Chapter 26 The Sound of the Joke
"The Bell Tower was already breaking before anyone noticed the sound."
A low, grinding groan rolled through the stone beneath their feet, so deep it felt less like noise and more like pressure, like the land itself was holding its breath. Salt water seeped through old cracks in the base, swirling around shattered slate and rusted metal from the wrecked boxcar jammed against the tower wall.
Evan felt it before he understood it.
Something had shifted.
Not the storm. Not the tide.
The Bell.
He tightened his grip around the indigo rope as if it might slip away on its own.
“Evan,” Jonas said quietly, fear threading through his voice, “whatever you’re about to do, do it fast.”
The boxcar lay half-crushed behind them, metal folded like paper from the impact. Ben was inside, barely conscious, Jonas and M. Cole crouched near him, whispering his name again and again like it might tether him to the world.
At the tower entrance stood Elara.
Cass’s grandmother.
The woman who should have been dead.
Her Keeper’s hook rested against the stone, the curved brass catching faint moonlight. She looked carved from the same rock as the tower... weathered, sharp-eyed, unyielding.
“The Bell is awake,” Elara said. “If you hesitate, it will choose again.”
Evan swallowed. “Choose what?”
She met his eyes. “Who pays.”
The indigo coil pulsed faintly in his hands. Not glowing. Not moving. Just… present. Like it knew it had reached the end of the line.
“You still haven’t told me what sound it wants,” Evan said. “Every Bell rings for something.”
Elara shook her head slowly. “That’s the lie. This one doesn’t ring for truth. It rings for belief.”
M. Cole stepped closer, her voice calm but urgent. “And belief is what kept it alive.”
Jonas’s jaw tightened. “Lila believed,” he said. “She believed enough to die for it.”
“And that’s why she figured it out,” Elara replied. “Too late.”
Evan frowned. “Figured out what?”
“That the Bell doesn’t punish wickedness,” Elara said. “It punishes devotion. It feeds on people who take it seriously.”
Silence fell between them, broken only by the distant crash of waves.
“You’re saying,” Evan said slowly, “that the curse exists because the town believes it must.”
“Yes" Elara simply replied.
Jonas laughed once, it was short and bitter. “You’re telling me ten years of deaths, disappearances, and silence came from… faith?”
Elara’s eyes hardened. “From fear pretending to be faith.”
Evan looked down at the coil again. “Then why did it take Ben?”
“Because he mattered,” Elara said. “Because he was innocent. The Bell doesn’t want the guilty. It wants what hurts most to lose.”
M. Cole placed a hand on Evan’s shoulder. “Lila told us once,” she said softly. “‘If the Bell ever takes me seriously, laugh at it.’ We thought she was joking.”
“She wasn’t,” Elara said. “She was begging.”
Evan exhaled slowly. “So what do I do?”
Elara stepped aside, revealing the iron gate set into the base of the tower. “You insult it.”
Jonas blinked. “You what?”
“You make it seem ridiculous,” Elara said. “You don’t give it music. You give it failure. Noise without meaning. Sound without reverence.”
Evan hesitated. “And if I’m wrong?”
Elara didn’t answer immediately.
“If you’re wrong,” she said at last, “the Bell will ring properly. And it will take the nearest soul.”
Evan nodded once. “Then let’s not be wrong.”
He limped toward the gate.
It was chained tight, thick iron links crusted with salt. A heavy brass lock hung at the center, old but intact.
“It’s sealed,” Evan said.
Elara raised her hook.
“This tower was never locked against the sea,” she said. “Only against liars.”
She struck the lock.
CLINK.
“The Bell does not save,” she said clearly.
She struck it again.
CLINK.
“It does not protect.”
The third strike rang sharper.
“It only consumes.”
The lock split clean down the middle, falling to the stone with a dull thud. The gate creaked open, releasing air that smelled old... metal, water, and something darker.
Evan stepped inside.
The chamber was circular, stone walls slick with moisture. At its center rose a thick pedestal, surrounded by shallow seawater swirling in slow, deliberate circles.
And above it...
The Bell.
Massive. Dark. Streaked with indigo stains that looked almost like veins.
It didn’t move.
But Evan felt it watching.
He stepped onto the narrow walkway around the pedestal, the coil tugging faintly toward the metal like a magnet.
His heart hammered.
“This is stupid,” he muttered. “Absolutely stupid.”
He raised the rope.
For one second, doubt flickered.
Then he slammed it against the Bell.
CLANG...
Not a toll.
A shrill, metallic scream ripped through the chamber.
At the same time, Evan dragged the slate shard violently down the rope.
SCREEEEEE...
The sound was unbearable.
Wrong.
It scraped nerves raw, like a broken machine trying to pretend it still worked.
The Bell convulsed.
Not ringing.
Shaking.
The coil snapped tight against its side, flattening, fusing, burning into the metal as if dragged there by force.
A sharp, choked sound burst from it, half yelp, half tear.
Then...
Nothing.
The Bell stilled.
The water settled.
Silence.
Evan collapsed to his knees, gasping.
“It’s… done,” he whispered.
Footsteps rushed in behind him.
Jonas reached the Bell first, touching the fused coil with trembling fingers.
“It’s cold,” he said. “Completely inert.”
M. Cole exhaled a sob of relief. “Ben?”
A weak voice answered from the boxcar.
“That was… really rude.”
They froze.
“I mean,” the voice added, faint but annoyed, “I get the point, but did it have to sound like that?”
Evan turned so fast he nearly fell.
Ben was sitting up.
Color had returned to his cheeks. His eyes were clear.
He was alive.
Jonas broke down completely, pulling him into a shaking embrace.
“You scared us,” Jonas whispered. “You scared us all.”
Ben frowned. “I was dreaming about the Bell,” he said. “It was very serious. Then something screamed at it and it got embarrassed.”
Elara closed her eyes.
“The joke worked,” she said. “The Bell hates being laughed at.”
Before anyone could speak...
There was a metal screeched outside.
It was Too fast.
“That’s Cass,” Evan said sharply. “She followed us.”
The maintenance hand-car slammed onto the causeway ramp, bounced violently, and threw Cass forward.
She hit stone hard, rolling, scraping over, her breath knocked from her lungs.
But the empty car kept going.
“Cass!” Evan shouted, sprinting toward her.
The car smashed into the wrecked boxcar, forcing it deeper into the tower base with a thunderous CRUNCH.
The stone cracked.
The tower groaned.
When the dust cleared, Cass lay gasping but alive.
Evan reached her just as he saw it.
A gap inside the tower wall.
Behind it was a hidden chamber.
And inside that chamber...
A massive leather-bound book.
Silver latch.
Indigo seal.
Elara stared at it in horror.
“That,” she said quietly, “was never meant to be opened.”
The Bell stood silent behind them.
But the story wasn’t finished.
It had only been unlocked.