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Chapter 1 - the last tree

About the Author 

THE LAST TREE 

By 

Maria nader 

Maria Nader grew up in Alexandria Egypt she started writing at the age of 

seventeen as a hobby and a way of expressing or letting out unexpressed 

feelings. She started writing on google docs when she was free from school. 

She writes when she feels like it and it's always short stories less than fifty 

pages, sometimes more. English isn't her first language. She may not be 

perfect in it but she finds comfort in writing with its vocabulary.She lives in 

Egypt with her family. The stories are really short, no one really tried to read 

them due to being busy or any other reasons. It's understandable friends or 

family, it doesn't matter. Me as maria i know these short stories are just some 

writings i find peace in illustrating but ill still like to write them even for my 

own self. 

Prologue: The First Betrayal 

"The first wound was not carved into the wood, but into the soul of the one who 

forgot that what is borrowed must always be returned." 

The first lie was beautiful. 

The first lie was beautiful because it promised a world without cost. The first 

truth was terrible because it revealed that everything—even the air we 

breathe—has a price. And the first wound was not carved into wood, but into 

the soul of those who believed they could steal forever and never be asked to 

return what was taken." 

It shimmered in the air like a promise, spun from the breath of the world itself. The 

High-Mages called it Aether—a gift from Mother to those wise enough to take it. 

They built their city on that lie, raising towers of glass and captured lightning, 

feeding their people with the stolen breath of the land. 

But the earth remembered. 

Deep beneath Argentum's gleaming streets, where the roots of the Spirit Oak 

tangled with the bones of the old world, the first High-Mage knelt before the tree. 

He pressed his palm to its bark, and the oak whispered a warning: "What is taken 

must be returned." He laughed, drew his knife, and carved the first wound into the 

ancient wood. 

The tree bled. 

And so did the world. 

Chapter 1: The Oracle's Mask 

"In a city built on illusions, the most dangerous thing you can wear is your own 

true face." 

Willa Vance had spent twenty years perfecting the art of lying without words. 

She sat at the Oracle Network anchor desk, her reflection flickering in the 

crystalline studio walls—walls pulsing with Glamours, illusions of a city that had 

never truly existed. The cameras loved her: the silver streaks in her dark hair (a 

Glamour, of course), the authoritative tilt of her chin (practiced), the warmth in her 

voice (rehearsed). She was the Republic's Voice, the trusted face of Argentum's 

prosperity. 

And she was drowning in it. 

Her fingers twitched toward the Essence implant at her temple, a habit born of 

years of suppression. The implant hummed, a constant reminder of her 

compliance—her allowance of Essence, the magical lifeblood that kept her young, 

kept her obedient. She could feel the Grey-Sickness lurking beneath her skin, 

waiting for the moment her supply faltered. One missed treatment, and her body 

would remember its true age. 

"Five minutes to air, Willa." 

Tomas Rhee's voice crackled in her earpiece, smooth as poisoned honey. 

"And Willa? The Board reviewed your last quarter's performance. Your allowance 

has been… adjusted." 

A veiled threat. A leash, tightened. 

She exhaled, forcing her Sight back into its cage. The gift—or curse—that let her 

see the truth beneath the lies. Right now, it twisted in her mind like a trapped 

animal, clawing at the illusions around her: the Glamours hiding the cracks in 

Argentum's facade, the Essence coins stamped with the faces of High-Mages who 

had never dirtied their hands, the flickering screens in the control room minimizing 

reports of Grey-Sickness outbreaks in Root-Sinking. 

Look away. Smile. Lie. 

Flashback: Willa's Awakening 

Ten Years Earlier 

Willa was twelve when she first saw the Ghosts. 

She had been playing in the gardens of the Oracle Network's training academy, her 

fingers brushing the bark of a young oak. The world had shifted. Suddenly, she saw 

the tree's roots stretching into the earth, not as wood, but as veins of light, pulsing 

with something alive and ancient. And then—them. Figures of smoke and sorrow, 

drifting through the air, their hollow eyes fixed on her. 

"What are you?" she whispered. 

A hand clamped over her mouth. "You don't speak of them," hissed her mentor, 

Elder Sylas. His grip was iron, his voice a blade. "That's the Sight, girl. And in this 

city, truth is a crime." 

He pressed a finger to her temple, and pain lanced through her skull—her first 

Essence implant, burning into place. "You'll learn to bury it. Or you'll learn to 

disappear." 

Willa buried it. 

