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The Ashen Farewell

  The sky wore the color of old pewter the morning they buried his parents. Clouds hung low

  over the sea cliffs, pressing down against the horizon until sky and ocean bled into one dull

  shade of gray. The gulls, once shrill and restless, had gone silent — their cries swallowed by

  the wind. Even the waves seemed to hold their breath.

  Elior Wyrden stood between two open graves, his coat drawn tight against the salt-heavy

  air. The preacher’s voice went thin on the wind, hollow words of comfort stripped of meaning.

  All Elior could hear was the rhythm of the shovel: the wet scrape of metal into earth, the heavy

  thud of soil striking wood. Each thud echoed through him, slow and hollow, until it no longer

  sounded like dirt at all but rain — soft, steady, falling against coffins that did not belong to this

  world.

  He tried to remember warmth — his mother’s laugh spilling like sunlight across a room,

  his father’s quiet strength and the way his eyes always seemed to see more than he said. He

  remembered the scent of oil and parchment in the study, the clutter of mythological texts

  scattered across the desk, the hours they’d spent tracing the roots of legends and naming beasts

  that had long fallen out of time. They called it mythic nonsense. He called it home.

  Now there was only wind.

  The police had offered no explanation — only confusion and paper reports. Their car

  found twenty miles off course, the GPS blank as if the road had never existed. No one could

  say why. No one ever would. He had imagined it a thousand ways: the crash, the silence after.

  If he had been there… could he have stopped it? Or would there be three caskets instead of

  two?

  No one had answers.

  Only whispers.

  Only the wind threading through the Ash Tree JUST beyond the graves —

  a towering thing whose silver bark gleamed like frost beneath

  the dimming sky. Its branches spread wide above the burial plots, an ancient umbrella of

  shadow and light. Each gust through its limbs carried the faint sound of a sigh, or perhaps the

  whisper of something older than wind.

  The graves faced the ocean. From where Elior stood, he could see the gray expanse of

  water stretching endlessly to the horizon — a shifting mirror for the sky’s grief.

  Between that cold vastness and the resting places of his parents, the Ash Tree stood sentinel, its roots

  gripping the cliffside as though holding the earth together.

  Elior lifted his gaze, pulling himself from the mire of thought like a man clawing his way

  from deep water.

  For the briefest moment, he swore the veins in the bark pulsed with faint light — slow, rhythmic, alive.

  Something in it watching him.

  A hand — cold from the sea air, steady — rested gently on his shoulder.

  A man stood beside him now. A stranger — tall, his coat shifting in the wind — yet

  something in his presence felt familiar, as if the air itself recognized him. His expression was

  quiet, unreadable, and his eyes carried the weight of someone who had known the same grief

  too many times before.

  He gave Elior a slow, wordless nod before stepping past him toward the graves.

  For a time, he said nothing. He simply stood before the twin headstones, gaze tracing the

  carved names and the fresh soil beneath them. The wind pressed at his back; his coat flared

  like a dark wing. Then, after a long silence, he bowed his head, lips moving in a whisper the

  wind carried away before it could be heard.

  When he turned back, his eyes found Elior’s again — distant, searching, and touched with something that might have been sorrow.

  It took Elior a moment to place the face.

  Up close, the man looked carved from wind and Time. His hair — the same pale-sand

  blond as Elior’s father’s — was streaked with silver at the temples, and his skin held the faint

  weathering of someone who had spent more years on the road than at home. A short, unkempt

  beard traced his jaw, catching the sea’s moisture, and a thin scar curved from his left temple to

  just beneath his eye — an old wound, white against fair skin. That eye — Elior realized, was

  clouded — not blind exactly, but touched by something that shimmered faintly in the dim

  light, as if it reflected more than the world around them.

  The other eye, sharp and clear gray, studied him with quiet intensity.

  His coat was heavy wool, dark and travel-worn, edges frayed from long use.

  Beneath it, faint lines of runic ink curled along his collarbone — markings

  half-hidden, half-faded, like whispers of a language the world had forgotten.

