Jackson Hole, Wyoming. 1983. Field biologist Evelyn Hart spends her days along the Snake River collecting water samples and documenting an impossible anomaly hidden beneath the river's surface. The algae should drift. Instead, it spirals. Deliberate. Organized. Alive. At 3:00 p.m. she sketches the pattern into her notebook. By sunset, she is gone. Two months later, her body surfaces downstream with her lungs packed full of green algae.
The coroner rules drowning. Yet her boots are dry. Her field notes remain untouched. And the algae found inside her body behaves unlike anything recorded in nature. The case quietly disappears. Thirty years later, a ranger discovers one of Evelyn's forgotten water samples inside an evidence locker. Under ultraviolet light, the algae begins moving. Then it spells her name. Soon the river follows him home.
Showers run green. Strange lights pulse beneath his skin. His lungs begin breathing to a rhythm that does not belong to him. And somewhere beneath the endless current of the Snake River, something ancient is still growing. Upstream is a slow-burning dread novella about obsession, environmental memory, identity, and the terrifying possibility that nature is not passive, blind, or indifferent. Filled with mountain wilderness, glowing river water, forgotten evidence lockers, and living biological mysteries, it blends cosmic horror with ecological dread.
Some rivers carry life. Others remember it.
Jackson Hole, Wyoming. 1983. Field biologist Evelyn Hart spends her days along the Snake River collecting water samples and documenting an impossible anomaly hidden beneath the river's surface. The algae should drift. Instead, it spirals. Deliberate. Organized. Alive. At 3:00 p.m. she sketches the pattern into her notebook. By sunset, she is gone. Two months later, her body surfaces downstream with her lungs packed full of green algae.
The coroner rules drowning. Yet her boots are dry. Her field notes remain untouched. And the algae found inside her body behaves unlike anything recorded in nature. The case quietly disappears. Thirty years later, a ranger discovers one of Evelyn's forgotten water samples inside an evidence locker. Under ultraviolet light, the algae begins moving. Then it spells her name. Soon the river follows him home.
Showers run green. Strange lights pulse beneath his skin. His lungs begin breathing to a rhythm that does not belong to him. And somewhere beneath the endless current of the Snake River, something ancient is still growing. Upstream is a slow-burning dread novella about obsession, environmental memory, identity, and the terrifying possibility that nature is not passive, blind, or indifferent. Filled with mountain wilderness, glowing river water, forgotten evidence lockers, and living biological mysteries, it blends cosmic horror with ecological dread.
Some rivers carry life. Others remember it.