Back in the village, Elias woke the next morning and found his vest pocket empty. He sighed, but he did not weep. He carved a new spoon from a piece of birch wood, sat on his stoop, and ate his stew. It tasted exactly the same. The village assumed Silas had finally left for the city. No one missed him much.
Elias would smile, crumb-dusted and calm. “But this one fits my hand.”
It was heavier than he expected. Warmer, too, as if it had just been held.
Across the cobblestone square lived a merchant named Silas. Silas dealt in things that glittered: silver thimbles, brass compasses, and once, a small chest of sapphires so blue they seemed to drink the daylight. Silas had a mustache waxed into twin needles and a laugh that sounded like coins falling. He owned three houses, two carriages, and one persistent, festering envy of Elias. The Golden Spoon
Not of the bread. Of the spoon.
He sat at the table, lifted the stew with the golden spoon, and put it to his lips. The stew tasted like nothing. Not bland, but absent. As if the idea of taste had been removed. He swallowed. His stomach remained hollow. His throat remained dry. And then the first shadow appeared at the end of the corridor.
And in the corridor, where the candles never went out, Silas sat alone at an empty table. The shadows were gone—fed at last. His hands were empty. His belly, for the first time in his life, was not hungry. Back in the village, Elias woke the next
He carved another birch spoon that evening. It fit his hand perfectly.
Time in the corridor worked differently. His beard grew to his chest. His fine coat frayed to threads. The golden spoon never tired, and the stew never ran out. His arm ached. His soul ached. Every time he tried to stop, the spoon burned his hand, and the voice whispered: “Who steals this spoon must feed everyone.”
Every evening, Elias sat on his stoop and ate his dinner—a thick vegetable stew or a simple bean porridge—with a spoon that gleamed like captured sunlight. It was golden. Not gold-plated, not brass washed in wishful thinking, but solid, heavy, twenty-four-karat gold. The bowl of the spoon was worn thin in the center from decades of use. The handle was engraved with a single word in a language no one in the village could read. It tasted exactly the same
Three years later, on a foggy night much like the one Silas disappeared, Elias found the golden spoon lying on his doorstep. It was clean. The engraving on the handle had changed. The old word was gone. In its place, a new word had been scratched, hasty and trembling, as if by a man with very little strength left:
Elias picked it up. He turned it over in his calloused hands. Then he walked to the edge of the crooked forest, knelt by a patch of soft earth, and buried the spoon where no one would ever find it.
He was not happy. But he was full.