Chapter 1014: Chapter 1014

Night fell suddenly, candles flickered. In darkness, watcher-lights shone brightest, bathing tokens and seedlings. All watched, hearts full. Then, as one, the watchers circled the ring, drifting skyward until they formed an arch above the circle. Light cascaded like dawn rising. The seeds sprouted vines that twined memory ribbons from ribbons to stone edges. Ground thrummed beneath hearts, as though the watchers and island responded to the promise. Jude and the wives felt tears break free, not fear, but pure reverence.

When watchers dispersed, the ring glowed softly, seedlings alive with light. The ceremony complete. Women exchanged awe-filled looks. Children fell to knees, trailing fingers on glowing vines. Jude knelt among them, placing hands on earth. Grace placed foreheads to palms beside him. After long time, Susan spoke. "We are accepted."

They sat in silence until embers died. Then they rose, extinguished torches, parted ribbons, freeing seedlings to grow roots. They exited circle in slow procession, each name whispered to seedlings whose leaves carried glow even after watchers left. When they emerged at path, hands intertwined, watchers hovered at the edge of forest, covering their forms like silent applause.

They returned home broken into clusters by fatigue and awe. Grace cradled Raven; Rose carried Laurel; others shifted ribbons, checking seeds. At orchard, aides fetched water, fresh fruit and stew. A flicker of laughter rose, promise of dawn’s return.

After eating, Jude called wives to longhouse fire-pit. Warm faces gathered, tired eyes shining. He spoke: "We carried tokens of our hearts. We asked watchers. They answered with seedlings. We now carry new life at mountain’s foot."

Emma added: "This is beginning, our bond with island deepens. Circling watchers and earth."

Lucy said: "Teach children to honor seedlings. To garden ring in morning light."

Natalie pressed: "We protect ring while seedlings grow. Keep watchers felt, not forgotten."

They spoke into darkness until ember-coal flared. Fire died. They returned home, easing into sleep like dusk breathing. Jude lay with Grace, holding her hand. The seedlings had given them promise, new life at mountain’s edge. Their covenant grown deeper.

Next day, Tending circle began, morning visits from wives in twos; watering seeds and talking to watchers; teaching children to leave flatcakes and ribbons. Night watchers hovered tight until sleep claimed hearts. Love held them.

Over days, seedlings grew faster, vines wrapping stones in watcher-light; leaves shaped in glyph form. The wives brought personal offerings, Lucy’s petal-etched ribbon tied around a shoot, Merlot wine tipped at their base, fresh herbs strewn. The watchers responded, bathing vines in petals of mist overnight.

Jude knew this was threshold: each season they passed deeper; each watcher-step drew them forward. The watchers had welcomed offerings, seeds, hearts, but soon the ring would mature, roots into stone, bonds into living ward. He wondered if it was only protection, or part of their story woven deep into mountain’s root.

He wrote glyph-slate of ring symbol: intertwining root and ribbon. Stored in record. A legend for next generation. Each wife added words: love, promise, vigilance, respect.

Sun warmed earth. Seedlings warmed watchers by morning. Children sang glyph-songs beneath vines; watchers paused, joining in woven silent chord.

Jude and Grace walked together beyond ring new sprout. They stood, hands clasped, gazing at living ring.

Grace pressed against him. "We’ve built a door."

He kissed her forehead. "Now we guard the path."

They headed back, sunrise bright on new life. Ahead, higher threshold. The mountain loomed. The ring glowed. The watchers watched from sky-arches. The wives followed, hands linked, carriers of seed, of story, of promise. The island responded in rustle and shimmer, more than landscape; living covenant.

And so they remained, carving, planting, naming, breathing life into mountainside, forging union between heart, earth, watchers, future. The path onward waited, but this day they had planted their hope.

Mist draped itself across the orchard once more as Jude awoke, a soft cloak of dew on the leaves. He rose, sensing a shift, a quiet expectant pause. Twelve bodies slept beside him, their breaths calm as distant waves. Grace lay closest, her hand resting on Raven’s tiny head. Jude pressed a kiss to Grace’s forehead, the taste of morning ritual lingering.

He stepped outside, bare feet sinking into damp soil, watchers drifting in pale glow among saplings. Their presence felt familiar now, comfortable. Today they would test the circle again, formally acknowledge watchers in new ways.

Jude found Emma and Lucy near the herb bed, tending seedlings from the ring at the mountain’s foot. They had watered overnight, and the shoots now glowed faintly blue from watcher light. Emma looked up as he approached. "More growth," she whispered. Lucy nodded. "They responded again."

Jude grinned. "That’s good." He traced a finger through the soft earth. "We keep going."

They roused the others, moving gently so as not to wake children. Each wife carried items: flatcakes, water, ribbon-wrapped memory slates, scented herbs. They formed a procession into the orchard, then into the forest, following markers toward the new ring of seedlings.

When they reached the circle, they arranged offerings along its edge: Grace placed fig-paste wafers, Layla sprinkled lavender petals, Rose laid down moss-wrapped stones, Susan set clay bowls of spring water, Scarlet tied bright ribbons high on sapling shoots, Stella laid torches for later.

Jude stepped into the center. Watching the ring, he began to hum softly. Others joined, breath slow and voices low. Children stood at the boundary, arms linked with mothers, humming in wonder. The watchers shimmered into view, gliding through branches, pulsating in time with their song.

The wives removed shoes and stepped barefoot, joining Jude in circle, offering hands outward. A watcher drifted inward then paused, touching a ribbon. Two watchers coiled around torches, touching flame lightly, extinguishing without scorch. Light pulses traveled through seedlings like electric threads.

Jude called softly: "We bring gratitude for your presence. We embody care and vow this bond." He pressed his hand to earth. Grace followed. Others touched seedlings in turn.

As they spoke, seedlings glowed brighter; new shoots burst overnight, reaching toward watchers.

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