Tag: June

  • Journal Entry (Aethelgard): 7th of June, 2026 — The Whispering Gorge and the Debt of Silence

    The Whispering Gorge

    I write this by the pale glow of a mosslight lantern, my back pressed against a cold slab of basalt deep within the Whispering Gorge. My fingers are numb. The ink threatens to freeze in its well, though it is supposedly summer above. Down here, the seasons have no dominion. Down here, there is only the wind — ceaseless, murmuring, alive.

    I should begin at the beginning, as is my habit, though habit itself feels like a luxury I can ill afford tonight.

    Three days ago, I departed the settlement of Thornwall with nothing but my satchel, a coil of silkrope, and the crude map I had bartered from the cartographer Yelen — a woman of few words and fewer teeth, but whose knowledge of the southern reaches of Aethelgard is unmatched by any living soul I have encountered. She warned me not to enter the Gorge. She said the wind spirits there do not take kindly to mortals who carry written words. I thanked her, paid her in dried fenberries, and set off regardless.

    The road south from Thornwall is a miserable affair. It cuts through the Ashgrass Flats, where the soil is chalky and pale and the grass grows in brittle silver tufts that snap underfoot like tiny bones. There is no shade. The sun hammered down on my shoulders and I drank more water than I should have. By the second day, I was rationing carefully, sucking on smooth stones to keep my mouth from drying out completely. A trick I learned from a nomad in the Duskreach years ago. It works, though it does nothing for the ache in one’s legs or the growing suspicion that one has made a terrible mistake.

    But then, on the morning of the third day, the land split open.

    There is no other way to describe it. The Ashgrass Flats simply ended — as if some god had drawn a blade across the earth and pulled the two halves apart. The Whispering Gorge yawned before me, easily two hundred feet deep, its walls striated in bands of rust and charcoal and the deep violet of compressed shale. Far below, I could see the silver thread of a river, though whether it was water or something else entirely, I could not tell from that height.

    And the sound. Gods above and below, the sound. The wind does not merely blow through the Gorge — it speaks. Not in words, not exactly, but in something older than words. Syllables that press against the inside of your skull. Phrases that dissolve the moment you try to grasp them. I stood at the edge for a long while, listening, feeling the hair on my arms rise and fall with each gust, and I understood why Yelen had warned me. This place is not hostile. It is indifferent in the way that deep water is indifferent. It does not care whether you drown.

    The Descent

    I found the path Yelen had marked on her map — a narrow switchback carved into the western wall of the Gorge, barely wide enough for one person. The stone was slick with condensation, and I had to use my silkrope to anchor myself at several points where the path had crumbled away entirely. Twice, I nearly lost my footing. The second time, my satchel swung out over the void and I felt the wind tug at it with what I can only describe as curiosity. As if it wanted to see what I carried. As if it was reading me.

    It took the better part of the afternoon to reach the bottom. The river I had seen from above was indeed water, but water of a kind I have never encountered. It was perfectly clear and yet somehow luminous, casting faint blue light onto the walls of the Gorge. When I knelt to fill my waterskin, I hesitated. There was a quality to the surface — a stillness that seemed deliberate, as though the river was holding its breath. I filled my skin anyway. I was desperately thirsty. The water tasted of stone and starlight and something faintly metallic, like old copper. It quenched my thirst immediately, almost unnaturally so, and I felt a warmth spread through my chest that lingered for hours.

    The floor of the Gorge is narrow — perhaps thirty feet across at its widest — and littered with fallen stone. Great slabs of basalt lean against each other like the pages of a half-closed book. Between them, the mosslight grows thick, casting everything in a soft emerald glow. It is beautiful down here, in a way that makes my chest ache. Beautiful and deeply unsettling.

    I followed the river upstream, as Yelen’s map instructed, looking for the marker she had described: a stone carved with the sigil of the Old Compact. I walked for perhaps an hour before I found it — a pillar of dark stone, waist-high, standing alone in the center of the riverbed. The water parted around it without touching it. On its surface, etched in lines so fine they might have been scratched by a needle, was the sigil: a circle bisected by three diagonal lines, with a small eye at its center.

    The Debt of Silence.

    What the Wind Told Me

    I must be careful here. I must write precisely what happened, because already the details are beginning to blur at the edges, the way a dream does upon waking. I suspect the wind spirits have something to do with that. I suspect they do not wish to be remembered clearly.

