Garnet Review
Lina ran.
That night, she placed the stone on her windowsill. Moonlight passed through it, and the room filled with a color that didn’t exist in the daylight spectrum—a deep, shifting red that seemed to breathe. She fell asleep watching it.
The garnet never spoke again. But if it could have, it would have said: Thank you.
“Garnet is not a stone,” she said. “It is a memory. When the world was young and the continents were one, there was a fire that burned at the planet’s core. Not chemical fire—a living one. It had intention. It wanted to see itself. So it pushed up through cracks in the crust, cooled into crystal, and waited. Each garnet is a shard of that original fire. And each one remembers being whole.” garnet
They arrived in a black sedan with diplomatic plates, speaking in a language Lina didn’t recognize but somehow understood. Their leader was a woman with silver hair and garnet earrings that matched the stone. She called herself the Collector.
“What do I do?” she asked.
“Sit,” she said. “You’re carrying a piece of the earth’s heart. It’s heavy.” Lina ran
“Back to the core. Back to the fire. And if you keep feeding it your strongest feelings—your fury, your love, your desperate need—it will pull you down with it. Not into the ground. Into yourself. Until there’s nothing left but the burning.”
She had touched the garnet while thinking of the mining company that had shuttered her father’s livelihood. She had thought, I wish they would burn.
Lina sat. She hadn’t realized she was crying. She fell asleep watching it
Lina shook her head.
She pointed at Lina’s stone. “That one remembers the most. It’s the first piece that broke off. And it wants to go home.”
She was seventeen, wiry from hunger, with calloused palms and the kind of quiet desperation that comes from watching your father’s workshop rust into ruin. The mine had been in her family for three generations, then closed when she was twelve. Now, she scavenged its tailings—not for gems, but for anything she could sell to the passing tourists who came to hike the gorges.
“It mirrors,” the Collector corrected. “Garnet is the stone of blood and fire. It doesn’t create—it amplifies what already burns inside you. Your grief for your mother. Your rage at the mine’s death. Your love for your father. It will take those and turn them into… consequences.”
On the second day, she brought it to the village’s dying apricot tree—a gnarled thing that had given no fruit since her mother’s death. She buried the stone at its roots for one hour. By evening, buds had burst from every branch, tight and green against the October chill.