The studio lights flared. Willa straightened her spine, arranged her features into the 

mask of the Oracle, and prepared to tell Argentum how bright its future was. 

Outside the crystalline walls, the Ever-Oak skyscrapers pierced the sky; their 

branches woven with captured lightning. Somewhere beyond them, in the slums 

where the air tasted of rot, the Last Tree stood dying. 

And no one was listening. 

Chapter 2: The Summit Disruption 

"Truth is a wildfire; you can bury it under a mountain of gold, but eventually, the 

mountain will burn." 

The Aetheria Summit was a spectacle of lies. 

Willa stood at the center of the stage, moderating a panel of Argentum's most 

powerful: High-Mage Elias Harrow, his silver robes embroidered with threads of 

captured lightning, and Minister Louis Caldren, his smile as polished as his boots. 

The audience—privileged students from the Aetheria Academy—watched with 

rapt attention, their Essence implants gleaming like jewels. 

Liora Vexley, daughter of High-Mage Vexley, raised her hand. "Why is Argentum 

the greatest nation in the world?" 

Elias smiled. "Because we have harnessed the diversity of magic itself. Our Aether

Grid powers progress. Our Essence economy fuels prosperity." 

Louis nodded. "Freedom. Innovation. The right of every citizen to thrive." 

Willa's Sight screamed. 

She saw the truth beneath Elias's words: the Aether-Grid, a web of crystalline 

veins, pulsing with trapped souls—thousands of them; their faces pressed against 

the inside of the glass, mouths open in silent screams. She saw Liora's necklace, 

not as jewelry, but as a cage of crystallized pain, each gem a stolen life. 

And then the Ghosts returned. 

They swarmed the stage, whispering of a future where the sky was choked with 

smog, where the last trees were stumped, where magic was a commodity bought 

and sold like bread. Willa's breath hitched. She had spent a lifetime burying her 

Sight. But this—this was too much. 

"Argentum isn't the greatest country in the world." 

The words left her lips before she could stop them. The auditorium fell silent. The 

air in the room seemed to freeze, the hum of the Aether-Grid suddenly sounding 

like a low, predatory growl. 

"Willa," Minister Caldren said, his voice a warning hiss. "Check your prompter." 

"I don't need a prompter to see the rankings you hide from the public," Willa 

continued, her voice gaining a sharp, clinical edge. She turned to the students in the 

front row. "You've been taught that we are the pinnacle of civilization. But look at 

the Global Vitality Index. We rank 142nd in Ecological Stability. The Iron 

Republic to the North has no magic, yet their children live to be eighty; here, if 

you aren't a High-Mage, the Grey-Sickness claims you by forty. In the Sylvan 

Isles, the water is pure—here, our 'prosperity' has poisoned every stream from the 

Spire to the Sinks." 

She stepped toward the edge of the stage, ignoring the red warning lights flickering 

on her vision. 

"We are 1st in Essence Production, yes. But we are last in Human Cost. We call 

ourselves leaders, but we are a parasite. We are a beautiful, rotting corpse. Our 

prosperity is built on stolen lives. When the last tree is cut down, the last fish 

eaten, and the last stream poisoned, you will finally realize that you cannot eat 

money. Our Essence is blood. And our Aether-Grid? It's a tomb." 

The screens behind her flickered. Security rushed to the stage. Louis Caldren's 

face darkened like a storm. "Seize her!" 

Willa's Oracle badge deactivated with a click. Her Essence implant flared with 

pain as her allowance was revoked. Grey-Sickness surged through her veins, her 

skin prickling as her body began to age—really age—for the first time in years. 

She ran. 

Behind her, the Summit devolved into chaos. Ahead, the streets of Argentum 

pulsed with War-Golems and the distant, dying glow of the Last Tree. 

Chapter 3: Descent to Root-Sinking 

"To understand the height of the tower, one must first touch the rot at the roots." 

The boundary between Argentum's gleaming districts and the Root-Sinking slums 

was a wound in the world. 

Willa stumbled across it, her body betraying her with every step. Her reflection in 

a shattered storefront window showed a stranger: hair streaked with grey, skin 

sallow, hands trembling. Grey-Sickness was reclaiming her, year by year, second 

by second. 

Root-Sinking was a graveyard of wood and flickering lanterns. The air smelled of 

dampness and despair. Around her, the slum's inhabitants moved like Ghosts 

themselves—bodies aged beyond their years, skin ashen, eyes hollow. A child 

coughed in an alley, his small frame wracked with the early stages of Grey

Sickness. A woman rocked back and forth, her Essence implant dark and dead, her 

face a map of wrinkles she shouldn't have had. 

