8 Mulloy Court Caledon -
A pale, shifting blue-green glow bled under the bedroom door, pooling on the dusty hardwood like liquid ice. Priya grabbed a heavy flashlight and crept into the living room. The glow came from the fireplace—not the hearth, but the wall beside the hearth. The brickwork shimmered, and for a dizzying moment, she could see through it. She saw a root cellar. But it was wrong. The floor was packed earth, not concrete, and on a low stone shelf sat a single, perfect sphere of carved granite, about the size of a grapefruit, pulsing with that cold light.
The house itself was a modest bungalow, pale brick stained dark by decades of wet autumns. A single, gnarled silver maple dominated the front yard, its roots buckling the sidewalk into a series of small, treacherous cliffs. No one had bought the property when the developers came through twenty years ago. The owner, an old stone mason named Emery Voss, had refused to sell. So the new mansions with their three-car garages and faux-stone facades rose around him, turning their back on the little court as if embarrassed by it. 8 mulloy court caledon
Then the furnace clicked off. The light vanished. The wall was just a wall. A pale, shifting blue-green glow bled under the
Priya sat down on the cold earth. The thrumming started, louder now, a vibration that traveled up through her bones. She understood. The seam wasn't a crack in the ground. It was a joint. A knuckle. And the keystone wasn't holding it closed—it was keeping it asleep . The brickwork shimmered, and for a dizzying moment,