The fire settled into itself, flas lowering from eager tongues to a steady, breathing glow. Wood popped softly now and then, sparks lifting and vanishing before they could decide where to land.
The woman sat opposite the girl, close enough to share warmth but not close enough to crowd. She watched the fire too, though her eyes kept drifting—counting shadows, listening for sounds that hadn’t arrived yet.
The man busied himself at the edge of the hollow, checking straps that didn’t need checking, pacing a short line and back again. Motion as reassurance.
Rhys noticed without comnt.
Caria broke a small piece of bread and handed it to the girl first, then to the woman, then to the man. No order that implied authority. Just... inclusion.
"Where are you headed?" the woman asked eventually. Not suspicion this ti. Orientation.
"Inland," Rhys said. "Not to anywhere specific."
The man snorted quietly. "Must be nice."
Rhys smiled, just a little. "It’s unsettling. Most people don’t realize how much direction does the deciding for them."
The girl tilted her head. "If you don’t know where you’re going, how do you know when you’ve gone the wrong way?"
Caria answered this ti. "You notice what you’re becoming."
The girl considered that, brow furrowing—not confused, just working. "So if you don’t like who you’re becoming..."
"You stop," Caria finished. "Or you turn. Even if it’s awkward."
The woman laughed under her breath. "You make it sound simple."
"It isn’t," Caria said gently. "But it is possible."
The wind shifted, carrying with it the faint, distant sound of sothing moving across stone—too far to place, too vague to na. The man stiffened instinctively.
Puddle’s head lifted.
Not alard. Just aware.
"It’s still far," Rhys said, quietly enough that only those closest heard him.
The man studied Puddle again, then nodded, trusting the judgnt without quite knowing why. He sat down at last, closer to the fire than before.
Ti passed in fragnts. A shared waterskin. The girl asking Rhys how old Puddle was. Caria showing the woman how to wrap a cracked strap so it would hold until morning. Ordinary exchanges, stitching the night together.
When the girl finally grew sleepy, she curled near the fire with her back to a warm stone, the tension of the day easing out of her in slow degrees. The woman watched until her breathing deepened, then looked up at Rhys and Caria.
"You didn’t have to stop," she said. Not accusation. Recognition.
"No," Rhys agreed. "But stopping is how you find out what matters."
The man stared into the embers. "And if tomorrow still only offers bad choices?"
Caria t his eyes. "Then you choose the one that lets you sleep with yourself afterward."
Silence followed—but it was a different kind now. Not strained. Not balanced on a blade.
Just... held.
Above them, stars spread quietly across the darkening sky, indifferent and steady.
And far below, where no firelight reached and no voices echoed, water continued its patient movent—unchaken by urgency, unchanged by fear—waiting, as it always did, for the world to rember how to move with it rather than against it.
The night deepened around them, layers settling one atop another. The fire burned lower still, its warmth now a shared center rather than a declaration. Shadows no longer leapt; they rested.
The man took first watch without being asked.
He stood a short distance from the fire, back straight now, eyes moving in slow arcs across the grass and the darkened path beyond the hollow. Not scanning for enemies so much as reacquainting himself with the shape of responsibility when it wasn’t sharpened by panic.
Caria noticed. She said nothing.
Rhys sat with his back against a stone, gaze lifted toward the stars. On land, they felt farther away—cold, precise. In the depths, light had always been borrowed, refracted. Here it arrived untouched.
Different kinds of honesty, he thought.
The woman eventually lay down near the girl, one arm curved protectively without gripping. Sleep ca to her in stages—light, then deeper, then finally real. The kind that only cos when the mind is allowed to stop rehearsing disaster.
Puddle shifted closer to the fire as it cooled, massive body curling with careful restraint. Its presence pressed against the hollow like a quiet promise: nothing crosses here unnoticed.
Hours passed.
At so point, the man spoke without turning. "If we wait tomorrow... we’ll need a different route."
Caria answered just as quietly. "Routes change all the ti."
"So cost more than others."
"Yes," she agreed. "But so cost less than regret."
He absorbed that in silence.
Later still, when the stars had rearranged themselves into unfamiliar patterns, Rhys felt the faintest stirring—not the thread, not the Kingdom.
Just the world breathing.
He didn’t reach for it.
He slept.
Morning ca again without ceremony.
Mist clung low in the hollow, softening edges, blurring yesterday’s sharp lines. The fire was ash now, warmth lingering only in mory. Birds called from unseen branches, bolder than the day before.
The girl woke first.
She sat up, blinking, then looked around as if checking whether the night had truly happened. When her eyes found Rhys and Caria, still there, unchanged, sothing settled in her expression.
The man crouched by the path, studying the mist. "If we go east," he said slowly, "there’s an old service road. Longer. Less watched."
The woman joined him, following his gaze. "It’ll take two extra days."
"And we keep daylight," he added. "We keep... choice."
She nodded once. Not relief. Alignnt.
The girl stood and brushed dirt from her clothes. "East is fine," she said simply.
No one argued.
They packed again, movents easy now, no rush pressing at their backs. When they were ready, Rhys and Caria stepped aside, clearing the path without ceremony.
The woman hesitated, then reached into her pack and pulled out the small carved token—the one ant for the shrine. She pressed it into the girl’s hand instead.
"You keep it," she said. "For listening."
The girl nodded, solemn, and tucked it away.
The man t Rhys’s eyes. "You won’t walk with us."
"No," Rhys said. "But you won’t walk alone."
It wasn’t a promise of protection.
It was a reminder of agency.
They parted without fanfare. No waves. No looking back.
Rhys, Caria, and Puddle watched until the figures thinned into the mist and then were gone—just another set of lives continuing, altered in ways no map would record.
When the hollow was empty again, Caria exhaled softly. "That will matter," she said.
"Yes," Rhys agreed. "But not because we stayed."
They turned back to the inland path, their own direction still undefined, still honest.
And far below—untouched by mist or morning—water moved on, patient and enduring, holding no judgnt over the choices made above it.
Only mory.
Only readiness.
Only the quiet certainty that the world, slowly and imperfectly, was learning how to listen.
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