The Vibrant Era- The Hollow Vale Memory Care Facility
Time is a formality here.
They said the residents of The Vibrant Era suffered from memory loss. That was a polite lie. The truth was far worse. They werenât wasting time. They were slipping through it.
Every afternoon at precisely three fifteen, the cafeteria filled with chatter. The same music looped on the overhead speakers â âSome Enchanted Eveningâ â and the same laughter echoed, just slightly out of sync. The staff said routine brought comfort. But routine in Hollow Vale was a door you should never knock on twice.
Mrs. Havers spoke first that day, her spoon trembling over cold soup.
âI saw him again,â she whispered, voice cracking like an old film. âThe man with the camera. He was at the dance⌠my dress was blue.â
Across from her, Mr. Henley nodded, eyes clouded but sharp. âWasnât that in â56?â
âYes,â she whispered. âBut it was today.â
No one else at the table flinched. Theyâd all seen something. Felt something. They shared it like a secret religion, one that only the dying could join. The nurses thought it was dementia, the gentle unraveling of the mind. They smiled kindly, refilled their tea, and moved on.
Her name was Miriam. Sixty-three, with bones that ached when the lights flickered. Sheâd been working here for twenty years. Lately, her own mind had startedâŚÂ glitching.
A word on a clipboard would smear and rearrange itself. A corridor would stretch longer than it should. Once, she caught her reflection in a window and saw her younger self looking back: twenty-three, hair red instead of white, eyes bright with the hope sheâd since buried.
She never mentioned it to the others. Not yet.
She listened when Mrs. Kellen said sheâd been home that morning, baking lemon bread for her husband, even though her husband had been dead for forty years. She listened when Mr. Gorski cried, saying heâd just held his newborn son, though his son was a grandfather now.
She listened. She believed.
At night, Miriam cleaned the halls alone. The air in Hollow Vale grew heavy after visiting hours, the light dimming in slow, uneven breaths. Sometimes sheâd hear a voice whisper her name, calling from the rooms she knew were empty. Sometimes sheâd catch the faint hum of that same cafeteria song, muffled through the vents, even though the speakers were off.
One night, as she passed Room 109, she saw Mr. Henley standing by the window. His chart said heâd died that morning.
âMiriam,â he said calmly, without turning.
âYou shouldnât be here,â she whispered.
âNeither should you.â
His reflection in the glass was younger â strong, laughing, alive. When he turned, the years collapsed back onto him like dust settling over a grave. His eyes were full of something like pity.
âThey open when we forget where we are,â he said. âThe seams. You start to slip, and then you remember before.â
Before what, she didnât ask. Because she already knew.
In the morning, the cafeteria hummed again. The residents chatted about the war, the old park, and the train that used to come through Hollow Vale. None of those things had existed for decades.
Miriam poured coffee, her hands shaking.
âI think itâs starting for me,â she said to Mrs. Havers.
The woman smiled kindly, like a grandmother soothing a frightened child.
âItâs not starting,â she said. âItâs remembering.â
Miriam blinked. The cafeteria light flickered once, twice. And suddenly, she was there.
The wallpaper was new. The staff uniforms were gray. Laughter came from people whose faces were photographs sheâd dusted for years.
Her body was young again. Her hair is red.
âFresh batch of nurses,â someone called.
And she realized she was standing in the same spot sheâd first been hired â fifty years ago.
The intercom crackled. âAttention, staff. Please welcome our new aide, Miriam Lane, to The Vibrant Era.â
She screamed, but the sound folded inward, muffled like a secret. When she blinked, the cafeteria was full again â but wrong. The tables were gone. The people were sitting on the floor, humming that same song. Their mouths moved, but their eyes were empty.
âWhere did we go?â Mrs. Havers whispered.
âWhere do we always go?â said Mr. Gorski. âBack before the world forgot us.â
The lights dimmed to blood-orange.
Far down the corridor, a door opened with the sound of tearing fabric.
Miriam dropped her coffee pot and followed the hum.
Room 109 again. The window shone brighter than the hall. Inside, the younger version of herself waited, smiling, with red hair and eyes full of time.
âCome on,â her other self said. âWeâre late.â
âFor what?â Miriam asked.
The air fractured. She reached out and touched her own hand, and everything went white.
They found her body the next morning in the cafeteria.
The coffeepot was still in her hand.
Her reflection was still moving in the window.
And every clock in Hollow Vale read a different time.
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