4 Chapters
Constant Wistlebrook's dream is keeping Ember safe while she hunts for the Melody Stones.
Constant Wistlebrook wiped flour from her hands and glanced at the worn map on the bakery counter. She needed to find all five Melody Stones before the Shadow Choir did. Her little sister Ember was counting on her. The stones held ancient magic that could protect Ember from the curse slowly draining her voice. The bakery wouldn't work as a base. Too many customers. Too many questions. Constant folded the map and tucked it into her apron pocket. She locked the shop door behind her and walked through the forest path toward home. The elven dwelling sat nestled between two oak trees, its woodwork carved with protective symbols their grandmother had etched years ago. Inside, Ember would be safe while Constant searched. The walls were thick. The windows small and high. No one from the Shadow Choir would find her sister here. Constant pushed open the carved wooden door. Ember sat by the fireplace, humming softly. The sound was weaker than yesterday. Constant's chest tightened. She pulled the map from her pocket and spread it across the table. Five locations marked in faded ink. Five stones hidden in dangerous places. She would need supplies. A lantern to mark safe paths through the wild territories. Something to help her listen for the stones' magical hum. She climbed the stairs to the storage room. Dust covered old trunks and wooden boxes. Her grandmother's tools filled the shelves. Constant found a brass lantern with delicate metalwork that would burn bright enough to guide her home. Behind it sat a strange device covered in cloth. She pulled the fabric away. Metal patterns caught the light, forming circles and spirals. A detector. Her grandmother had used it to find magic in the deep woods. Constant tucked both items under her arm and descended the stairs. Tomorrow, she would begin the hunt.
Constant stepped into the morning cold, the brass lantern and detector heavy in her pack. She needed to learn how the detector worked before heading into the wild territories. Her fingers traced the metal spirals, searching for a switch or button. The device hummed when she turned a small dial on its side. The sound matched the rhythm of magic, like her grandmother had described. She walked toward the forest edge, watching the spirals glow faint blue near an old stone marker. Good. It could sense even weak magic. Now she needed to test it against something stronger, something that might feel like a Melody Stone. She turned back toward the house, where Ember's cursed voice still held traces of the ancient power. The detector would either work or it wouldn't. Either way, tomorrow she'd leave to find the first stone. Back inside, Constant spread the map across the table and marked the first location with charcoal. Three days' walk north, through the rocky hills where water sources were scarce. She climbed to the storage room and found her grandmother's old backpack, the leather straps decorated with elven patterns that had faded over time. A water sack hung beside it, the craftsmanship still solid despite years of disuse. She secured the map on top of the pack with leather cord and carried everything downstairs. Ember watched from the fireplace, her eyes tracking each item. Constant filled the water sack from the well and tested the weight on her shoulders. Heavy, but manageable. She set the pack by the door. Tomorrow morning, she would begin the real search. Tonight, she would stay with Ember one more time before the journey started. Outside, behind the house, Constant cleared a flat workspace on an old wooden table. She found canvas map panels in the storage room and stretched them across a display board her grandmother had built. The board leaned against the table, steady enough to hold the maps and organize supplies. She laid out each item in order. The detector. The lantern. Empty pouches for herbs. A knife. The water sack and backpack. This workspace would help her prepare before each search, keeping everything ready and organized. She studied the mapped locations again, tracing routes with her finger. Three days there, three days back if she found nothing. Ember couldn't wait forever. The curse was spreading. Constant packed the board away and returned inside. She sat beside her sister and took her hand. Tomorrow the real work would begin, but tonight they had each other. Morning came too fast. Constant woke before dawn and checked her supplies one last time. The display board showed everything she needed. But something was missing. Knowledge. She needed to understand what the Melody Stones really were. The village archive vault stood at the forest's edge, its thick oak doors marked with bronze hinges. Inside were records from before her grandmother's time. Constant walked through the empty streets and pushed open the heavy door. Dust filled the air. Shelves lined the walls, packed with scrolls and old books. She found maps marked with symbols that matched her grandmother's notes. One scroll described protective magic tied to singing stones. Another showed locations that lined up with her own map. She copied what she could into a small notebook and tucked it into her pack. Now she had what she needed. The tools. The knowledge. The plan. She locked the vault behind her and headed home to say goodbye to Ember.
