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The child wandered without fear. The orchard guided more than it led. They passed the Spiral of Listening. Sat beside a tree that pulsed like a heartbeat. Danced in a ring of dandelions that blew their thoughts into the sky.

They t others.

A boy who spoke only in rhythm, whose feet never touched the ground. A girl who carried a mirror but never looked into it, instead showing others how beautiful they were.

A shadow who whispered, "You’re not lost, just rembering from the outside in."

The child listened. And then, finally, they spoke.

"I think I know my na."

Not loudly. Not fully. But enough.

The orchard shivered.

A single petal fell and beca a door.

...

"What will you do with it?" asked Rui, sitting beside them as they studied the unfinished shape.

"Not open it," the child said. "Not yet. Maybe... paint it. Or sing to it. Or carry it until soone else needs to rember."

Rui smiled. "You’re going to do well here."

They stayed for many days. Or perhaps it was minutes. Ti was not counted in the orchard; it was felt.

Each mont layered itself like bark on a tree—rings of experience, not to asure but to mark.

The child—now slowly naming themselves Aru, maybe, or Rin, or sothing close to wind and root—began to build.

Not a ho, exactly. A space. A garden of questions. A swing made of sighs. A bench carved from story.

People ca, sat, added their own pieces. One child drew laughter on the wind. Another built a tiny tower from forgotten words. A quiet girl traced a path that glowed when stepped upon only by those who had doubted.

And so, the grove grew.

...

Tian Shen and Feng Yin returned weeks later, or maybe seasons. They felt no need to announce themselves. The orchard whispered it for them.

They ca upon the grove by accident, or perhaps by invitation.

Feng Yin placed a hand on the scroll, letting it sing.

Tian Shen knelt by the petal-door, now painted with whorls of dream-dust.

"You made a door," he said.

The child nodded. "But I didn’t open it. Not yet. I think soone else will need it more."

Feng Yin looked up, eyes soft. "You rembered the most important part."

The child tilted their head. "Which is?"

"That becoming never ends."

...

Storms still ca. Doubt still rustled the leaves. Sotis, people left. Sotis, they returned. Sotis, they didn’t.

But the orchard held space for all of it.

Rui’s paintings began to glow faintly when moonlight touched them. Lan spoke a word aloud, once, and trees blood where her footprints passed. Ji Luan led a festival of shadows that taught children to listen for what wasn’t said.

Aru—yes, that was their na now—Aru planted a small tree. Not to grow food or flowers, but to grow listening. Its fruit, when bitten, gave you the taste of your own forgotten wonder.

Visitors ca. Drears. Wanderers. Those carrying heavy grief or fierce hope. So stayed a night. So stayed longer.

No one stayed forever. But everyone took the orchard with them.

...

One evening, a star fell into the grove.

It did not burn. It pulsed.

Children gathered. Elders watched. The orchard tilted its attention.

The star did not speak, but it humd.

Aru touched it gently and whispered, "Are you becoming, too?"

The star pulsed once. Then twice. Then rose into the branches of the listening tree and disappeared.

In its place, a blossom ford.

Not of light.

Of hope.

...

Silas added another spiral.

Myrrh composed a silence that made people weep.

Feng Yin and Tian Shen began building a new path, not to follow, but to invite.

And Aru, now fully dreaming in both directions, carved their own door.

This one, they opened.

Not to leave.

To welco.

Soone was coming.

They always were.

...

The wind shifted, and a hush spread like twilight across the orchard. Aru stood by the open door, not with expectation, but with openness. A warmth spilled from their hands, not light, not sound—sothing in between.

And then ca the sound of feet. Light, hesitant, then more sure.

A girl stepped through.

Her hair was a constellation of curls, and her eyes held too many suns. She looked like soone who had carried too many nas, then dropped them all to begin again. The orchard tilted to et her.

"I dread this," she said, voice raw with wonder. "But I thought it was only ."

Aru smiled. "That’s how most dreaming begins. Alone. But it doesn’t stay that way."

The girl looked around, her gaze drinking in the trees, the glowing paths, the scent of petals rising like stories. "What is this place?"

"A question that listens back," Aru said.

She stepped fully into the grove. Where she passed, shadows lifted. Threads shimred, as though soone had rembered an old truth.

Aru guided her to the swing made of sighs. She touched it. It trembled. Then steadied.

"Does it have a na?" she asked.

"It will. When you’re ready."

And so, the orchard grew again.

Because soone had co.

They always did.

...

