Alignnt didn’t announce itself.
It arrived as a soft convergence—the way breath finds rhythm after exertion, or how two hands fall into step without looking. The ground ahead sloped gently downward, not inviting, not resistant. Just there.
They entered the adow.
Grass brushed their calves, cool where shadow lingered, warm where sunlight slipped through the cloud cover. Insects lifted and settled again, adjusting their trajectories around the interruption without alarm. Puddle moved differently here—slower, head low, senses spread wide, not guarding but listening.
Halfway across, Rhys felt it first. Not danger. Not command.
Attention.
He stopped, raising a hand—not sharply, just enough. Caria halted at once, her posture shifting into stillness rather than readiness.
The air felt... denser. As if the space itself had paused to consider them.
From the far side of the adow, a figure erged—not stepping out so much as resolving into clarity. An older man, maybe, or simply soone worn smooth by years. No armor. No banner. A staff, more walking aid than weapon. He stood at the boundary where grass gave way to scrub, waiting without expectation.
He didn’t wave.
Neither did they.
After a mont, he inclined his head—not a greeting, exactly. More an acknowledgnt of shared presence.
Caria exhaled. "That," she said quietly, "feels subtle enough to matter."
Rhys nodded. "But not urgent."
They waited. The man remained where he was, eyes calm, assessing without asuring. Eventually, he spoke—not loudly, not cautiously.
"You don’t look lost," he said.
"No," Rhys replied. "We’re not."
The man considered that. "Good. Lost people rush."
Silence again. The wind moved through the adow, rearranging the grass. Sowhere behind them, Puddle settled into a sit, unbothered.
"There’s a village south of here," the man continued, gesturing vaguely with his staff. "They don’t need saving. Just... ti. And fewer mistakes."
Caria smiled faintly. "That’s rare honesty."
He shrugged. "It’s easier than gratitude."
Rhys felt the alignnt settle a little more firmly—not pulling them forward, not anchoring them back. Just... clarifying the shape of the mont.
"We weren’t heading there," Rhys said.
"I know," the man replied. "That’s why I walked this way instead."
Another pause. Longer this ti. Not heavy.
"Will you stay?" the man asked—not a request, not a test.
Caria glanced at Rhys. He t her eyes. No words passed between them. None were needed.
"For a while," Rhys said.
The man nodded once, satisfied, and turned back toward the scrub without hurry, trusting they would follow—or not.
They did.
Not because they were needed.
Not because a path had claid them.
But because, for this stretch of land and this quiet bend in the day, staying aligned ant walking alongside what was already unfolding—carefully, attentively—
and without the need to be anything more than present.
They followed at a respectful distance—not close enough to crowd, not far enough to disengage. The scrub thickened briefly, then thinned again as the land sloped toward lower ground. The adow fell away behind them, its openness closing without protest.
The man walked with the economy of soone who knew exactly how much effort a step required—and never spent more. His staff tapped stone now and then, not marking pace, just confirming contact.
No nas were exchanged.
Ahead, the land showed signs of tending rather than settlent. Fences repaired in only the most necessary places. Channels cut to guide runoff, not redirect it entirely. Fields that curved around old trees instead of clearing them. The work of people who negotiated with the land instead of issuing demands.
Puddle paused near one of the channels, lowering its head. The water there was shallow, slow. It watched for a mont, then moved on, satisfied.
"They argue less than they used to," the man said suddenly, as if continuing a thought Rhys hadn’t heard. "Not because they agree more. Because they’ve learned which argunts cost too much."
Caria took that in. "And the ones that remain?"
He smiled faintly. "They matter."
They reached the village edge without ceremony. No gate. No marker. Just a subtle shift in how the ground was walked upon—paths erging where feet had decided, collectively, to return often enough to make them real.
A few people looked up. No alarm. No reverence. Just brief curiosity, then acceptance. Soone raised a hand in greeting—not to them, but to the man. He nodded back, nothing more.
Rhys felt it then—not the pull of responsibility, but the shape of restraint required to remain aligned. To notice what not to change. To recognize which problems were still in the process of becoming themselves.
The man stopped near a low stone wall and turned. "You can stay as long as you like," he said. "Or leave before dinner. Both choices will still be yours afterward."
Caria smiled. "That’s generous."
He shook his head. "It’s accurate."
He left them there, rging into the village with the ease of soone who belonged without needing to be seen.
Rhys and Caria remained by the wall. Puddle settled nearby, folding into stillness, its attention broad but calm.
From sowhere deeper in the village ca the sound of laughter—brief, unguarded. From another direction, the dull clack of tools. Ordinary life, proceeding without needing an audience.
Rhys exhaled.
"Looks like we’re doing nothing," Caria said softly.
"For now," he agreed.
They stayed.
Not as protectors.
Not as answers.
Just as two people—and a great, listening creature—standing at the edge of things, allowing the world to continue at its own pace.
Evening settled without ceremony.
Light shifted first—angles softening, edges loosening—then sound followed, the village’s rhythm easing from work into sothing more porous. Fires were lit, not all at once, but in pockets. Smoke drifted low and thin, carrying the sll of grain and herbs and sothing sweet that reminded Rhys of nothing specific.
No one ca to ask who they were.
A child ran past, skidded to a stop when she noticed Puddle, stared with wide-eyed calculation, then grinned and waved before being hauled away by an apologetic adult. Puddle watched the exchange with solemn interest, then returned its attention to the larger shape of things.
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