Chapter 1137: Story 1137: The Mark of Silence
The first sign was the birds.
They fell from the skies across Greybridge, necks twisted, wings contorted mid-flight. No one heard them land. No screams, no impact, no final flutter—just silence.
Absolute.
Total.
Horrifying silence.
Then ca the marks.
They appeared on doorfras, on windowsills, scratched into skin, etched on mirrors, drawn in chalk and ash. A single symbol: a spiral swallowing itself, surrounded by four slashes—one for each corner of the world. No one knew what it ant, but everyone who saw it understood one thing:
Do not speak.
The silence spread fast. Voices failed mid-sentence. Screams died in throats. Babies gaped in terror but made no sound. The city beca a pantomi of fear—wide eyes, trembling hands, mouths gasping like fish on dry stone.
Even thought, sohow, felt heavy.
Oppressed.
Sothing unseen, unheard, had taken root.
A scholar nad Eloen Marr, once a linguist of the Deep Sigils, believed she understood. Hidden beneath the central library was a vault sealed for centuries—its walls covered in runes older than ti, older than the gods.
She broke the seal.
She found only parchnt… and silence.
No records. No artifacts. Just pages of blank vellum. But when she stared too long, her ears began to ring. Her vision throbbed with flickers of spirals. Her skin crawled with a pressure she could not na.
She left the vault with a mark on her tongue.
And no voice.
That night, Greybridge lost all sound.
Not muffled. Not deadened.
Erased.
Glass shattered in silence. Bells swung without a whisper. A great fire tore through the trade quarter, and not a single crackle or scream escaped. The fire didn’t roar—it watched. It fed.
Sowhere in the smoke, people saw a shape moving against the flas: robed, faceless, gliding without footfall.
The Mark-Bearer.
The Silent Herald.
Those marked began to vanish—one by one, in their sleep. They didn’t struggle. Their mouths hung open as if singing, though no lody could be heard. Only the cold remained where they had been, and the spiral drawn in ash on their pillow.
Eloen tried to warn the rest with chalk on walls:
“The Spiral is a Mouth.”
“It is Listening.”
“Do Not Speak.”
But by then, no one could read.
Letters themselves began to lt, rearranging into that sa spiral, as if language were surrendering to sothing deeper.
More primordial.
On the seventh night, Eloen stood atop the silent bell tower and faced the city.
She held up a mirror to the heavens, scratched with the spiral mark. A wind blew—not loud, but felt—and the stars above shifted.
Not twinkling. Twitching.
In the reflection, she saw her own mouth disappear.
Then she smiled.
So say Greybridge still stands in a dinsion out of sync, vibrating between realms, where sound no longer lives. A city of breathless ghosts, all marked, all waiting for the Herald’s return.
And if you dream of spirals…
Be careful what you say upon waking.
The Spiral might hear you.
And leave its mark.
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