Willa's Sight flared again. 

She saw the truth of Argentum: the earth beneath the city, bleeding dry; the 

Aether-Grid, a monstrous thing, its tendrils buried in the Spirit Oak's roots, 

drinking its life; the essence refineries, where souls were rendered into liquid gold. 

And the Last Tree. 

It stood at the heart of Root-Sinking, a Spirit Oak blackened by poison, its 

branches skeletal, its bark weeping sap like tears. Druids gathered around it, their 

robes tattered, their faces grim. Among them stood a figure like an ancient statue: 

Elder Thorn, his eyes holding centuries of sorrow. 

Willa collapsed at the tree's roots. 

Her Sight showed her the tree falling. The world dying with it. 

Thorn knelt beside her. "You finally see the truth, Oracle." 

Then the darkness took her. 

Chapter 4: The Last Tree's Guardian 

"We called it a resource so we wouldn't have to call it a murder." 

Willa woke to the scent of herbs and the sound of weeping. 

She was lying in a small dwelling carved into the Spirit Oak's roots, its walls lined 

with glowing runes. Elder Thorn bent over her, his gnarled hands pressing a 

poultice to her chest. "Drink. It won't heal you, but it'll buy you time." 

"Why help me?" she rasped. 

Thorn's voice was the sound of roots cracking stone. "Because you are the first 

Oracle in a century to see the truth. And because the Last Tree is dying." 

He told her the history she had never been taught: how Argentum's prosperity was 

built on the slow murder of the world. Aether was the world's blood. Essence was 

its life. Grey-Sickness was Mother's curse on those who stole from Her. 

"The High-Mages call the Spirit Oak a resource," Thorn said. "They do not 

understand. It is Her heart. And they mean to cut it out." 

He led her to a hidden chamber beneath the tree. There, curled in the roots, was a 

dragon hatchling—small, sickly, its scales dull. "Dragons are tied to Mother's 

health," Thorn explained. "They are dying with Her." 

Willa's Sight showed her the High-Mages' plan: in three days, they would fell the 

Spirit Oak, use its death to power one final, desperate surge of Essence. A Super

Charge, they called it. 

A suicide. 

"Why tell me this?" she asked. 

Thorn's eyes were ancient. "Because you are the only one who can stop it." 

The door burst open. 

Rana Sori stood there, breathless, her Conduit Runner's cloak dusted with ash. 

"They're coming. Oracle Network security. They're tearing Root-Sinking apart 

looking for you." 

Willa's hands clenched. "Then we don't have time." 

Chapter 5: Underground Allies 

"A revolution is just a collection of people who have run out of lies to tell 

themselves." 

The resistance hideout was a cavern of flickering lanterns and desperate hope. 

Rana led Willa through tunnels lined with stolen tech and scavenged weapons. 

"Welcome to the revolution," she said, grinning. 

The allies gathered there were a mosaic of the disillusioned: 

• Kael Rowan, a rogue alchemist, his hands stained with the remnants of 

Essence experiments. "I helped build the system that's killing us," he 

admitted. "Now I'm tearing it down." 

• Mira Santos, a former Oracle Network technician, her fingers flying over 

hacked Mental-Link nodes. "They use the Link to control thoughts," she 

said. "I use it to set them free." 

• Liora Vexley, her privileged upbringing now a ghost in her eyes. "My 

father is one of them," she whispered. "But I'm not." 

• Dr. Marek Lys, "Professor Trembles," his hands shaking as he displayed 

data. "The Aether-Grid is collapsing. Mother is dying. And the High-Mages 

are accelerating it." 

• Anya Calder, a former Essence Auditor, her voice sharp. "You spent years 

lying for them, Willa. What makes you think we can trust you?" 

Willa met her gaze. "Because I have nothing left to lose." 

Kael studied her. "You don't even know how to use that Sight of yours." 

"Then teach me," she said. 

Outside, the city burned. 

Chapter 6: Secrets of the Sight 

"The Sight is not a window to another world; it is the lens that finally wipes the 

grease from this one." 

Elder Thorn took Willa to the grove beneath the Spirit Oak's roots. 

The air hummed with fading magic. Ancient runes pulsed in the dark, their light 

casting shadows that moved like living things. "Your Sight is not a curse," Thorn 

said. "It is a gift. But you must learn to wield it." 

