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Chapter 2 - The Moonflower Oath – 1

There was once a kingdom that existed between night and dawn — a place not found on any map, for it lived in the pause between two heartbeats of time. They called it Elaria, the Land of Silver Winds.

Its rivers sang to the moon, its trees whispered in forgotten tongues, and every century, the moon itself would bloom once — a flower of light that grew on the highest peak of Mount Oril.

They called it the Moonflower — a blossom born from tears of the sky. Legend said whoever touched it under the full moon would see the true soul of their destined beloved, no matter how far or lost they were.

But it came with a warning:

"To find the soul you seek, you must give a part of your own."

And so, few dared.

He was born in a house of glass, where sunlight scattered into colors before touching the ground. His name was Cael Anor, son of the royal cartographer — but more of a dreamer than a scholar.

He painted maps that led nowhere, constellations that didn't exist, and faces of people he'd never met. His father called him "the boy of useless stars."

But Cael didn't mind. Somewhere deep inside, he felt that what he painted wasn't fiction — it was memory.

He would often see a girl in his dreams — standing by a lake of mirrors, her hair white as starlight, her eyes a storm of silver and sorrow. He didn't know her name, but he had painted her a hundred times.

And always, in those dreams, she whispered:

"Find me when the moon forgets to shine."

Across the Silver Lake, in a sanctuary where time moved slower than light, there lived a girl named Lyara.

She was the last Keeper of the Moonflower — a priestess bound to guard it until its next bloom. The task was ancient, sacred, and cruel. She was forbidden from seeing the world beyond the temple gates, for her presence alone was believed to draw storms.

Yet every night, when moonlight spilled across the water, she felt it — a pulse in her chest that wasn't her own. As if somewhere, someone was painting her soul on canvas, stroke by stroke, color by color.

Her only friend was the lake itself — a body of living silver that reflected not the world, but what the heart longed for most. And in it, she sometimes saw a boy with paint-stained hands, looking at her as though he'd known her all his life.

Lyara would touch the surface, whispering,

"If you exist, let the wind carry your name."

And though no answer ever came, she never stopped calling.

One autumn night, as Cael stood on the balcony of the royal observatory, he noticed something strange — the moon flickered.

Not dimmed, not veiled by cloud — but flickered, like a flame about to die. The court astrologers panicked, declaring it a curse. The Moonflower was withering, and with it, the balance of Elaria.

A message spread through the land:

"When the moon forgets to shine, the heart that remembers love must find the flower."

Cael felt his breath stop.

He remembered the whisper from his dreams.

He remembered her.

So, against his father's command, he left before dawn, carrying only a brush, a small lantern, and a single painting — her face.

The path to Oril was no mere climb — it was a trial woven by gods and ghosts. The forest bent around him, time slowed, and whispers of the lost called his name.

At night, Cael would paint the stars to light his way. When hunger came, he drew fruit, and somehow, it became real — as if the world itself responded to his longing. He realized his art was no longer imagination. It was remembrance.

And always, he saw flashes — her face by the lake, her sorrow like frost on his skin.

One night, as rain fell like melted glass, a spirit appeared — a woman made of mist.

"You seek the Moonflower?" she asked.

He nodded.

"Then know this — the flower doesn't bloom for love. It blooms for loss. To touch it is to remember what the world tried to make you forget."

Cael looked at his painting. "Then I have already lost enough."

At the peak of Mount Oril stood the Temple of Mirrors — Lyara's home, her cage. For years she had tended the dying Moonflower, feeding it her own light, her own breath. She was bound to it; her life was its root.

When Cael reached the summit, he saw her — not as a vision this time, but alive.

The same silver hair, the same eyes that carried lifetimes.

She turned, and the world fell silent.

"You came," she whispered, disbelief breaking into a tremor.

"I've always been coming," he said.

For a long moment, they simply stared — strangers who somehow carried each other's memory. Then she smiled faintly.

"You shouldn't have. The Moonflower is dying because of me."

He shook his head. "No, it's dying because it wants to be free — like you."

She almost laughed. "And what will you do? Paint freedom for me?"

"Yes," he said softly. "If you'll let me."

When the eclipse began, the temple trembled. The Moonflower, pale and ghostly, began to wilt. Its light dimmed like a heartbeat fading.

Lyara fell to her knees, the bond draining her life with every breath.

Cael ran to her, holding her in his arms. "Tell me what to do."

"Leave," she whispered. "If the flower dies, I die with it."

"Then let it die," he said fiercely. "You're not its prisoner."

Tears streaked her cheeks like moonlight falling from heaven. "It's not that simple. The Moonflower was born from the soul of the first lovers — if it dies, the world forgets what love means."

He looked at the dying bloom, then back at her.

"Then I'll paint it anew."

He tore open his satchel, took his brush, and dipped it in his own blood. With trembling hands, he painted light into the air — every color he remembered from her, every whisper of her soul he'd ever dreamed. The temple began to glow.

The Moonflower responded — faintly, hesitantly — its petals lifting, reaching for his light. But as it revived, Cael weakened. His hands shook. His eyes dimmed.

"Stop!" Lyara cried, clutching his face. "You're giving it your soul!"

He smiled weakly. "I told you once… I've already lost enough."

And with one final stroke, the Moonflower bloomed — brighter than any dawn. Its light spread across the world, healing the cracks of sky and time.

But when the brilliance faded, Cael was gone.

Only his brush lay beside the petals, still warm.

Lyara wept, her tears falling onto the flower. But as each drop touched the petals, the air shimmered — and there he was, faintly, like a reflection in water.

"Cael?" she whispered.

His voice echoed softly, from everywhere and nowhere.

"The Moon remembers love. So long as it shines, I'll be here."

She pressed her hand to the flower, her heartbeat merging with its glow.

"Then let me remember too."

And the flower answered — binding them both into light, into legend, into memory.

The moon returned to the sky, whole again. But from that day onward, its surface bore a mark — a faint brushstroke of gold, like a painter's final touch.

They said it was the proof that love could outlive even its own story.

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