Chapter 2
The pyrwing survived the night. By morning, word had already spread through the forest in ways Nyx didn't fully understand—spirit whispers carried faster than wind, reaching creatures she'd never met in places she'd never been.
They began arriving at dawn. First came a woman carrying an owl with a shattered wing, then a trader cradling a fox kit that wouldn't open its eyes. By midday, twelve guardians stood in the clearing beyond her cottage, their injured animals wrapped in blankets and held close. Nyx felt the phantom frequencies spike as she looked at them all—too many, too fast, her hands already shaking from the pyrwing ceremony. She tried to explain she needed time to recover, that the old magic took days to restore itself, but a man stepped forward with a rabbit whose fur had turned gray from grief. The clearing seemed to glow brighter around them, luminous rocks catching the light, vibrant plants swaying though no wind blew. She understood then what was happening—the forest itself was testing her, asking if she truly meant to build a sanctuary or just save one creature and stop. Her scar ached as she knelt beside the rabbit, her fingers already reaching for the willow bark she'd need. She chose to fail slowly rather than turn them away, and that choice felt like the first real foundation her sanctuary had ever had.
By evening, the guardians had built something without asking. A small structure stood near the edge of the clearing, rough timber painted in colors they'd mixed themselves—yellows like morning sun, blues like deep water. A sign hung crooked on the door: offerings for the healer and her animals. Inside, someone had left dried fish wrapped in cloth. Another left a jar of honey. A child's drawing showed a woman with a scar touching a glowing rabbit. Nyx stood in the doorway, her body screaming from treating nine creatures in one day, phantom frequencies making her skull feel like it would split open. But the structure meant they'd be back. It meant they believed she could do this, even when she wasn't sure herself. Hazel chittered from her shoulder, and Nyx reached up to touch the silver squirrel's fur. The sanctuary wasn't just hers anymore—it belonged to everyone who walked through that glowing clearing carrying something broken, trusting her to try.
She pulled out a new journal that night, green leather soft under her fingers. The stranger who'd brought the pyrwing had left it in the offerings house—blank pages waiting to be filled. Nyx opened it by candlelight and began sketching the owl's wing, the fox kit's closed eyes, the gray rabbit whose color had started returning after she'd held it for an hour. Her hand cramped as she wrote notes beside each drawing—what worked, what didn't, how many tears she'd used, which herbs helped most. This was different from her mother's journals, different from documenting loss. This was about what survived. About what came back. She filled three pages before her vision blurred, then carefully wrote across the top of the first page: "Recovery Journal, First Night." The sanctuary had a foundation now, and this journal would be its memory.
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