Constant stood at the edge of the village, looking toward the distant mountains where the first Melody Stone waited. The map showed safe paths through three different territories. Each route offered something she needed. The northern hills had clean water sources and shelter caves. The eastern valley held merchant camps where she could trade for supplies. The western forest connected to ancient elven roads her people had built generations ago. She studied each option, weighing the risks. The curse in Ember's voice grew weaker each day. Time mattered more than comfort. Constant chose the northern route and adjusted her pack straps. The world was bigger than their small village, filled with places that could either help or stop her. She would learn which was which. Before she left, she needed something to mark her path home. Something that could guide allies if she needed help. She walked back to the archive vault and searched through the supply closet. An old lantern post leaned against the wall, its metal frame twisted with carved branches. Glass panels hung from delicate chains, catching sunlight through their surface. She carried it outside and placed it where the path began. The light would shine through the forest, visible to travelers and scholars who might know about the stones. The lantern cast patterns across the ground as the sun moved higher. Constant secured her pack one final time and checked that the detector sat within easy reach. The northern route stretched ahead, empty and waiting. She had her tools, her knowledge, and now a beacon to bring her back. Ember was safe behind thick walls and protective symbols. The Shadow Choir hadn't found them yet. Three days to the first stone, then three days back. She could do this. The path called to her, promising answers and danger in equal measure. Constant took her first step forward, leaving the village behind. She walked past the old meeting hall where a wooden figure stood outside. The carving showed an elf playing a flute, its surface worn smooth by weather and time. Her grandmother had told her stories about it. Someone from generations past had found a Melody Stone and returned home safe. The village had carved the figure to remember that success was possible. Constant touched the smooth wood as she passed. Others had walked dangerous paths and survived. Others had searched for magic and won. The figure proved the stones were real and the hunt could end well. She left it behind and entered the forest. The trees closed around her. Birds called overhead. Water rushed somewhere to her left. This world held the answers she needed, scattered across hills and valleys and ancient roads. She would find them, one stone at a time, and bring Ember's voice back whole. The forest opened into a clearing where the meeting hall stood tall among the trees. Elves gathered on its wide porch, trading goods and sharing news from distant places. Constant climbed the steps and listened to their voices. A merchant spoke about strange sounds in the eastern caves. A trader mentioned old ruins near the northern pass. A traveler described symbols carved into mountain stones that matched the ones in her notebook. Each story added to what she knew. Each conversation revealed paths she hadn't seen on her map. The world was full of people who had walked these roads before. Some knew about the stones. Some had seen the Shadow Choir. Some had information that could save weeks of searching. She thanked them and walked down the steps. The northern route waited, but now she knew which landmarks to watch for and which dangers to avoid. The meeting hall had given her what maps couldn't. She turned toward the path with fresh purpose, ready to begin the real search.
The road stretched north through grasslands where wildflowers grew in thick patches along the edges. Constant walked steadily, her boots finding rhythm on the packed dirt. The detector sat against her hip, its weight a constant reminder of her purpose. She had left the village behind two hours ago, and already the world felt bigger than any map could show. A stone bridge crossed a narrow stream ahead, its surface marked with old elven symbols that had faded to shadows. She stopped to refill her water sack, watching the current flow beneath smooth rocks. This was the world Ember would see again once the curse broke—open and waiting, full of paths they could walk together. The afternoon sun climbed higher as the grasslands gave way to rolling hills. Constant spotted something strange on the horizon—a tall wooden structure rising from the highest peak. She climbed toward it, her legs burning with the effort. The structure turned out to be an elven signal post, its carved wood polished smooth and decorated with patterns that matched the old archive scrolls. Mirrors hung from its sides, catching sunlight and throwing it across the valley below. She touched the carvings and recognized protection symbols mixed with warning marks. Her people had built this generations ago to watch for dangers crossing the open lands. From here, she could see the northern pass where the first Melody Stone waited, still two days away. Constant pulled out her notebook and sketched the signal post's location on her map. Other posts like this one probably marked the old elven roads, creating a network of watchtowers across the territories. If the Shadow Choir came searching, these posts would show their movement from miles away. She turned in a slow circle, studying the horizon in every direction. Empty grasslands stretched south toward home. Rocky hills rose to the north. The world spread out before her, vast and full of hidden structures her grandmother's people had left behind. She tucked the notebook away and started down the far side of the hill. The signal post stood behind her now, a reminder that she wasn't the first elf to walk dangerous paths alone. Others had built tools to survive. Others had prepared for threats that might never come. She would use what they left and add her own marks to help whoever came next. The Melody Stone waited ahead, and now she had proof that the old roads still worked. By evening, the hills gave way to darker forest. Constant noticed dense thickets growing between the trees, their twisted stems forming walls she couldn't pass through. She touched one branch and pulled her hand back fast. Thorns covered every surface, black and sharp as needles. The thicket curved along the forest edge like a fence, blocking paths that led into shadowed ground. She walked beside it until she found a gap where the thorns thinned. Her notebook showed warnings about dangerous areas in the northern territories. This barrier marked where safe travel ended and wild lands began. She made camp on the protected side, close enough to the thicket to use it as a wall against anything that might approach from deeper forest. The fire cast light across the black thorns, making them gleam like metal. Her grandmother's people had known these plants would grow thick and create borders travelers could trust. Constant wrapped herself in her blanket and watched the flames. Tomorrow she would follow the thicket north until it opened toward the pass. Tonight, she had shelter, and Ember had one more day of waiting. The journey was teaching her how the old elves had survived—by reading the land and trusting what grew there. Night settled over the forest, bringing darkness that pressed against her small fire. Then Constant noticed something glowing on the trees around her. Thin vines wrapped around the bark, their stems pulsing with warm amber light. The glow spread across the trunks like veins, soft enough to ease the shadows without blinding her. She stood and walked to the nearest tree, touching one of the vines. It felt warm under her fingers, alive with something gentle. The vines climbed higher than she could see, turning the forest into a calm space instead of a threatening one. She returned to her fire and pulled out her notebook. Her grandmother had never mentioned these plants, but they felt like something the old elves would have valued. Light without fire. Safety without walls. She drew a quick sketch and noted their location. The world kept revealing pieces of itself—signal posts for watching, thorn barriers for protection, and now these glowing vines for comfort in the dark. Each discovery showed her that the path ahead had been walked before, that others had found ways to survive what waited in the wild. She closed the notebook and settled against her pack. The amber light held steady around her. Tomorrow would bring her closer to the Melody Stone, but tonight the forest itself kept watch.
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