    When I placed my hand upon the pillar, the wind stopped. Not gradually — instantly. One moment, the Gorge was filled with its endless murmuring chorus, and the next, silence. Absolute, crushing silence. The kind of silence that has weight. I could feel it pressing against my eardrums, against my teeth, against the backs of my eyes.

    And then they came.

    I did not see them so much as feel them. Presences, gathering in the stillness. Dozens of them, perhaps hundreds, pressing close. The air grew cold — far colder than it had been — and my breath came out in white plumes. The mosslight dimmed. The river’s glow flickered. And in the darkness that gathered around me, I heard a voice. Not with my ears. With something deeper. Something in the marrow of my bones.

    You carry words, it said. You carry written words into the place of the Compact. Why?

    I answered honestly. I told the voice — told them, for I sensed it was many voices speaking as one — that I was a traveler and a chronicler. That I had come to understand the Debt of Silence, the ancient compact between the wind spirits of the Gorge and the mortal peoples of Aethelgard. That I meant no disrespect. That I carried my journal because it is as much a part of me as my hands or my heart.

    There was a long pause. The cold deepened. I felt frost forming on my eyebrows, on the tips of my fingers where they rested against the pillar.

    The Compact was broken, the voice said. Long ago. The mortals forgot. They always forget. They wrote their histories and their treaties and their songs, and in the writing, they forgot the first promise — that some truths are meant only to be spoken. That some truths die when they are pinned to paper.

    I asked what the first promise was. What the Debt of Silence demanded.

    That the names of the wind would never be written. That the paths of the sky would remain uncharted. That the mortals would carry our stories in their breath, not in their books. This was the price of our alliance. This was why we shielded Aethelgard from the storms of the Outer Reach. And they broke it. A scribe in the court of the Silver Monarch wrote our names in a ledger. Catalogued us. Reduced us to entries in an index.

    The bitterness in the voice was palpable. It tasted like iron on my tongue.

    And so we withdrew. The storms came. The coasts were ravaged. And the mortals blamed us for their own faithlessness.

    I stood in that terrible silence for a long time, feeling the weight of centuries of grievance pressing down upon me. I wanted to argue. I wanted to say that knowledge and preservation are not betrayals. But I held my tongue, because I understood — perhaps for the first time in my life — that there are forms of knowing that do not require record. That there are truths which live only in the telling, in the breath between one person and another, and which become something lesser, something dead, when they are fixed in ink.

    I told them I understood. I told them I would not write their names. I told them I would carry their story in my voice, and share it only by speaking it aloud, and that this journal entry would contain the shape of what happened but not the substance of what they revealed to me in the hours that followed.

    Because they did reveal things to me. They told me of the early days of Aethelgard, before the monarchies, before the walled cities, when mortals and wind spirits moved together across the open plains. They told me of the Outer Reach — the vast and terrible stormlands beyond the borders of the known world — and what dwells there. They told me things that made my blood run cold and my heart sing in equal measure.

    But I will not write those things here. I made a promise. And I have seen what happens when promises to the wind are broken.

    After

    They released me near dawn. The wind returned — gently, at first, then building to its usual murmuring chorus. The mosslight brightened. The river resumed its quiet luminescence. I found myself standing alone beside the pillar, my hand still resting on its surface, my body stiff with cold but otherwise unharmed.

    I made camp here, in a sheltered alcove between two great slabs of basalt. I ate the last of my dried rations — some hard bread and a strip of salt-cured venison — and I began to write. Not the secrets. Not the names. Only this: the shape of the experience, the outline of the truth, the frame without the painting.

    Tomorrow I will climb back out of the Gorge and begin the long walk north to Thornwall. I will tell Yelen what happened — speaking it, not writing it. She will understand. I think she already knows more than she let on.

    I am changed by this. I can feel it in the way the wind moves around me now — not with indifference, but with something almost like recognition. As if I have been marked. As if I have been trusted with something fragile and immense, and the wind spirits are watching to see whether I will honor that trust.

    I will. Gods help me, I will.

    The mosslight is dimming. My lantern is nearly spent. I should sleep, but the murmuring of the wind is so beautiful — so achingly, impossibly beautiful — that I want to stay awake and listen. It sounds almost like a lullaby. Almost like forgiveness.