  He’d seen that face once before — in a photograph his father kept tucked inside his desk

  drawer, the edges yellowed with age. He remembered asking his mother about the man, and

  the faint smile that crossed her lips before she replied, “That’s your father’s brother —

  My brother-in-law. You’ll meet him someday, hopefully soon… though he’s always been the

  reclusive sort.”

  The memory rose unbidden, and with it the name slipped from his lips before he’d fully

  thought it. “Uncle Auren?”

  The man nodded once more, the motion slow, as if confirming something to himself. His

  hand, still cold from the wind, found Elior’s shoulder again — steady, grounding.

  “I wish I had words that could bring you peace,” he said quietly. “But I am sorry for your loss.”

  Elior only nodded, the motion small and hollow. The words felt rehearsed, like lines

  spoken on a stage. Above them, the Ash Tree groaned softly in the wind, its silver bark

  whispering against itself — a sound that might have been the wind. Or a sigh.

  “Beautiful tree,” Auren murmured.

  “You know what they say about ash trees, don’t you?”

  Elior shook his head.

  “They grow on crossroads,” Auren said softly. “Places where one world bleeds into another.”

  He blinked, shaking himself from reverie, and his voice found a steadier warmth. “I hope

  you don’t mind, but I’ve taken the liberty of having your essentials brought to my home. As

  you may not know, your parents left your guardianship in my care — in the event of their…

  departure.” His words faltered on the edge of that last word. “No boy should have to bury his

  parents at seventeen,” he murmured. “And no parent should ever have to bury their child.”

  Auren’s eyes tightened in something darker — a grief Elior recognized.

  Maeve Solstr?m, the family friend who had arranged the service, stepped forward quietly.

  She was a tall woman with sea-gray eyes and wind-tangled hair drawn back in a loose braid

  streaked with silver. Her coat, dark wool lined with faded tartan, looked older than the decade,

  the cuffs worn soft from years of weather and work. There was something steady about her —

  the kind of calm that comes from knowing grief too well — yet a faint, unspoken warmth

  lingered in her gaze. Her skin bore the faint freckling of one who had lived her life beneath

  open skies, and when she spoke, her voice carried the lilting cadence of the northern coasts,

  every word softened by salt and memory.

  Without a word, she pressed something into Elior’s palm, after a brief saddened look

  "your mother left this in my care before she took leave from work, said she

  it would find its way back to you when the Ash stirred,” she murmured, glancing toward the tree as its bark pulsed faintly with the wind.

  “Well…”" see paused as if her words refused to obey her — "I'm sorry" she finished quietly taking her leave.

  Elior opened his hand.

  The Fossilized Leaf pendant glowed amber-gold in the dim light, its tiny leaf perfectly preserved — a relic of sunlight trapped forever in resin.

  A memory struck him like breath returning

  the pendant catching firelight in their kitchen

  one winter evening, its golden depths alive as his mother traced a thumb over the fossilized

  leaf. “Everything that lives leaves a trace, Elior,” she’d said, her voice soft, reverent. “Even the

  smallest life holds the memory of the world that made it. Amber doesn’t just preserve — it

  remembers.” She had smiled then, faint and knowing, the pendant warm against her skin as

  though it carried the echo of every sun it had ever seen. He hadn’t understood her words then.

  Now, standing beneath the gray sky, he thought he almost did.

  The pendant was warm despite

  the wind, as though it had been waiting for his touch. Its weight was small, almost fragile, yet

  it carried the scent of her perfume — faint, floral, already fading. Elior closed his hand around

  it, the sharp edge of grief cutting clean and silent through his chest.

  Auren watched him, something shifting behind his eyes.

  Then he unclasped the chain around his neck and revealed a simple ring — worn, weathered, and humming faintly with memory.

  “Your father gave me this the night before you were born,” Auren said.

  “He told me to keep it safe until the day it might mean more to you than to him.”

  He placed the ring in Elior’s hand.

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  — no ceremony, only the heaviness of memory passed from one hand to another.

  Elior turned it over — Petrified Ash preserved in amber, engraved with runes worn soft by time.

  It pulsed faintly with warmth.

  “Thank you,” Elior whispered.

  Auren nodded. “He’d be proud of you. He always was.”

