the chaos, had clung to the sliver of hope that somehow, somewhere, they were alive.

The flicker danced again, stronger this time. It wasn't a mirage. With a surge of adrenaline, she grabbed her tattered pack and started walking, her weathered boots kicking up plumes of red sand. Joe, with a resigned sigh, followed behind.

The trek was grueling. The sun beat down mercilessly, and the wind howled a mournful song. Phoebe's throat was raw, her legs leaden weights. But the fire, a beacon in the desolate landscape, fueled her steps.

Just as dusk began to settle, casting long, grotesque shadows from the dunes, they finally reached the source of the fire. It was a small, ramshackle hut, barely a silhouette against the encroaching darkness.

A frail figure emerged, cloaked in a threadbare shawl. She was the complete opposite of the bustling village and it's lively occupants that Phoebe remembered, but it was a sign of life, a spark in the vast desert of despair.

The woman, her face etched with a lifetime of the harsh environment, regarded them with suspicion.

"Who are you? What brings you to my doorstep?" she queried in a frail voice that sounded more like a whisper.

"We… we're survivors," Phoebe rasped, her voice hoarse. "From the village swallowed by the sandstorm. Ten days ago."

The woman's eyes widened in disbelief. A flicker of something, perhaps hope, ignited in their depths.

"There were… others?" she asked in disbelief

"My family," Phoebe replied impatiently, choking back a sob. "My husband, Ken, and our little girl, Kayla." she continued

The woman's gaze fell. "Many came seeking refuge after the storm. But the desert is unforgiving. Most… didn't make it." she said looking up with a storm welling in her eyes

Hope, the fragile ember, started to flicker and die. Phoebe sank to her knees, the weight of despair threatening to crush her. But then, the woman spoke again, her voice softer now.

"But… there was a young girl. Maybe eight or nine years old. She arrived a few days after the storm. Alone, delirious, muttering about a village lost to sand."

Phoebe's head snapped up. "Kayla? It was Kayla?"

The woman nodded. "I took care of her. But the desert took its toll. She didn't last long." her voice broken with sorrow

Grief, a suffocating wave, threatened to drown Phoebe. Yet, a seed of hope, bruised but not extinguished, remained.

"Where… where is she buried?" she asked regaining her posture with pride

The woman pointed towards a cluster of weathered rocks, a makeshift graveyard. Phoebe stumbled towards it, Joe following close behind.

There, beneath a small, weathered stone etched with a single word – Kayla – Phoebe finally allowed herself to grieve. Tears, long held back, streamed down her face, watering the barren landscape of her heart.

As the first rays of dawn painted the sky the following day, Phoebe stood by the grave, her shoulders slumped. But in her eyes, a different kind of hope flickered. It wasn't the hope of finding her family alive, but the hope of carrying their memory, a testament to the enduring power of love.

"We can't stay here," Joe said, his voice gruff but laced with a newfound empathy.

Phoebe nodded. "No, we can't. But we can return to the ruins of our village. We can rebuild, in Kayla and my family's memory. We can give hope to anyone else who might find their way to this desolate place."

Joe's eyes, usually as hard as the desert floor, softened. "Hope. You really think that's enough?"

Phoebe smiled, a flicker of defiance in her eyes. "Hope...is all we have, Joe. It's what keeps the sand from burying our dreams. It's what allows us to face another sunrise, another scorching day."

The journey back was just as arduous as the one towards the signal fire. But this time, a different kind of fire burned within Elara. It wasn't the desperate hope of finding a loved one alive, but the resolute hope of rebuilding, of honouring her family's memory.

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This I can call the hope of reunion. Sometimes, we need to use our late loved ones to bring hope to the faces of others. This is what they did.

A story with beautiful descriptions! For Phoebe knowing that her daughter could not survive gave her a certainty to cling to and to keep on insisting.