dreamglowhigh24
They say the Gulf of Thailand does not like to give up what it takes. Its waters are warm, deceptive, and thick with shifting currents that can swallow a vessel whole and bury the evidence beneath meters of restless, white sand within a single tide. For twelve months, the sea off the coast of the Trat Province had kept its secrets locked away in the deep, ink-black trenches where the sun never reaches.
But sometimes, the ocean plays a cruel game. It takes a life, strips away its history, washes its memory clean like a piece of glass buffeted by the surf, and casts the empty shell back onto a distant shore.
On the isolated beaches of the eastern islands, the locals know that the water connects everything. A broken piece of timber from a shipwreck on Koh Chang can drift silently through the dark, eventually washing up on the rocks of Koh Kood hours away. But timber is dead matter. It does not carry a soul. It does not possess a voice. It does not wear the exact face of a boy who drowned in a midnight tempest a year ago, leaving behind a grief so heavy it could silence the grandest music in the world.
There are rules to life, and there are rules to death. But in the space where the deep water meets the shore, those rules begin to blur into an echo a terrifying, impossible question mark hidden beneath the waves