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Abby turned to her friends, a smile blooming on her lips. “We came looking for a secret,” she said, “and we found a moment. Let’s keep listening for those moments wherever we go.”
Abby, Fernanda, and Nikolina left the market hand‑in‑hand, Inti trotting ahead with his head held high. The stone, now a tiny, smooth pebble in Abby’s pocket, pulsed faintly—an ever‑present reminder of the night they had listened to the Earth’s breath.
She wasn’t alone. Fernanda, her longtime friend from university, had insisted on joining. Fernanda’s dark curls fell in a braid that swayed with each step, and her eyes, the colour of polished onyx, missed nothing. Beside her, Nikolina—quiet, observant, a photographer who saw the world through a lens that turned ordinary moments into poetry—clutched a battered camera, its strap frayed from countless adventures.
Fernanda laughed softly. “We’ll take a few for good luck,” she said, reaching for a bead shaped like a teardrop. As her fingers brushed the cool glass, a sudden chill rippled through the market. The chatter dimmed, and a figure stepped forward from the shadows—a woman draped in a shawl the colour of twilight. Abby turned to her friends, a smile blooming on her lips
The wind over the high plateau sang a thin, metallic hymn, pulling at the hem of Abby’s jacket as she stepped out onto the cobblestones of La Paz. The city’s lights flickered like fireflies caught in a jar, and the distant peaks of the Cordillera loomed, their snow‑capped crowns catching the last amber of a November sunset.
“Look,” Nikolina whispered, pointing to a wooden box etched with intricate patterns. Inside, a collection of tiny glass beads shimmered, each catching the lantern light and scattering it in a hundred directions. “They say each bead holds a story,” she said, her voice hushed, as if the beads might overhear and break.
And then there was Inti.
Abby had come here on a whim—an impulse born from a half‑forgotten postcard, a whispered legend about a hidden market where the Andes traded secrets instead of goods. She had told herself it was a break from the noise of the city, a chance to breathe in a world where the air was thin enough to make thoughts feel sharper, clearer.
Nikolina lifted her camera, the shutter clicking in time with the hum. Each flash illuminated a fleeting image of a woman standing on a cliff, hair streaming like a banner in the wind, eyes closed as if listening to the world. The photograph developed instantly, the image solidifying into a portrait that seemed to pulse with a quiet light.
“It is the sun’s memory,” the man whispered. “When you hold it, you will feel the world’s pause, the instant when night and day meet, when all possibilities exist.” The stone, now a tiny, smooth pebble in
Fernanda squeezed her hand, and Nikolina raised her camera, capturing the sunrise as it painted the mountains in gold. Inti, ever faithful, nudged Abby’s knee, his soft breath warm against her shin.
Abby felt the weight of her words settle in her chest like a stone. “What moment?” she asked, the question hanging between them.
He opened the box, revealing a single, perfectly round stone that glowed with an inner fire. The stone’s surface was smooth, yet it seemed to contain a swirling galaxy of colours, each hue shifting as if breathing. Fernanda’s dark curls fell in a braid that