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Just as the last of the purple twilight vanished, Elara saw it—a soft, amber pulse through the grey veil. It wasn't the fungus. It was a window.

The fog in the Whispering Woods didn’t just hang in the air; it felt like a living thing, cold and clingy, pulling at Elara’s cloak as she stumbled over gnarled roots. She had been warned never to stray past the stone markers after dusk, but her youngest brother’s fever had broken the boundaries of her fear. The "Glimmer-Root," a fungus that supposedly only grew in the deepest damp of the Hollow, was his only hope. Download 0368cbb0ad7a55d1462158cc3f52c5e1 jpg

He pointed to a mismatched ceramic mug on a stump-table. Beside it lay a bundle of glowing, sapphire-tinted roots. Elara realized then that in the Hollow, you don't find what you're looking for—it finds you, provided you're brave enough to follow the light through the mist. Just as the last of the purple twilight

Inside, the air smelled of dried lavender and rain. An old man, his beard woven with silver thread and tiny dried flowers, didn't look up from his cauldron. "You're late for the root, child," he murmured, his voice like grinding stones. "But the fog is patient. Sit. The tea is already poured." The fog in the Whispering Woods didn’t just

Elara approached tentatively. There was no sound of owls or wind here, only the low, rhythmic hum of the earth itself. When she knocked on the heavy cedar door, it didn't creak; it sighed open.

Tucked into the roots of an ancient, twisted oak sat a cottage so small it looked grown rather than built. Its thatched roof was thick with glowing moss, and from its single round window, a warm light spilled onto the leaf-littered floor.