The Golden Spoon Link

He carved another birch spoon that evening. It fit his hand perfectly.

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 laughed—a shrill, broken sound. “I don’t believe in curses. I believe in gold.”

He tried to drop it. It stuck to his palm. The Golden Spoon

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.

Back in the village, Elias woke the next morning and found his vest pocket empty. He sighed, but he did not weep. He carved a new spoon from a piece of birch wood, sat on his stoop, and ate his stew. It tasted exactly the same. The village assumed Silas had finally left for the city. No one missed him much.

Time in the corridor worked differently. His beard grew to his chest. His fine coat frayed to threads. The golden spoon never tired, and the stew never ran out. His arm ached. His soul ached. Every time he tried to stop, the spoon burned his hand, and the voice whispered: “Who steals this spoon must feed everyone.” He carved another birch spoon that evening

“Enough.”

And in the corridor, where the candles never went out, Silas sat alone at an empty table. The shadows were gone—fed at last. His hands were empty. His belly, for the first time in his life, was not hungry.

One autumn evening, when the fog rolled in so thick it muffled the church bells, Silas decided to take the spoon. Not with violence—he was a coward in that way—but with cleverness. He waited until Elias went inside to fetch more wood for his oven. The bakery door was unlocked (it always was). Silas slipped in, opened the vest pocket hanging by the hearth, and lifted the golden spoon. No—a shape like a child, with eyes like extinguished stars

Not of the bread. Of the 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.

Elias would smile, crumb-dusted and calm. “But this one fits my hand.”

He lifted the spoon again. The stew had not diminished. He fed the shadow-child. One spoonful. Two. Ten. The shadow drank the stew, and for a moment, its eyes flickered with something like warmth. Then another shadow appeared. And another. Soon the corridor was filled with them—hundreds, thousands, all the hungry that Silas had never seen, all the empty bellies his gold had never filled.

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.”