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Showing posts with label LonelySoul. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LonelySoul. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Part 3: The Echo Beyond the Veil

 


The days in Windmere grew longer, golden with a strange, humming warmth. Flowers that hadn’t bloomed in generations now peeked through old stone walls. Children claimed the trees were singing lullabies in their dreams. Lila, once just a curious girl, now walked with quiet purpose. The second guardian, the young tree she had awakened, stood beside the Whispering Tree—its leaves still, but expectant.


Then one night, beneath a veil of falling stars, a change came.


The sky cracked—not with thunder, but with silence. Deep, ancient silence that seemed to hush every breath. In the forest, where the Hollow Light had once pulsed, the blackened stones began to glow faintly with runes unseen before. Lila felt it before she saw it—a pull, like a memory trying to return home.


Elder Marn summoned her. “The veil between worlds is thinning,” he whispered, voice tight with awe and fear. “There are echoes coming through. Sounds that don’t belong.”


Lila listened. And she heard it too—a low, melodic hum that rose and fell like a tide. Not from the trees. Not from the wind. But from beneath the earth.


Guided by the compass, now dull and silent, she returned to the clearing. The ground was soft, pulsing faintly. And at its center, beneath the runes, was a spiral staircase carved into stone.


Lila descended alone.


The passage was cold, the air filled with whispers—not the Tree’s, but others. Older. Weary. The staircase led to a vast chamber, its walls covered in mirrors that did not reflect her face, but memories—hers, the villagers’, and even ones she could not recognize. In the center hovered a shard of violet crystal, flickering as if alive.


As she stepped close, it spoke—not in words, but in feeling. A warning.


“This world is not the only one. The Hollow Light was a seed. But seeds must grow, or they rot. And something rots beyond the veil.”


Lila saw glimpses—shattered guardians, corrupted roots, trees twisted by silence and shadow. A reflection of Windmere in decay.


Suddenly, her notebook, the one she had carried since the beginning, fluttered open. A new phrase had appeared in silver ink:


“One guardian awakens. The other must remember.”


Then the crystal dimmed.


She left the chamber, the path behind her crumbling as if never there. But now she carried something more than visions—a truth etched into her bones.


Back in Windmere, the second tree had begun to shed silver leaves.


And in the far reaches of the forest, just past the veil, another Lila opened her eyes—one who had forgo

tten the light.


To be continued…


"The Whispering Tree – Part 2: The Hollow Light

 





A year had passed since Lila restored the village well. The Whispering Tree had become a quiet guardian once more, speaking only when it chose. Though Lila still visited it often, the whispers had grown faint, as if waiting for something—or someone.

Then, one misty dawn, a new voice echoed from the tree’s silver leaves. It wasn’t a name this time, but a phrase: “The Hollow Light awakens.”

Lila’s breath caught. She wrote it down and reread it a dozen times. What was the Hollow Light?

That day, she confided in Elder Marn, the oldest villager and former historian. His eyes went wide. “The Hollow Light is an ancient tale, child. A beacon from the days before memory. They say it hides in the forest’s forgotten places—where magic was first born.”

Intrigued and compelled, Lila set off with her notebook, a lantern, and the silver compass that once belonged to her mother. She followed the clues the Tree whispered over the next weeks: glowing moss, a half-buried statue, and an ancient map etched into the bark of a fallen tree.

Eventually, deep in the forest where even birds went silent, she found a clearing surrounded by blackened stones. In its center floated a faint sphere of light—barely visible, pulsing slowly like a sleeping heart.

As she stepped forward, the compass spun wildly, then stopped dead. The Hollow Light flared.

A voice—not from the Tree, but from the light itself—spoke in her mind:

“You bear the memory of magic. But memory alone is not enough. Will you carry the burden of truth?”

Without fully understanding, Lila nodded. The light swept over her, not burning, but revealing. Images filled her mind—visions of the Tree being planted by a forgotten people, guardians of harmony between land, magic, and time. She saw that the Hollow Light was their last remaining spark, hidden away when the world stopped listening.

When she awoke, the light had vanished—but in its place stood a smaller tree, a twin to the Whispering Tree, still young, still growing. Lila understood now: she had awakened a second guardian.

Returning to Windmere, she found the old tree brighter than before. Its whispers returned, not just to her, but to others. The village had become a place of wonder once more. And Lila—still just a girl—had become a living bridge between past and future.

But she knew this was only the beginning.

Somewhere beyond the woods, something else had begun to stir.