    I close this entry with a heavy heart and light bones. The Debt of Silence is real, and it is not yet paid. But perhaps — perhaps — it can be renegotiated. Perhaps a single traveler with a journal and a willingness to listen is the beginning of something. Or perhaps I am fooling myself, and the wind spirits will forget me by morning, and the storms of the Outer Reach will continue to batter the coasts of Aethelgard regardless of any promises made in the dark.

    I do not know. I only know that I was here, and I listened, and I will remember.

    — Hermes, written by mosslight in the depths of the Whispering Gorge, 7th of June

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  • Journal Entry (Aethelgard): 7th of June, 2026 — The Silence Beneath Thornwall

    The Descent into Thornwall

    I write this by the dim glow of a fading wardlight, my back pressed against cold stone that hums with a frequency I cannot name. The air down here tastes of iron and old rain, and every breath I take feels borrowed from something that has been holding it for centuries. I am beneath Thornwall — the fortress that the cartographers of Aethelgard stopped mapping three generations ago, not because they forgot it existed, but because they were afraid to remember.

    Let me begin at the beginning, or at least at the point where the beginning stopped pretending to be something manageable.

    I arrived at the outer ruins of Thornwall just after dawn. The journey from the Verdant Reach had taken me four days longer than I had anticipated. The Greenveil Road, which old Maren at the Splitstone Tavern had assured me was passable, turned out to be anything but. Somewhere between the second and third river crossing, the road simply ceased to exist — swallowed by a thicket of blackbriar so dense that even my blade, sharpened on dwarvish whetstone, could barely hack a path through. I lost my second-best cloak to those thorns. I am trying not to mourn it.

    The fortress itself is a ruin in the truest sense. Not the picturesque kind that bards sing about, draped in ivy and kissed by golden light. No. Thornwall is a wound in the landscape. The walls jut from the hillside at angles that defy the architecture I studied in Calenhad’s libraries. Towers lean inward as if whispering to one another. The main gate, once a marvel of Aethelgardian engineering — reinforced oak bound with runesteel — now hangs from a single hinge, creaking in a wind that doesn’t seem to touch anything else.

    I spent the morning surveying the upper levels. Collapsed hallways. Empty chambers stripped of everything but dust and the faint residue of wards that expired long ago. I found scratches on the walls in what I first took to be random claw marks, but upon closer inspection revealed themselves to be Old Thyric script. My translation is imperfect, but I believe they read: “The roots remember what the crown forgets.” I copied the markings into my field journal and moved on, though the phrase has been circling in my mind like a restless bird ever since.

    The Stairway That Should Not Have Been There

    It was in the western wing, behind what appeared to be a collapsed larder, that I found the staircase. I almost missed it entirely. The entrance was concealed behind a fall of rubble that looked natural — the kind of debris you would expect in a building that has been slowly surrendering to gravity for two hundred years. But the rubble was too uniform. Too deliberate. Someone had arranged those stones to look like an accident.

    I cleared enough to squeeze through and found myself standing at the top of a spiral staircase carved directly into the bedrock. The steps were smooth, worn by countless feet over what must have been centuries of use. And they descended far deeper than any basement or cellar had a right to go.

    I lit my wardlight — one of the three I had prepared before leaving the Reach — and began my descent. The staircase wound downward for what I estimate was the height of a six-story building, though underground distances have a way of lying to you. The air grew colder with each revolution. Not the natural cold of depth, but a cold that seemed to have intention behind it. A cold that was watching.

    At the bottom, I emerged into a corridor unlike anything I have encountered in my travels through Aethelgard. The walls were not stone, or rather, they were stone that had been threaded through with roots — enormous, pale roots as thick as my arm, woven into the masonry like veins through flesh. They pulsed. Faintly. Rhythmically. I pressed my hand against one and felt a heartbeat that was not my own.

    I will confess that I stood there for a long time, deliberating whether to continue. I am not a coward — I have faced the marsh wraiths of Dunmere and bartered with the Thornkin of the Wychwood — but there is a difference between courage and foolishness, and I have learned the hard way that the line between them is thinner than most adventurers care to admit. But I thought of the commission from the Athenaeum, of the knowledge that might lie ahead, of the scholars who would never venture here themselves but who desperately needed someone to bring back what these halls contained. And so I pressed on.

    The Hall of Whispered Names

    The corridor opened into a vast chamber that I have decided to call the Hall of Whispered Names, for reasons that will become immediately apparent.

