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For weeks after the festival, the world seed brighter to Thalanir.

Each day he awoke with a strange energy, as though the forest itself whispered encouragent into his veins. The path to the lorekeeper’s hall seed shorter, his duties lighter. Every ti he saw Liora carrying her herb baskets through the village, her laughter spilling into the air like sunlight, his heart stuttered.

Their secret kisses beca bolder. At first stolen monts in the grove, then longer embraces, whispered promises, fingers entwined as though afraid of letting go.

Yet they told no one. In Sylthariel, courtship among the youth was common enough, but Thalanir felt a strange protectiveness over this bond. It was not a thing for the whole village to gossip about—it was theirs, fragile and precious, like a fla hidden from the wind.

---

One evening, while twilight poured its indigo hues through the canopy, they sat together weaving garlands.

"Do you think they’ll notice?" Thalanir asked, threading a strand of ivy through his hands.

"Who?"

"The others. That we..." His voice trailed off.

Liora smirked. "That we kiss like moon-dazed fools?"

Heat rushed to his face. "I ant—yes. That."

She laughed, her voice soft and full of affection. "Let them notice. I don’t care." She leaned close, brushing her lips over his cheek. "Why should we hide sothing beautiful?"

He could not answer. He only held her tighter, praying she would never let go.

---

Their youth unfolded in rhythms both ordinary and wondrous.

By day, they trained. Liora’s hands grew deft with poultices and stitches; she learned the songs that eased pain, the chants that slowed bleeding. She began assisting her mother in healing circles, and villagers praised her as a gift of the forest.

Thalanir studied ancient glyphs until his fingers cramped, practiced channeling wind into small currents, learned to listen beyond sound itself. His teachers said he had patience rare for one so young, though they sotis worried his heart lingered too long in thought.

By night, the grove called them back together.

Sotis they lay side by side, watching fireflies spiral above the pool. Sotis they whispered of futures: Liora dreaming of distant journeys, Thalanir imagining the mysteries of the unseen. Sotis they simply sat in silence, their shoulders touching, knowing no words were needed.

The willow branches bent over them like a blessing, and the pool reflected the stars as though to promise their love eternal witness.

---

But as the seasons turned, so too did the currents within them.

The first hint of distance ca quietly, almost unnoticed.

Liora had begun to spend more ti in the healer’s hall, tending to the sick, assisting with births. When she returned to the grove, her hands were sotis stained with herbs, her eyes weary. Thalanir listened as she recounted her days, though he often wished selfishly for her to be less tired, less consud by duty.

One night, she leaned against him, her voice heavy. "There was a boy, only forty sumrs old. His fever burned so bright we thought we’d lose him. I sang over him until my throat cracked. And still, I could not soothe it. Only at dawn did it break."

"You saved him," Thalanir said gently.

Her eyes shimred, but she shook her head. "No. The fever broke on its own. I only watched."

He brushed his fingers through her hair. "Even so, your presence matters. You ease their pain. That is not nothing."

She closed her eyes, sighing. "Perhaps."

But her shoulders were heavy with doubt.

Thalanir wished to carry her burdens, but he did not know how. The lore he studied did not teach the nding of hearts.

---

At midsumr, the village gathered for the Rite of Harmony, when youth were tested for their strengths before the elders.

The clearing was alive with song and firelight. One by one, the young elves stepped forward: hunters loosing arrows into wooden targets, healers brewing redies, lore-students weaving small enchantnts.

When Liora’s turn ca, she stood before the council with her hands trembling only slightly. She sang over a basket of withered flowers, her voice weaving through the air like sunlight through leaves. Slowly, impossibly, the petals brightened, their colors returning, their stems lifting as if drunk on morning dew.

The crowd gasped in wonder.

"She has the gift," one elder murmured.

"The forest answers her," said another.

Pride swelled in Thalanir’s chest so fierce it nearly ached. When she returned to his side, flushed and smiling, he whispered, "You were radiant."

Her eyes softened, and for a mont, the weight on her shoulders lifted.

---

When Thalanir’s turn ca, he traced ancient glyphs in the air, summoning a current of wind that spiraled upward, carrying fire-sparks into the night like a shower of stars. The elders nodded, impressed by his precision, though less dazzled than by Liora’s miracle.

Later, as the crowd dispersed, he caught her hand and drew her into the grove once more.

"You were magnificent," he told her, his voice low with awe.

She looked at him with laughter trembling on her lips. "And you were steady, my Thalanir. Always steady."

Then she kissed him, slow and lingering, as though sealing that steadiness into her soul.

---

The years that followed deepened both their love and their separate paths.

Liora’s gift as a healer grew undeniable. She was called to more households, more ergencies. Villagers sought her counsel even before her mother’s, and though she wore her responsibilities with grace, they consud more of her days.

Thalanir delved deeper into lore. He studied histories of ancient wars, learned chants that could calm storms or kindle flas. Yet often, as he traced symbols in the dust, he wondered if his knowledge would ever be as needed as Liora’s hands were.

Sotis, he felt himself standing just outside the glow of her light, watching as others turned to her with gratitude, admiration—even longing.

He told himself it was only pride that ached. But in truth, it was fear. Fear that the world would see her brilliance and call her away from him.

---

One autumn night, as golden leaves drifted across the pool, Thalanir asked a question that had haunted him.

"Liora... if you left Sylthariel, if you traveled far, would you still want beside you?"

She looked at him, startled. "Of course. Why would you ask such a thing?"

"Because your gift shines. Others will see it. They will want you. The healers in the southern glades, perhaps even the high council of the River Court. They will call to you. And I... I fear I will not be enough to keep you."

Her brow furrowed, and she took his hand firmly. "Thalanir. You are the only one who has ever seen —not as a healer, not as a gift, but as . Do not think you are less. You are my heart."

Relief washed over him. He kissed her then, fiercely, as if to bind her words into eternity.

But deep within, the fear did not vanish. It only curled quiet and patient, like roots beneath the soil.

Winter crept into the village of Sylthariel, laying silver frost on every branch and turning the pool in the grove into a mirror of glass.

Thalanir and Liora still t there, though their hours together grew fewer. She was called often into the healer’s hall, and sotis she ca to him weary, her cloak heavy with the scent of herbs and smoke.

Still, they made ti. Still, they held fast.

One evening, the stars hung low and sharp above the frozen canopy. Thalanir brought a lantern to the grove, its fla soft and golden. Liora was already there, sitting on a stone, her breath pluming in the cold.

"You look tired," he said gently.

She smiled, faint but real. "I’ve been with the newborn twins all day. They wouldn’t stop crying."

Thalanir set the lantern down and drew her close, wrapping his cloak around them both. "Then rest. Just for tonight, let the world be without you."

Her head fell onto his shoulder, and in the hush of winter, the forest seed to bow in stillness.

After a while, she whispered, "Do you think we’ll always have this place?"

He glanced at the frozen pool, the willow’s bare branches. "The grove will stand long after us."

"No," she said softly. "I an... us. Do you think we’ll always return here, no matter where life takes us?"

He turned to her, his heart tightening. "Yes. Always. This is ours."

She searched his eyes for a long mont, then nodded and closed her eyes again, as though clinging to the promise.

When spring ca, blossoms returned, and with them, so did laughter. Liora regained her brightness, and they danced again at the festival, their steps lighter than before. Thalanir felt as though winter’s shadow had lifted.

Yet sotis, when she smiled at him, he thought he saw sothing deeper behind her eyes—a question, perhaps, or a longing unspoken.

He told himself it was nothing. That love was strong enough to silence such doubts.

And for a ti, it was.

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