Dara: Deep

And then the Chorus began. Not a song, but a cascade of truths. Dara saw herself as a child, laughing in the shallows. She saw her first love, her first failure, her first betrayal of herself. Every hidden shame, every buried joy, every secret hope—the crystals around her vibrated, turning her internal world into external light. It was agonizing. It was beautiful.

“Compensating,” she murmured, overriding the safety locks. The hull groaned. A rivet popped, then another. The violet light grew into a sprawling field of crystal formations, each one a frozen, resonant frequency. It was the Chorus. And at its center was a figure.

Her rational mind screamed warnings. Her heart, attuned to that ancient hum, urged her forward. dara deep

The pressure in the cabin vanished. The violet light flared, then softened. The being smiled, a slow, spreading crack across its abalone face.

She checked her systems. The Seeker was damaged, but it could ascend. Above her, a whole world waited. A world she had been running from. A world full of noise and light and other flawed, beautiful people. And then the Chorus began

Today, the sensors on The Seeker went haywire. The pressure gauge was fine, but the sonar showed impossible geometries—pillars of basalt that twisted like smoke, canyons that seemed to breathe. Then she saw it. A faint, pulsing violet light, far below the rated crush depth of her vessel.

“I am not searching for the Chorus,” Dara whispered, the words scraping out of her like broken shell. “I am hiding from the surface. From the people who need me. From my own life. I came down here because I am afraid to live.” She saw her first love, her first failure,

A woman, seated on a throne of black coral. Her skin was the colour of abalone, iridescent and cracked. Her eyes were twin pearls, unblinking. She was not human. She was the Deep’s memory, the spirit of the trench.