Golden Spoon: The

Silas had offered to buy it a hundred times. First for ten gold coins, then a hundred, then a pouch of rubies the size of acorns. Each time, Elias would wipe the spoon on his apron, tuck it into his vest pocket, and say, “No, thank you, Silas. It’s just my spoon.”

He sat at the table, lifted the stew with the golden spoon, and put it to his lips. The stew tasted like nothing. Not bland, but absent. As if the idea of taste had been removed. He swallowed. His stomach remained hollow. His throat remained dry. And then the first shadow appeared at the end of the corridor. The Golden Spoon

“Enough.”

A child. No—a shape like a child, with eyes like extinguished stars. It opened a mouth that had no bottom, and Silas understood. Silas had offered to buy it a hundred times

Elias picked it up. He turned it over in his calloused hands. Then he walked to the edge of the crooked forest, knelt by a patch of soft earth, and buried the spoon where no one would ever find it. It’s just my spoon

He turned to leave, but the fog had crept under the door and filled the bakery like a sleeping breath. The windows were gone. The walls were gone. Silas found himself standing not in the bakery but in a long, narrow corridor made of bone-white wood, lit by candles that burned without smoke. At the far end sat a table. On the table, a single bowl of cold stew. And in Silas’s hand, the golden spoon.

Across the cobblestone square lived a merchant named Silas. Silas dealt in things that glittered: silver thimbles, brass compasses, and once, a small chest of sapphires so blue they seemed to drink the daylight. Silas had a mustache waxed into twin needles and a laugh that sounded like coins falling. He owned three houses, two carriages, and one persistent, festering envy of Elias.

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