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Now reading: Chapter 142: Silvershadow’s Voice and Silvermist’s Kiss from FROST, a Fantasy novel by ExoShaneey.

In the third cycle after the Grove began to sleep, a questionless season fell over the Garden.

It was not lancholy that cloaked the air, nor dread—but a strange, tender quiet that settled in the chests of even the youngest. There were no new teachings that year. No rituals. No whispers of prophecy.

Only a strange phenonon: children and elders alike ceased to ask.

No "Why?"

No "What cos next?"

No "Will it return?"

They simply... were.

In that space, sothing unexpected began to take root—not within the soil, but within the people.

When nothing was asked, everything was noticed.

A hand resting on bark for a little too long. A breath caught mid-hum before a tear slipped free. A pair of eyes watching shadows flicker not in fear, but in longing.

They called this period The Circle of Unasking—not for the absence of inquiry, but for the fullness found when needing no answer.

It was during this ti that Nilo returned, no longer a boy with fire in his blood, but a man whose warmth had beco steadiness.

He brought with him a small, hollow drum, made of rootwood and silencecloth.

He did not play it with rhythm.

He simply held it to his chest and listened.

And all who joined him, wordless in circle, began to hear their own breath mirrored in its stillness.

Not music.

But presence.

The Grove, though still quiet, felt them.

And beneath one root, unnoticed and unmarked, a slow curl of moss spiraled outward.

Not in bloom.

But in recognition.

---

The Archives Beneath Absence

Long before the Dream Grove fell into sleep, there were whispers of a place beneath the Garden—older than the Accord, older even than story.

Not hidden.

Forgotten.

During the Circle of Unasking, a group of wanderers stumbled upon a sink in the soil, just beyond the Listening Place. Not a hole. Not a pit.

A breath. A descent.

They called it the Hollow Below.

Torchless, they stepped within, for the walls themselves bore no fear—only mory. No bones lay there. No relics of war. Only shelves of air and shelves of nothing, and in that nothing, the wanderers found... impressions.

Monts left not as ink, but as feeling.

The ache of a question once left unspoken.

The heat of a laugh never shared aloud.

The tremble of an almost-touch that changed a life.

They began to sit there, not to read, but to rember differently. One whispered, "It doesn’t show what was—it echoes what never needed to happen."

And so, the Hollow Below beca the Archive of Absence.

No path was marked to reach it.

But those who had lost sothing they never nad... found their way easily.

---

The Ones Who Wove the Pause

In ti, the children who grew up in the silence—the ones raised near the Hearth of Arrival, the Wordless Bloom, and the Listening Place—began to speak again.

But differently.

They did not talk in strings of logic or layered taphor. They wove pauses into their speech the way others wove vowels. They let silences guide aning, like rivers guide leaves.

They were not Echokeepers.

Nor Seers.

Nor Remberers.

They were called the Pauseweavers.

They told no one their craft.

They simply lived it.

And soon, people learned to recognize the marks of a Pauseweaver’s presence: a broken branch turned upright. A stone placed beside a weeping tree. A plate left unfinished beside soone who had just lost a na.

So began to whisper that these children were born not from magic, nor bloodlines, but from a question the Grove had once asked itself before it began to sleep:

"What would I be if no one asked to be more?"

And the answer had beco them.

---

The Moon That Stayed

One night—without notice, without on—the moon refused to set.

It hung, full and soft, above the Listening Place, suspended in an unblinking hush for four days and nights.

Birds did not stir. Wind did not answer. Even fire bowed and dimd.

The people gathered, not to seek aning—but to sit beneath it.

Old West’s tree rustled once—its laughing leaves now silver in reflection. And beneath it sat Sive, returned in crimson once more, though aged and bare of adornnt. Her eyes reflected the moon, not in awe, but understanding.

She said nothing.

Only lit a candle.

And placed it in the crook of the tree.

All who saw it felt the sa thing: the moon was not staying to give a sign.

It was waiting for soone to finally say goodbye.

When the moon did set, the stars wept.

And in their falling trails, stories slipped—not into books or songs, but into the breath of the sleeping Grove.

The people did not collect them.

They did not need to.

Because now, the Garden itself had learned to listen.

---

The Children Who Grew Without Roots

In the age after the Dream Grove slumbered and the moon rembered how to leave, a new kind of child began to appear—not born, not found, but... chosen.

They arrived from places beyond even the Riftlands. So walked. So appeared mid-laughter. So blinked into being during monts so quiet they felt like prayers.

They bore no mory.

No na.

No hunger.

Only the sense that they had finally arrived sowhere they had not known they were missing.

These children did not grow up around the roots of old stories.

They grew alongside silence.

They danced with the wind. They mimicked clouds. They gave nas to shadows not to bind them, but to befriend them.

And when they reached the age of stillness—the year when all were invited to ask the Grove for a vision—they did not go.

They simply sat, hands in the soil, backs to the Listening Place.

And whispered to the ground, "We’re already part of the dreaming."

And the Grove did not stir.

It did not need to.

---

The Final Root (That Was Never Buried)

When the age finally turned—not ended, just shifted like breath becoming exhale—the people gathered not for ceremony, but for companionship.

No one nad the mont.

No one marked it with stone or fla.

