The Whispers of the Old Traveler
The village, a wind-etched crevice in the mountain's flank, held its breath. Zara, eyes shadowed, held the book close. Its pages, thin as fading memories, whispered of a truth she couldn't quite believe.
"Idris," she said, voice tight, "this… it's supposed to mean something, right?"
Idris, gnarled as the oak he leaned against, watched her. His stillness, a practiced calm, patience settled in his bones. "Meaning," he rasped, the word like dry leaves rustling across stone. "You want meaning? Look at the sky. Empty, but people see constellations." A brief softening, a ghost of sorrow touched his eyes, then was gone.
The sky above the village was a vast, unbroken grey, a canvas of endless cloud, though a faint, silver light tried to pierce through the layers, mirroring the stone beneath their feet. A faint scent of woodsmoke and dry earth hung in the still air.
He gestured to the clearing. Children, loud and wild, chased a patched-up ball, their bare feet kicking up small clouds of dust, and one child, with eyes as bright as the faint light above, looked up and smiled at Zara, before returning to the game. Their joy, a sharp, untamed thing, briefly pierced the grey air, their laughter and shouts a fading echo as Zara turned away.
"They don't need books," he said. "They simply exist, at this moment."
Zara's fingers tightened on the book. "But… this is supposed to be the way. The way of honesty, the elders told me."
"Way," Idris scoffed, spitting a sliver of twig. "A trail you make yourself, one step at a time. Words? Just marks. People fill them with what they crave."
He gave her a grey stone, cool and worn smooth, against her palm, and glanced at it for a moment. "This," he murmured, "is just rock. You'll see things. Maybe. Your own reflection of what courage tastes like, the sting of it."
"Taste?" Zara asked.
"Whatever you're hungry for," Idris said, eyes flat. "Or nothing. Doesn't matter."
Tomas, lean and sharp, stepped into the clearing. "Idris," he growled, his voice tight with fear, "this is heresy. The book is law. The law of certainty, in a world that has no certainty." His fear, a cold ache in his gut, was born of a trust betrayed, a lesson learned too late, and a fear of repeating the same mistakes.
"Law," Idris sneered. "Law's what people hide behind when they're scared of the dark. True courage? To walk without a law, and trust the earth beneath your feet."
Zara watched, the stone a weight in her hand. They're both wrong, she thought, the stone feeling cool and smooth against her palm, a strange, comforting connection to Idris. It's not about books or stones. It's about… something else.
She remembered, as a child, lost in the woods, the scent of damp earth and pine needles filling her senses, how she’d followed a feeling, a deep, internal urging, and found her way home. The memory of that feeling, a warm thrum in her chest, was a compass she'd buried deep, a feeling of pure trust.
"Listen," Idris said, voice low, "not to them, not to me. Listen to the silence between the words. The feeling in your bones. The wind in the rocks. Trust the quiet confidence that beats inside you, a steady drum."
Zara turned, the stone cool and heavy. The village, its rules a cage, felt smaller than ever. She walked away, not towards a destination, but away from everything she’d known.
A small, almost unnoticeable smile, a flicker of true resolve, played on her lips. It was the taste of freedom, a choice made from a place of pure, unadulterated self, and she felt the rough stones beneath her worn shoes, and the cold, whispering wind on her face.
The path, a thin thread of worn rock and dust, winding up the mountain, felt alive beneath her feet, a silent invitation. She didn’t know where it led, but she knew, with a sudden, undeniable certainty, that she had to follow it.
The village, a wind-etched crevice in the mountain's flank, held its breath. Zara, eyes shadowed, held the book close. Its pages, thin as fading memories, whispered of a truth she couldn't quite believe.
"Idris," she said, voice tight, "this… it's supposed to mean something, right?"
Idris, gnarled as the oak he leaned against, watched her. His stillness, a practiced calm, patience settled in his bones. "Meaning," he rasped, the word like dry leaves rustling across stone. "You want meaning? Look at the sky. Empty, but people see constellations." A brief softening, a ghost of sorrow touched his eyes, then was gone.
The sky above the village was a vast, unbroken grey, a canvas of endless cloud, though a faint, silver light tried to pierce through the layers, mirroring the stone beneath their feet. A faint scent of woodsmoke and dry earth hung in the still air.
He gestured to the clearing. Children, loud and wild, chased a patched-up ball, their bare feet kicking up small clouds of dust, and one child, with eyes as bright as the faint light above, looked up and smiled at Zara, before returning to the game. Their joy, a sharp, untamed thing, briefly pierced the grey air, their laughter and shouts a fading echo as Zara turned away.
"They don't need books," he said. "They simply exist, at this moment."
Zara's fingers tightened on the book. "But… this is supposed to be the way. The way of honesty, the elders told me."
"Way," Idris scoffed, spitting a sliver of twig. "A trail you make yourself, one step at a time. Words? Just marks. People fill them with what they crave."
He gave her a grey stone, cool and worn smooth, against her palm, and glanced at it for a moment. "This," he murmured, "is just rock. You'll see things. Maybe. Your own reflection of what courage tastes like, the sting of it."
"Taste?" Zara asked.
"Whatever you're hungry for," Idris said, eyes flat. "Or nothing. Doesn't matter."
Tomas, lean and sharp, stepped into the clearing. "Idris," he growled, his voice tight with fear, "this is heresy. The book is law. The law of certainty, in a world that has no certainty." His fear, a cold ache in his gut, was born of a trust betrayed, a lesson learned too late, and a fear of repeating the same mistakes.
"Law," Idris sneered. "Law's what people hide behind when they're scared of the dark. True courage? To walk without a law, and trust the earth beneath your feet."
Zara watched, the stone a weight in her hand. They're both wrong, she thought, the stone feeling cool and smooth against her palm, a strange, comforting connection to Idris. It's not about books or stones. It's about… something else.
She remembered, as a child, lost in the woods, the scent of damp earth and pine needles filling her senses, how she’d followed a feeling, a deep, internal urging, and found her way home. The memory of that feeling, a warm thrum in her chest, was a compass she'd buried deep, a feeling of pure trust.
"Listen," Idris said, voice low, "not to them, not to me. Listen to the silence between the words. The feeling in your bones. The wind in the rocks. Trust the quiet confidence that beats inside you, a steady drum."
Zara turned, the stone cool and heavy. The village, its rules a cage, felt smaller than ever. She walked away, not towards a destination, but away from everything she’d known.
A small, almost unnoticeable smile, a flicker of true resolve, played on her lips. It was the taste of freedom, a choice made from a place of pure, unadulterated self, and she felt the rough stones beneath her worn shoes, and the cold, whispering wind on her face.
The path, a thin thread of worn rock and dust, winding up the mountain, felt alive beneath her feet, a silent invitation. She didn’t know where it led, but she knew, with a sudden, undeniable certainty, that she had to follow it.