The Pike That Guards the Bottom of Black MereB2Myths & LegendsListen to the whole story5 nyckelordNyckelordförrådThe first thing they told Callum when he arrived in Thornside was not to fish Black Mere.Översätt styckeIt was his uncle who told him, standing in the doorway of a narrow stone cottage with a mug of tea going cold in his hand. "You can fish the river. You can fish the mill pond. But not the Mere." He said the last word the way people say the name of someone they've lost—carefully, with a kind of respect that borders on fear.Översätt styckeCallum was seventeen and had grown up in a city. He smiled and said nothing, which his uncle apparently took as agreement.Översätt styckeThe legend, as the village told it, went like this: Black Mere was formed not by glaciers or rain, but by grief. Three hundred years ago, a local lord had drowned his own reflection in it—or so the story went, depending on who was telling it. The water had turned black overnight, and nothing that fell in was ever recovered. Not a boat, not a net, not a man. At the bottom lived a pike. Not an ordinary pike—those dull, predatory fish that haunted every other lake in the county—but something older. The villagers called it The Keeper. It was said to be the length of a man lying flat, with eyes the colour of tarnished silver. It did not eat. It simply kept. The rule was simple and severe: cast a line into Black Mere, and The Keeper would take something from you. Not the hook. Not the bait. Something that mattered. Callum thought it was the kind of story adults told children to keep them away from deep water. Sensible, really, if you wrapped it in enough mythology.Översätt styckeHis brother Finn arrived two weeks later. Finn was twenty-two and reckless in the specific way of people who believe nothing bad has ever truly happened to them. He had heard the legend, too—their uncle told it at dinner the first night, clearly enjoying the weight of it—and Finn had laughed in exactly the way Callum had privately wanted to. "Superstition," Finn said, spearing a potato. "You know what actually lives in dark lakes? Silt. And maybe some very confused carp." Their uncle set down his fork but said nothing.Översätt styckeOn the fourth morning of Finn's visit, Callum woke to find his brother's bed empty, his boots gone, and his fishing rod—which he had brought along with the casual arrogance of someone who expected the world to accommodate his hobbies—missing from the front hall. Callum ran. The Mere was half a mile from the cottage, down a track through birch trees that were already beginning to lose their leaves. The morning was cold and very still. When he broke through the tree line and saw the water, he stopped. Black Mere was exactly as the name promised: dark, opaque, perfectly flat. No wind touched it. No reeds grew at its edges. It simply sat there in the hillside like a held breath.Översätt styckeFinn was standing at the bank. His line was in the water. "Finn." Callum kept his voice steady. "Pull it out." His brother didn't turn. "I've been here twenty minutes and nothing has happened. The only thing guarding this lake is boredom." But his voice had lost some of its earlier confidence. He sounded like someone who has told a joke and is waiting, uncertainly, for the laughter. Callum walked to the bank and stood beside him. The water was close—uncomfortably close, in a way that felt less like proximity to a lake and more like proximity to something that was aware of you. "Do you feel that?" Callum asked. "Feel what?" Callum couldn't explain it precisely. A pressure, maybe. The sense that being watched was not the right word for it, but it was the closest word available. And then the line went taut. Finn grabbed the rod with both hands, his knuckles whitening. Whatever was on the other end did not thrash or pull dramatically, the way a caught fish will. It simply held. It held the way a wall holds. "Let go," Callum said. "I can't—it's—" "Let go of the rod, Finn." Something in Callum's voice, or perhaps something in the water, made Finn release his grip. The rod hung in the air for a single, impossible moment. Then it was gone, pulled cleanly beneath the surface without so much as a ripple. The water settled immediately. Flat. Still. Indifferent. They stood there for a long time. "Carp," Finn said, eventually, in a very small voice. "Come on," said Callum.Översätt styckeFinn left Thornside the following day, a week earlier than planned. He said it was work, and Callum let him say it. On the walk to the bus stop, Finn was quieter than Callum had ever known him to be. Not frightened, exactly. More like a man who has opened a door expecting an empty room and found, instead, that it was full of something he didn't have the language to describe. "You don't actually believe it took something from me," Finn said, at the bus stop. It was not entirely a question. Callum considered this honestly. "I don't know what it took. Maybe nothing. Maybe a fishing rod and your certainty about how the world works." He paused. "Maybe that was the point." The bus came. Finn got on it. He turned once at the door and looked at his brother with an expression Callum found difficult to interpret—not gratitude, not exactly, but something adjacent to it.Översätt styckeOn the walk back to the cottage, Callum passed the track to the Mere and kept walking. He did not look down it. He wasn't afraid. He simply understood, now, the difference between a place that is dangerous and a place that is serious. Black Mere was the second kind. It had its rule, and the rule had been broken, and something had been taken, and the account was settled. You didn't go back to renegotiate.Översätt styckeBerättelser för nybörjareGraderade läsareKorta berättelserMyths & Legends storiesAppen har 200+ English berättelser. Fortsätt läsa.Fortsätt i appenGratis att prova · iOS & AndroidFörståelsekontrollComprehension Questions0 of 3 besvarad1Why does Callum run to Black Mere on the fourth morning of Finn's visit?AHe wants to fish there before his brother does.BHe discovers Finn's bed is empty and his fishing rod is missing.CHis uncle tells him Finn has gone to the lake alone.2What happens to Finn's fishing rod when he lets go of it?AIt falls into the shallow water near the bank and Callum retrieves it.BIt is pulled away by a strong current and floats to the other side.CIt is pulled cleanly beneath the surface without leaving a ripple.3At the end of the story, what does Callum believe The Keeper may have taken from Finn?AHis courage and his will to travel.BHis certainty about how the world works.CHis memory of what happened at the lake.Kontrollera din förståelse innan du går vidare.ResetKontrollera svar