Better | Peach's Untold Tale

And the pit? The poet buried it the next morning, beneath a loose board in the garden.

There is a myth that peaches are born from the sighs of gods. False. They are born from the patience of the forgotten. Each sunrise painted a little more gold into its cheek. Each rain taught it how to hold tenderness without breaking. The stem was its only tether to the world it knew—and already, it could feel that world loosening its grip. peach's untold tale

Before the blush, before the fuzz, before the thumbprint of summer’s sun—there was silence. And the pit

“You’re not perfect,” the poet whispered, turning the fruit over. There was a brown spot near the pit, a crack healed crookedly. “Good. So am I.” Each rain taught it how to hold tenderness without breaking

The peach understood, in its final hours, that being eaten is not a tragedy. It is an intimacy. The poet bit down, juice running to the wrist, and for one messy, sun-warmed moment, the untold tale ended not in silence—but in a gasp of sweetness that tasted exactly like having mattered.