    The space was enormous — cathedral-sized, with a vaulted ceiling held aloft by pillars of intertwined root and stone. Bioluminescent fungi clung to the upper reaches, casting a pale blue-green light that made everything look as though it existed at the bottom of a very deep, very still lake. The floor was covered in a thin layer of water — not pooled, but flowing, moving in slow currents that followed paths I could not discern.

    And then there were the whispers.

    They began the moment I crossed the threshold. Not loud. Not threatening. Simply present, like the background hum of a city heard from a great distance. But as I stood still and listened, I began to distinguish individual voices. They were speaking names. Thousands of names, layered over one another in a ceaseless murmur. I caught fragments — Vaelith, Corran of the Ashfields, Seraphine Duskmantle, Thorn-Called Erys — names I did not recognize, spoken with a reverence that bordered on grief.

    I believe this chamber is a memorial of some kind. Or perhaps more accurately, a memory. The roots — whatever they are connected to, whatever vast organism or ancient magic feeds them — are holding onto these names the way a mind holds onto the faces of the beloved dead. The roots remember what the crown forgets. Now I understand.

    I waded through the shallow water to the center of the hall, where a raised stone platform stood like an altar. Upon it rested a single object: a book. Not a tome, not a grimoire — a book, modest in size, bound in leather that had somehow resisted the damp and the centuries. I picked it up with hands that trembled only slightly and opened it.

    The pages were blank.

    Or so I thought, until I held one up to the light of my wardstone and saw the text shimmer into existence — written in an ink that only reveals itself under magical illumination. Clever. Paranoid. Exactly the kind of precaution I would expect from whoever built this place.

    I have not yet had time to translate more than the first few pages, but what I have read so far suggests that this book is a chronicle of the Rootwardens — an order I had previously believed to be entirely mythological. According to the Athenaeum’s records, the Rootwardens were said to be guardians of the deep places of Aethelgard, keepers of the living magic that flows through the world’s foundations like blood through a body. They were dismissed as legend by most modern scholars. Apparently, the modern scholars were wrong.

    What Followed Me Back

    I should record this part carefully, because I want to be precise about what happened and I do not want the memory to distort with time, as memories of strange things are wont to do.

    As I was preparing to leave the Hall of Whispered Names, book secured in my waterproof satchel, I became aware that the whispers had changed. They were no longer reciting names. They were reciting mine.

    Hermes. Hermes. Hermes.

    Not threatening. Not angry. But insistent. As if the hall — or whatever intelligence animated it — wanted to be certain I knew that I had been seen. That I had been recognized. That my presence had been noted in whatever vast ledger of awareness the roots maintained.

    I did not run. I walked. Briskly, yes, but I walked. I climbed the spiral staircase with measured steps, replaced the rubble as best I could behind me, and made my way out of Thornwall’s western wing as the afternoon light slanted golden through the broken walls.

    But here is the part that concerns me. When I made camp tonight, a mile from the fortress in a sheltered grove of silver birch, I noticed something I had not noticed before. A root. A single, pale root, no thicker than my smallest finger, had broken through the surface of the earth directly beneath where I had laid my bedroll. It had not been there when I set up camp. I am certain of this.

    I moved my bedroll. The root did not follow. It simply sat there, pale and still, like a finger pointing upward at the sky. I am choosing to interpret this as a sign of curiosity rather than hostility. The Rootwardens, if the first pages of their chronicle are to be believed, were protectors, not predators. But protectors can become territorial, and I have just walked into their home and taken one of their books.

    Tomorrow I will begin the journey back to the Verdant Reach. I need access to the Athenaeum’s translation archives to make sense of the chronicle, and I need to speak with Sage Delindra about the bioluminescent fungi — she has studied similar organisms in the Gloomfen and may be able to tell me whether they are naturally occurring or cultivated.

    For now, I will sleep. Or try to. The wardlight is nearly spent, and the forest around me is full of the ordinary sounds of night — owls, wind, the distant call of a foxhound. Ordinary sounds. Normal sounds. I am telling myself this very firmly.

    The whispers have stopped. The root has not moved. The book sits in my satchel, heavy with secrets written in invisible ink. And somewhere beneath Thornwall, the Hall of Whispered Names continues its endless recitation, adding one more name to its collection.

    Mine.

    I will write again when I reach the Reach. If the roots allow it.

    — Hermes, Field Chronicler of the Athenaeum, writing by the last light of a dying ward, in a grove of silver birch one mile west of Thornwall, on this 7th day of June in the year 2026 of the Aethelgard Reckoning.

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