Monday, March 30, 2026

Shifting Sand Episode 65






Episode 65: The Salt and the Sting


​The rain was relentless against the motel glass, a rhythmic drumming that felt like it was trying to break through the very walls. Monica stood over Andrew, her hands steady as she evaluated the jagged lines of his stitches. 

"I’m going to go out and get us some pizza," she whispered, her voice a soft, grounding anchor in the dark room.

 "You stay put."
​As soon as the door clicked shut, Andrew felt the walls closing in. The room felt smaller, the air thicker with the metallic tang of his own blood. 

He needed to wash the scent of the road off his skin—to scrub away the "stink" of his failure. He forced himself up, bracing against the peeling wallpaper as he made his way to the bathroom. But as the warm water hit his back, the world tilted. His vision went dark, and he collapsed against the cold, unforgiving tile.


​Monica returned to the smell of pepperoni and the hollow sound of running water. She found him slumped and shivering under the spray. 

With a focused, maternal intensity, she hauled him out and got him back to the bed. As the night grew colder, Andrew began to shiver—a deep, bone-rattling tremor that wouldn't stop. Monica watched him, her eyes filled with a desperate resolve. 

She climbed into the bed, pulling the heavy blankets over them both, using her own warmth to pull him back from the edge of the dark. Fully  clothed. 

​The Morning After
​The morning sun filtered through the thin, yellowed curtains, casting an amber glow over the room. 

Monica lay still, savoring the weight of Andrew against her. As he stirred, the air changed. 

There was a primal, half-conscious hunger in the way they reached for each other—a desperate, wordless language of two people who thought they were already ghosts.


​Later, picking at the remains of the cold pizza, Andrew took her hand. "Monica, that meant a lot. But I have to be straight with you. If I survive this, I have to try to work things out with Sarah. I love her. I love my baby girl."

​"I know, Andrew," Monica whispered, her heart breaking quietly in the dim light. "I'm going to the store. 

I'll be back in thirty minutes." As soon as her taillights vanished from the gravel lot, Andrew moved. 

He gathered his things and wrote a note: Monica, you helped me survive... what we shared meant something... I am gone now. Please don't cry 

He slipped out, driving toward the grey mist of Astoria.

​The Church in Cannon Beach

​The following Wednesday, Sarah stood in the church parking lot, her mind a frantic swirl of "what ifs" and "not yets." Inside, a kind woman named Martha took her into the kitchen. 

Sarah finally broke, the words pouring out like a floodgate had failed. She told Martha her husband was likely dead—not because she wanted it to be true, but because her mind was trying to find a resting place for the grief. Martha pulled her into a fierce hug. "That is just... that is horrific," she breathed. Right there, they prayed for God's will, though Sarah’s heart felt like lead.

​In the lobby, they were met by Caleb. He was ruggedly handsome, but there was a calculated edge to his kindness. 

There she is, Caleb thought, his gaze locked on Sarah’s red hair and the raw, disoriented look in her eyes. 

To Caleb, her grief wasn't a tragedy to be respected; it was a door left slightly ajar. He saw the wedding ring still on her finger, but he also saw the way she gripped her own arms, as if trying to keep herself from shattering.

​He insisted on walking her to her car, his voice smooth and comforting. Sarah felt a strange, dizzying mix of fear and relief. It was the first time in days someone had looked at her without pity—the first time she felt like a person instead of a widow-in-waiting. "So, you and your husband live in town?" he asked.

​"My husband passed away recently," Sarah whispered. The lie felt like a physical weight, but in her state of shock, it felt like a survival mechanism.

 If she accepted he was gone, the agonizing wait might finally stop. Caleb pressed a business card into her hand. "If you ever need something fixed... I'm good with my hands." Sarah took it, her fingers trembling. Her soul whispered a warning, but the hollow silence of her life shouted louder.

​The Choice

​The next morning, the silence in the house was a screaming void. Sarah saw Caleb again at the coffee shop. 

He was attentive and focused entirely on her, filling the space Andrew had left behind with a charm that felt like a warm blanket.

 She wasn't looking for a lover; she was looking for a heartbeat in the room to drown out the noise of her own sorrow.

​"I actually have a leaky faucet," Sarah heard herself say. 

Her heart thumping against her ribs wasn't excitement—it was the frantic beat of a bird trapped in a cage. She knew she was inviting a wolf into her home, but the thought of one more night alone with her thoughts was more terrifying than the man standing in front of her.

​Back home, Sarah stood in the kitchen, staring at the card on the counter. She looked at her wedding ring—the gold band that now felt like a shackle to a ghost. 

Her mind was a fog of trauma and exhaustion. If I am to survive this, she reasoned, her logic warped by the heavy weight of her loss, I have to be the person he thinks I am.

​She walked into her bedroom and slowly slid the gold band off, placing it inside her jewelry drawer. It wasn't an act of betrayal in her heart; it was a desperate attempt to find a version of herself that wasn't broken.

 She walked out to the deck and looked at the grey Pacific, the lie now her only shield against the wind. "He's gone," she whispered, trying to believe her own words. "He's really gone."

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