He taught her to look—not just at the surface, but at the threads beneath. She saw 

the Aether-Grid for what it was: a monstrous thing, its crystalline veins pulsing 

with trapped souls. She saw the Essence refineries, where lives were rendered into 

liquid power. She saw the High-Mages, their bodies bloated with stolen years, their 

minds rotting with greed. 

And she saw the Last Tree's roots, blackened and bleeding, stretching into the 

heart of the world. 

"Mother is dying," Thorn said. "And when She does, all magic dies with Her." 

Kael worked beside her, grinding herbs into a paste. "This will slow the Grey

Sickness," he said. "But it's not a cure." 

"Nothing is," Willa replied. 

Mira burst in, her face pale. "They're broadcasting footage. Of you. They're 

calling you a terrorist." 

The screens showed Willa's face, twisted by digital Glamours, standing beside 

"eco-terrorists," her face twisted into a snarl. "They're turning the city against 

you," Mira said. 

Willa's hands clenched. "Let them. The truth doesn't care about their lies." 

Chapter 7: The Aether-Grid Incursion 

"The lights of Argentum didn't shine; they screamed in a frequency only the dying 

could hear." 

The Aether-Grid substation was a cathedral of suffering. 

Rana led them through maintenance tunnels, past War-Golems and security drones. 

The air smelled of ozone and something older—something alive. 

Willa's Sight showed her the truth: souls, suspended in crystalline matrices, their 

faces pressed against the glass, their mouths open in silent screams. "They're 

powering the city," she whispered. "Not magic. Suffering." 

Mira hacked into the substation's systems, her fingers flying. "I can disrupt the 

flow. Buy us time." 

Kael collected samples of processed Essence, his face grim. "This isn't just magic. 

It's them." 

Alarms blared. 

Tomas Rhee stood in the doorway, flanked by security. "Willa," he said, smiling. 

"You've caused quite the stir." 

"Tomas," she replied. "I didn't think you had the stomach for this." 

He laughed. "Oh, I don't. But Elias does. And he's very interested in that Sight of 

yours." 

He let them go. 

As they fled, Willa's vision showed her Elias, his eyes glowing with stolen power, 

his hands outstretched toward the Last Tree. 

"We're out of time," she said. 

Chapter 8: The Forgotten Temple 

"History is a ghost that waits in the shadows for the moment we stop running." 

Liora led them to a place hidden in her father's records: an ancient temple, built 

before Argentum, its walls carved with living wood. 

The murals told a story: the first covenant between humans and Mother. Magic, 

freely given. Stewardship, not exploitation. 

Anya translated the inscriptions. "The Aether-Grid was never meant to be a 

weapon. It was a bridge." 

In the temple's heart, a scrying pool reflected the world's Spirit Oaks—all dead or 

dying. Only Argentum's Last Tree remained. 

Willa touched the water. 

Her Sight connected her to Mother's fading consciousness. She saw the betrayal: 

the first High-Mages, carving into the Spirit Oak, twisting communion into 

consumption. 

"They stole Her heart," Thorn said. 

Liora's voice was a whisper. "And they're going to do it again." 

War-Golems breached the temple. 

Kael's alchemical bomb bought them time. But Liora was captured, dragged away 

by her own father. 

"We can't leave her!" Kael snarled. 

Willa's vision showed her two paths: save Liora, or save the Tree. 

"We save the world," she said. 

 

Chapter 9: Bonds of Necessity 

"Forgiveness is a luxury for the living; for us, there is only the shared weight of the 

stones we helped stack." 

Back in the hideout, Willa and Kael worked through the night. 

He confessed his sins: the Essence refineries he'd designed, the souls he'd rendered into power. "I didn't know," he said. "Not until I saw their faces in the vapor." 

She told him of her complicity: the lies she'd spread, the truths she'd buried. "I knew," she said. "And I did nothing." 

Their hands brushed as he administered a new treatment—his own blood, mixed 

with the Spirit Oak's sap. 

Her Sight flared. 

For a moment, they shared a vision: the Spirit Oak falling. Elias, ascending. And 

between them, a choice—one that would cost everything. 

Mira interrupted. "Liora's at Oracle Network HQ. They're going to force her to 

denounce us." 

Rana's plan was simple: split up. Save Liora. Stop the felling. 

"We can't do both," Willa said. 

Kael's voice was steel. "We can." 

Thorn entered, his face grim. "The ceremony's been moved up. Dawn." 