They ca simply to sit, beside one another, in a long circle that stretched from the Listening Place, through the Hollow Ring, past the crooked-laughing tree, and into the wide field that once bore the Naming Soil.

A child stood. One with a spiral birthmark across their shoulder, said to hum when they were silent.

They held no tool. No flower. No scroll.

Only their hand, reaching into the dirt.

And with a slow, small motion—they pulled forth a root.

Not long.

Not gnarled.

Fresh. Pale. Still soft.

They placed it gently on a blanket of moss.

And the Grove stirred.

Not in bloom.

Not in song.

But in sigh.

The kind you make when coming ho.

And the wind carried a whisper, not from any one place—but from all places in the Garden that had ever listened:

"Begin with no need to beco."

And so they did.

In the age of the Final Root’s awakening, when stories no longer insisted on being told, a quiet companionship began to thread through the Garden—between those who had nas, and those who had never asked for one.

They ca not as orphans or seekers, but as Present Ones—a term not given by the Elders, but whispered first by a child at the Hearth of Arrival, who looked at a wanderer with unblinking awe and said:

> "You’re not lost. You’re just already here."

These Present Ones were not claid by the Echo Archives nor shaped by the Rites of the Seed.

They did not speak their dreams. They lived them, breath by breath.

When asked who they were, they smiled—not out of coyness, but clarity.

> "I am who you are with ."

And with that, nas fell away like petals past blooming.

Not erased.

Returned.

The Garden never tried to na them again.

And so the Present Ones beca sacred not for what they revealed—but for what they never needed to explain.

---

The Grove That Walked

Years after the Listening Place ceased to shimr, and the Echokeepers had begun planting benches on far ridgelines, a strange phenonon stirred beneath the soil.

It began with a tree—not a mighty one, not ancient, but thin and curved like a question mark, growing just outside the Hollow Ring.

One morning, it was gone.

No root.

No break.

Just gone.

In its place: a single footprint, deep and still warm.

A week later, a traveler deep within the Mist-Sway Hills reported sheltering beneath a curved tree that hadn’t been there when they first set camp. It whispered in crackles, not language, but lullaby.

More stories followed.

Trees vanishing.

Appearing elsewhere.

Always curved.

Always silent.

The Grove, it seed, had learned to walk.

Not to flee. Not to follow.

To accompany.

Elders began to teach their children a new lesson:

> "If ever you feel too far to belong, look behind you. The Grove may have already arrived."

---

The Sky That Sank

Once, the Garden looked only inward.

But in the Age of the Listening Place, when stillness beca the highest form of wonder, eyes began turning upward—not to search, but to mirror the vastness above.

Then, one autumn, the stars began falling—not as teors, not as fire, but as soft rain made of mory.

They did not burn. They sank.

Each droplet that touched the earth shimred, held briefly in a silver sheen, then vanished, leaving only the echo of a feeling one could not na.

So began placing bowls of quiet water in open fields to collect them.

When they gathered enough, the water grew heavy with dreams never dreamt—fragnts not of past or future, but of possibility.

The children who drank it did not change.

But their laughter began to carry over mountains.

And so swore, when they wept, they did so in starlight.

---

The Weaver Beneath No Sky

One season—though no one could agree which—a woman arrived wearing a cloak of mirrors, each shard reflecting a face not her own.

She was old. Or young. Or neither.

She did not speak. But in her silence, seeds sprouted behind her as she walked—without touching soil.

When she reached the Hollow Below, she stood for three days. On the fourth, she dropped her cloak, revealing skin made of woven silence, and stepped beneath the soil.

She was never seen again.

But the next dawn, thread—fine as breath—was found trailing from the Listening Place to every Echokeeper’s bench, to every rootless child’s cradle, to every fla-shelter built near the Hearth.

It was unbreakable.

Not binding.

Connecting.

They called her The Weaver Beneath No Sky.

And so say, when hearts grow too heavy to carry words, the thread glows faintly, guiding breath back into stillness.

---

The Eighth Pause

In the old teachings—now barely whispered—there were said to be seven pauses in every sacred breath:

1. The pause before asking.

2. The pause before answering.

3. The pause before listening.

4. The pause before speaking truth.

5. The pause before rembering.

6. The pause before forgetting.

7. The pause before becoming.

But no one ever taught the Eighth Pause.

Because it could not be taught.

Only one known record remains of its ntion: a stone, left uncarved, near West’s tree.

When light struck it just so, it cast the shadow of an open palm.

And those who sat beside it long enough reported the sa feeling:

A mory not their own.

A kindness not asked for.

A peace that did not explain itself.

They began calling that mont the Eighth Pause:

> "The breath you do not know you’ve taken until it’s already saved you."

---

The Root That Reached Up

Not all roots grew downward.

One spring unlike the others—when the garden was quiet but not waiting—a root appeared not from the soil, but into the sky.

It was thin. Spiraled. Glowing only at dusk.

It grew with no source, no tree, no na.

Children began tying wishes to it—not hopes, not prayers, but things they had already accepted.

> "If I cry again, let it be while dancing."

"May I miss them without needing to forget."

"Let joy arrive without knocking."

The root never answered.

But it never withered either.

When wind blew strong, the wishes spun like leaves—never torn, only taught to move.

Eventually, no one rembered where it began.

They simply called it The Upward Root.

A reminder that even what holds you down may one day beco the thing that lifts you.

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