The girl sat on the swing made of sighs, her fingers trailing through the dusk-light like ripples in still water. Aru didn’t speak. They simply sat nearby, hands resting on their knees, watching as the orchard breathed around them.

The girl rocked gently, a quiet rhythm forming in the space between thoughts.

"Do you rember your na?" Aru asked softly.

She shook her head. "Not fully. Just pieces. Like echoes caught in a bottle."

"That’s how it begins," Aru said. "The orchard doesn’t rush."

She looked up at them, eyes wide, curious. "Will it tell ?"

"No," Aru replied, smiling. "But it’ll help you listen when you’re ready to hear."

She glanced at the paths twisting in and out of view, each lit with soft trails of emotion—joy, sorrow, awe, rest. "Is it always like this here?"

"Only when soone is paying attention," Aru said. "The orchard reflects. It rembers the rembering."

The girl closed her eyes. "I feel like I’m breathing for the first ti."

They stayed in silence for a while. A breeze passed, carrying the faint sound of laughter from another grove. The trees swayed, not to the wind, but to the mory of soone who once sang lullabies under their branches.

A soft rustling, and Rui appeared with a folded paper bird resting in his palm.

"For you," he said, handing it to the girl. "It knows the way to your oldest question."

She took it with both hands. The bird stirred gently, as if acknowledging her presence, then went still.

"What if I’m not ready to ask?" she whispered.

"You don’t need to be," Rui said. "Just carry it. That’s enough."

Lan arrived soon after, barefoot as always. She carried a small bell made of glass. She didn’t speak, but when she rang it once, the ground beneath them humd, and tiny shoots of pale blue flowers blood in a ring around the swing.

The girl reached down, fingertips brushing the petals. "It’s like everything here is alive, but in... feelings."

Lan nodded, and Aru said, "Feelings are what move the orchard. Not plans. Not maps. Just truth—however quiet."

The girl finally stood, gently placing the paper bird into a pouch at her side. "Can I stay?"

Aru tilted their head. "Of course. But know this: staying doesn’t an never leaving. It just ans being here... for now. Until the next door."

She nodded slowly. "Then I’ll be here. For now."

Rui smiled and began sketching her silhouette into the air with a charcoal made from cloud-husk. Lan wandered to a nearby tree, leaving faint prints of starlight with every step.

Together, they made room.

...

Days passed—or monts, or lifetis. The orchard did not asure them. But with each breath, the grove changed, shaped by those who dwelled and those who dreamt.

The girl—who now called herself Kaia—found a path that only opened when she humd. She sang nonsense lodies until the orchard gave her one back. In this exchange, sothing rooted inside her: not a mory, but a direction.

She planted a stone in the center of a stream and whispered, "For all the nas I haven’t found yet."

The water turned silver where it touched the stone.

Aru watched her work, but never instructed. The orchard was not a place of rules, only rhythms.

Ji Luan returned with a ribbon of wind that could mimic any voice. He gave it to Kaia, saying, "For when you need to hear yourself from a distance."

She tied it around her wrist, and when she laughed, the ribbon laughed with her—brighter, clearer, unafraid.

Other travelers arrived: a twin pair who never spoke, but whose shadows told stories; an old woman who wept whenever the moon rose and left songs in the soil where she walked.

Kaia t them all. So taught her. So asked her questions. So simply sat beside her, their silence a kind of answer.

And all the while, the orchard grew.

...

One morning, Aru found Kaia beneath the Tree of Listening, her hands cradling the blossom of hope left by the fallen star.

"It’s warm," she said.

"Yes," Aru whispered. "Hope is a seed. And you’ve been tending it."

Kaia looked up, eyes clear. "I think I know what my na isn’t."

Aru smiled. "That’s often the first real knowing."

She stood. "I’m ready to carve my door now."

Aru said nothing. They simply placed a hand on her shoulder, gentle, grounding.

The grove responded. A space opened. Not carved by tools or force, but shaped by Kaia’s intent. Her breath, her heartbeat, her becoming.

She stepped into the space and began to hum again, the sa lody that had once opened her path.

And slowly, a door began to form—not in wood or stone, but in the space between.

Made of music.

Shaped by mory.

Held open by becoming.

...

Far off, Tian Shen looked up from his ditation and smiled. Feng Yin, sitting beside him, raised an eyebrow. "What is it?"

He only said, "Soone just rembered who they might be."

Feng Yin nodded. "That’s the kind of battle worth fighting."

And in the distance, the orchard blood.

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