Some stories don’t end. They just change skins. Would you like this adapted into a different style (e.g., darker fairy tale, poetic monologue, or a children’s story)?
The peach understood, in its final hours, that being eaten is not a tragedy. It is an intimacy. The poet bit down, juice running to the wrist, and for one messy, sun-warmed moment, the untold tale ended not in silence—but in a gasp of sweetness that tasted exactly like having mattered. peach's untold tale
Not a farmer’s hand, weathered and kind. Not a child’s hand, greedy and quick. This hand was a poet’s—dry knuckles, ink-stained palm, trembling just slightly. The peach felt the twist, the small tear of its stem, the sudden vertigo of leaving home. Some stories don’t end