  Elior slipped the ring and pendant into his jacket.

  The wind exhaled between them.

  Auren gave a slow nod, his expression

  unreadable but his eyes tired — not from the years, but from all the remembering.

  Whenever you’re ready,” Auren murmured, “we can go.”

  Elior looked at the graves Emotion swelling at the though of the Final goodbye.

  “If I stay any longer… I don’t think I can hold it in.”

  Auren’s hands gripped his shoulders, firm and grounding. "You have every right to lose your composure, son.”

  He pulled Elior into a brief, steady embrace, not the warmth of Eliors mothers, nor the protective strength of his fathers,

  but steady and real, and that was something.

  When Auren released him, the mourners were already scattering down the path toward

  their cars. As they turned to leave, a voice called out — firm but hesitant. “Elior Wyrden!”

  A man in a dark overcoat approached, shoes crunching over wet gravel. “Nathaniel

  Greaves,” he said, offering his hand. “Your parents’ solicitor — this is Ms. Hall, their notary.

  I’m terribly sorry for your loss.”

  Elior shook his hand, the gesture mechanical, distant.

  “Your parents left instructions to deliver something to you — personally.” From a leather

  case, Greaves produced a small envelope sealed with dark wax stamped in a circle of

  intertwined branches. “It’s from them,” he said quietly. “A letter — attached to the will. There

  are other details of course: the estate transfer, the holdings, the property here and abroad. But

  this—” he hesitated, glancing at Auren “—was meant for your hands alone. Legal

  guardianship transfers to your uncle as stipulated.”

  Elior stared at the envelope. His name was written across the front in his mother’s

  handwriting — soft loops and delicate strokes he knew by heart. “Thank you,” he managed.

  Greaves nodded. “If you need anything further, our office is at your disposal.” Ms. Hall

  murmured a polite farewell, and soon both were gone, their figures swallowed by mist.

  Elior stood in silence, the envelope cold between his fingers. Auren watched him for a

  moment, eyes unreadable. “Keep it close,” he said. “Open it when you’re ready.” Elior slipped

  the letter into his coat pocket beside the ring and pendant, feeling their combined weight settle

  against his chest. He looked once more toward the graves, the sea beyond them blurring into

  gray. “Ready,” he said softly.

  Auren’s nod was slight. “Then let’s go, Elior.”

  They turned toward the waiting car — an all-black sedan, well worn but clearly

  maintained. For just a moment, as they passed beneath the Ash Tree, its silver bark caught the

  light again. It seemed to shiver, as though stirring from slumber.

  The drive north seemed to last forever. Mist crawled across the coastal roads like it was

  alive, wrapping around the car in pale ribbons that turned the headlights into halos. Every few

  minutes, Elior glanced at his uncle — not sure what he expected — but Auren said nothing.

  His hands were steady on the wheel, his gaze fixed somewhere far beyond the windshield.

  Perhaps he was lost in his own grief. If so, he let nothing show.

  Elior’s thoughts drifted to the envelope resting in his pocket — a quiet weight against his

  heart. Before he realized it, his hand had moved on its own, drawing it out to rest in his lap.

  The wax seal remained unbroken, its surface catching the passing light. He traced the

  impression — two intertwined branches curling into a perfect circle. He had seen it before,

  stamped into the corner of old letters in his father’s study. He could almost smell the oil and

  parchment again, hear the ticking of the old clock that never kept time. A younger version of

  himself sitting cross-legged on the rug, running his fingers over the heavy piece of polished

  metal his father kept in a drawer — the family seal. An artifact from a bygone age, always out

  of place in their modern home, as if it belonged to another world entirely.

  The symbol seemed to bend when he looked too long — a trick of the eyes, he told himself,

  though something in him doubted it. The letter felt heavier than paper should be, as if it carried

  not just words but the gravity of something waiting to be remembered. He wanted to open it, to

  hear their voices again, but fear rooted him. Whatever it held, it was final — a message from

  the other side of goodbye. He slipped it back into his coat, close to his heart.

