The village of Redhollow had no color left.
Its wooden houses leaned inward like they were whispering secrets. Doors hung crooked. Smoke rose from none of the chimneys. No laughter. No livestock.
Just silence.
Elric and the group stood at the edge of the main path. The trees of Shadeland Grove still loomed in the distance behind them, watching.
Neera dismounted first. "This is where we lost them," she said quietly. "Two healers. We sent them ahead. No word since."
Marin clutched her satchel tighter. "The people here were storytellers. Every home had a wall of carvings—family histories. Now…"
She didn't finish.
Elric stepped forward.
---
Within the Village
Cai walked slowly down the main path, one hand running over the fence posts.
"Too quiet," he said. "Even the wind doesn't carry voices here anymore."
Lira stayed close to Elric, blade at her side.
Then, from one of the houses, a figure stepped out.
An old woman. Skin pale. Blank eyes.
She didn't blink. She didn't seem surprised to see them.
She simply asked, "Have we met before?"
Veyra approached her gently. "Ma'am… what's your name?"
The woman blinked. Twice. Then slowly, like tasting unfamiliar fruit, whispered,
"I… don't… remember."
Behind her, more doors opened.
Dozens of villagers emerged. All silent. All staring. All empty.
---
Inside the Meeting Hall
The village hall was a hollow shell—burned candles long gone cold, a cracked crest above the hearth. Elric laid the glowing seed on a table at the center.
Roran paced. "This place feels cursed."
"No," Elric said. "It's not cursed. It's cleared. Someone erased too much—too fast."
Marin nodded. "Like shaking a scroll clean and forgetting what language looked like."
Lira crossed her arms. "We plant it here?"
Elric looked to Cai.
The boy nodded. "This is where the wound runs deepest."
Elric pressed the seed into the floorboards.
The moment it touched wood—light burst upward in threads, thin and silver, webbing into the air.
The villagers gasped.
Some clutched their heads.
Others fell to their knees.
The light didn't harm them—it wrapped around them, showing images only they could see:
– A father teaching his son to carve names into wood.
– A mother singing to a child whose name is now forgotten.
– A fire that burned the records. A shadow that watched and said nothing.
Memory returned.
And with it—tears.
The old woman sobbed. "My name is Ilenna. I had three sons. One of them… he carved his name into the roof."
Elric's voice was steady. "You still can."
---
But Not Everyone Wept
As the villagers wept and embraced one another, a figure stepped into the hall.
Tall. Robed in black. A golden ring on his finger marked with the Council's crest.
His voice was dry.
"Very moving."
Lira drew her blade. "Identify yourself."
The man did not flinch.
"Elric of the Clinic," he said calmly. "You are tampering with sealed history. That is grounds for execution under Doctrine Thirty-Seven."
Elric turned slowly.
"I'm not the one who sealed it."
"You were never supposed to open it."
The man reached into his cloak.
And the Council's seal flickered with red flame.
---