top of page
Search

The Well Remembers

  • Writer: Kate Bender
    Kate Bender
  • Dec 6, 2025
  • 1 min read

Journal Entry – December 5, 1871


Another guest is missing.


Mr. Thorne — the banker — left his boots by the fire, his papers neatly tucked beneath the bed, his coat folded with care. But he is gone. The others don’t remember him. When I said his name, Mrs. Crane only smiled politely, as though I’d mentioned a stranger who passed by once in summer.


The fog led me to the well.

I should have turned back.


The water was too still — no wind, no ripple, no echo of my reflection. Only blackness. When I leaned closer, my breath stirred the surface… and beneath it, I saw his face rise from the dark, distorted and reaching.


I stepped back.

The water stilled instantly, as though ashamed.


The mark on my arm flared once — a pulse of heat that felt almost like a greeting.


I don’t know who whispered “thank you,”

but I know it wasn’t me.

Recent Posts

See All
The Paper Without Words

Journal Entry – December 11, 1871 The preacher’s Bible — the one left behind in his room — has lost all its words. Not blank, not smudged, not faded: erased. The pages feel smooth, warm, as though som

 
 
 
The Hunger Underfoot

Journal Entry – December 10, 1871 The guests are losing time. Mr. Rourke swore it was morning even as the sun set outside his window. He blinked at the darkness like it had betrayed him. Others moved

 
 
 
The Door That Went Nowhere

Journal Entry – December 9, 1871 A new door appeared in the hallway outside the parlor — narrow, tall, unpainted, as though carved from a single piece of ash wood still green at the core. I don’t reme

 
 
 

Comments


bottom of page