The Disappearing Friend and the Secret Note

The next afternoon I biked to the observatory, the bill tucked safely in my pocket. The building looked even more weathered than before, its dome rusted like a forgotten relic. The oak stood tall beside it, branches stretched out like tired arms. At first, I saw nothing unusual. But when I circled the trunk, I noticed a strip of bark that looked cleaner than the rest—as if it had been peeled back recently. I pressed my fingers along the edge, and the bark shifted, revealing a shallow hollow someone had carved. Inside was a folded scrap of notebook paper, the corner torn jaggedly like it had been ripped out in a hurry. My hands trembled as I opened it. Her handwriting filled the page this time—messier, frantic. She wrote that she hadn’t run away. She’d overheard something she wasn’t supposed to, something involving someone she trusted, and she feared for her safety. She didn’t want to disappear, but she had to hide until she knew what to do. Continue reading…

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