Rainy Good Morning !!exclusive!! Official
Elias’s hands trembled as he lifted the cage. It was surprisingly light. He turned the tiny brass key in its base, feeling a series of soft, satisfying clicks. The silver rings began to spin slowly, catching the dim window light.
Elias felt a hot tear slide down his cheek. He sat there on the cold floor, wrapped in the quilt, as the sounds faded after thirty perfect seconds. The rain continued its soft applause on the roof.
The rain was tapping a gentle, erratic rhythm against the windowpane—not the aggressive drumming of a storm, but the soft, persistent patter of a world taking a long, quiet shower. Inside the attic bedroom, Elias pulled the worn quilt up to his chin. It was the kind of rainy good morning that made you want to burrow and disappear. rainy good morning
His grandfather’s workbench was in the corner of the living room, a cluttered altar of brass gears, tiny screwdrivers, and magnifying lenses. In the center, under a dust cloth, was the reason for his early rising: a small, bird-shaped cage of interlocking silver rings.
For three years, Elias had been trying to finish it. It was a "memory cage," his grandfather had called it, a device from an old family legend. You were supposed to capture a single sound—a laugh, a name, a promise—inside the silver rings. When you opened the cage on a rainy morning, the sound would be released, clear and perfect, one last time. Elias’s hands trembled as he lifted the cage
Instead, the smell hit him first: fresh bread and cinnamon. Then the sound—not a voice, but the rhythmic thump-thump-squeak of a dough hook kneading dough. And layered over it, the soft, tuneless humming of a woman who was utterly content.
Today was the first rainy morning since the funeral. The silver rings began to spin slowly, catching
Then, with a final, breathy pop , the cage opened.
