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The road was a promise. The tunnel is where it stopped.
In the 1940s, Fontana Dam flooded a stretch of the Little Tennessee River, putting old Highway 288 and six Appalachian communities under the water of a new lake. Thirteen hundred people were displaced, and the family cemeteries they left behind became reachable only by boat. The government promised a road to replace the drowned one. Construction ran six miles into the hills above Bryson City, reached a tunnel bored through a ridge, and stopped. The official reason was unstable rock. Locals call it the Road to Nowhere.
In the summer of 2026, Sydney Howe comes to Bryson City on a gentle assignment for The Continental Review: a feature on Decoration Day, the Appalachian tradition of returning by boat each summer to tend the graves the lake cut off. Then she hears about two high school seniors who walked into the tunnel one evening before graduation and never came out.
No national outlet has touched the disappearance, and the town has learned not to ask. Sydney can see what the story would be worth to the writer who gets it right, and she stays to report it. Each trip into the mountains earns her something and costs her something, and somewhere in the work the reporting stops being witness and starts being claim. The tunnel does not punish. It does not judge a life. It registers, with perfect indifference, the difference between moving through a place and trying to own it.
Decoration Day is hard literary horror about deep time, grief, and the cost of trying to own a place, set at a real site in the Smoky Mountains of North Carolina. For readers of Jeff VanderMeer's Annihilation, Mark Z. Danielewski's House of Leaves, and the quiet, geometric dread of Thomas Ligotti.
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