  Outside, the fog thickened. The car hummed softly. In the glass, Elior’s reflection blinked a

  fraction too late. Elior tired from the day pressed him forehead to the cold window welcoming the cold shock

  an allowed his mind to wander to places less deary then today.

  When the fog finally began to thin, the world revealed itself piece by piece — first the

  suggestion of rooftops, then the silhouette of spires cutting through the gray. The manor did

  not so much appear as emerge, rising from the hillside as if the earth itself were exhaling it

  back into being.

  It perched at the cliff’s edge, the black water below churning restlessly against stone. From

  a distance, it might have looked abandoned — a relic left to the wind and salt — but as the car

  drew closer, faint light traced along the seams of its frame, glinting off the dark iron that bound

  the structure like a skeleton beneath the wood.

  The timbers, slick with sea mist, were the color of drowned oak; the ironwork gleamed

  faintly, as though remembering sunlight. In the last breath of dusk, the house took on an almost

  spectral glow — neither alive nor dead, but caught somewhere between. Windows dotted its

  face like unblinking eyes, reflecting the last gold of the sinking sun before swallowing it

  whole. A single lamp wavered above the front door, its clouded glass twitching in the wind.

  The house seemed to listen as they approached. Elior, drawn to it, leaned forward and

  rolled down his window.

  The timbers groaned softly in the cold air, and for a moment, he felt

  as though it had been waiting for him.

  A hollow unease coiled in his chest. The place felt too still, too aware. He had never seen it

  before, yet it stirred a feeling of recognition — not memory, but something deeper, older, like

  the faint echo of a dream half-remembered. The rhythm of the waves below almost matched

  his pulse.

  The wind swept against the car as they stopped before the gate, carrying the scent of salt

  and iron. A flicker of movement crossed one of the upper windows — or maybe it was only the

  reflection of the sea.

  Auren killed the engine. The silence that followed pressed heavy between them.

  “Welcome home, Elior,” Auren said.

  The word home felt alien.

  As Elior stepped out of the sedan, the air struck him — sharp with salt and rain, and

  something else beneath it. Ozone.

  That electric scent that hums quietly against the skin before

  a storm, as though the world itself is holding its breath. It carried the weight of a warning —

  something vast and unseen waiting beyond the horizon.

  He closed his eyes almost in protest, and for a fleeting moment, the sound of the sea gave way to another

  rhythm: the soft clatter of pans, the hiss of eggs on a skillet, the warm hum of his mother’s

  voice. He could almost feel the sunlight through the kitchen window, smell the faint sweetness

  of coffee and toasted bread. His father would be there too — newspaper in hand, pretending to

  read, watching him with quiet amusement before reaching out to ruffle his hair. Sleepyhead,

  his father would say, voice rich with affection. Past ten again. You’ll sleep through your own

  birthday at this rate.

  The memory flickered like an old film reel, fading as the cold wind dragged him back to

  the present. The sea crashed below the cliffs. The scent of ozone thickened — metallic,

  alive.

  Nothing seemed real anymore.

  Nothing felt Right.

  Only echoes.

  Elior took a step forward — and the world shuddered.

  He stumbled, catching himself on the car. Auren said something — Elior couldn’t make

  out the words — his uncle’s face filled with concern, but the world was dimming, colors

  fading.

  The letter slipped from his pocket as he fell — the wax seal catching the

  faintest glint of silver light before the envelope vanished beneath the mist.

  just before the darkness took him, Elior saw it — a shimmer, faint and silver,

  threading through the air like dust caught in moonlight. It drifted past his fingertips and

  vanished into his skin. The air trembled. The world drew a single, silent breath.

  The scent of ash filled his lungs — cold, ancient, and familiar.

  Whispers stirred in the fog, too soft to be words, yet they knew him. They moved through

  him. The manor leaned closer — timbers creaking in the wind, windows catching faint light

  where none should exist. For a heartbeat, Elior felt that same recognition as before, but clearer

  now, almost intimate. The air between him and the house pulsed — not like a place watching,

  but like something remembering.

  His pulse slowed.

  His body sank.

  somewhere, far beyond the cliff and sea, something

  vast turned its gaze toward him.

  Then—

  stillness.

  "The Ash remembers."

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