Willa met his gaze. "Then we end this tonight." 

chapter 10: Liora's revelation

"The greatest tragedy of a monster is the child who must learn to survive its 

shadow." 

The Oracle Network headquarters was a fortress of lies. 

Willa, Kael, and Mira infiltrated through service tunnels, past guards and drones. 

They found Liora's cell empty—save for a message in the condensation: "Scrying 

Pool." 

The pool showed them Elias and Louis, standing over a pulsing crystalline heart—

Mother's Heart, stolen centuries ago, the source of the Aether-Grid's power. 

"They're not just cutting down the Tree," Liora said. "They're going to drain Her 

Heart. Kill magic forever." 

High-Mage Vexley stood in the doorway, War-Golems at his back. "Liora," he 

said. "You were never meant to see this." 

She faced him. "And you were never meant to do it." 

He let them go. 

"Take this," he said, pressing a key into Liora's hand. "It will get you into the 

Heart chamber. But know this: Elias is no longer a man. He is something worse." 

Chapter 11: The Truth Broadcast 

"Once a secret is heard by everyone, it ceases to be a weapon and becomes a 

mirror." 

The broadcast was their last weapon. 

Willa sat at the anchor desk one final time, her face lined with Grey-Sickness, her 

voice raw with truth. She showed Argentum the evidence: the souls in the Aether

Grid, the dying Spirit Oak, the High-Mages' betrayal. 

"They're going to kill Mother," she said , looking directly into the camera, her eyes 

piercing through the Glamours of every citizen watching. 'You have traded the 

world for a promise of gold, but look at the sky. Look at the roots. When the last 

tree is cut down, the last fish eaten, and the last stream poisoned, you will 

finally realize that you cannot eat money. Our prosperity is a hunger that will 

eventually consume us all." "And when She dies, so does magic. So do we." 

The city watched. 

And for the first time, they saw. 

Security breached the studio. Kael fought them off with alchemical fire. Liora 

strengthened the broadcast signal with her magic. Mira hacked the Mental-Link, 

forcing the truth into every mind in Argentum. 

Willa's Sight showed her Mother's Heart, pulsing weakly in Elias's grasp. 

"We have to stop him," she said. 

The building collapsed around them as they fled. 

Chapter 12: The Rise of Elias 

"The man who would be a god usually ends up as nothing more than a very bright 

catastrophe." 

Elias Harrow had always hungered for godhood. 

Flashbacks showed his rise: the impoverished mage, the discovery of Mother's 

Heart, the first taste of stolen power. Now, in the hidden chamber beneath 

Argentum, he stood over the crystalline organ, his body crackling with energy. 

"Louis," he said, smiling. "You still believe this is about saving Argentum." 

Louis's face paled. "Elias—" 

"I'm going to remake the world," Elias said. "And you won't be part of it." 

He began the ritual. 

The chamber trembled. Glamours failed. The Aether-Grid screamed. 

And the Spirit Oak began to fall. 

Chapter 13: Descent to the Heart 

"The deeper you go into the earth, the less the titles of the surface seem to matter." 

The tunnels beneath Argentum were a labyrinth of traps and illusions. 

Willa's Sight guided them past Elias's defenses. Kael's alchemy burned through 

obstacles. Liora's knowledge of ancient warnings kept them alive. 

They faced a guardian—a golem of stone and souls. Mira was injured protecting 

Liora. Kael destroyed it with his last bomb. 

The tunnel collapsed. 

Willa saw two paths: retreat, or continue. 

"We go on," she said. 

Mother's Heart chamber loomed ahead, pulsing with stolen power. 

And Elias, waiting. 

Chapter 14: The Breaking Point 

"The only way to break a cycle of theft is to offer a gift that cannot be taken back." 

Elias floated above Mother's Heart, his body half-transformed into light. 

"You're too late," he said. 

Willa's Grey-Sickness surged. Kael attacked. Liora tried to shut down the ritual. 

Elias laughed. "You think you can stop me? I am the future." 

Willa forced her Sight to its limit. 

She saw Mother's Heart—its pain, its hope. She saw the Spirit Oak falling. She 

saw Elias's end. 

And she saw the only way to stop him. 

She dragged herself forward, leaving a trail of dust. 

Kael realized too late. "Willa, NO—" 

She placed her hands on Mother's Heart. 

"I give this freely," she whispered. 

Light exploded. 

Chapter 15: Willa's Sacrifice 

"She didn't die to save the magic; she died to remind us that we were enough 

without it." 

The chamber shook. 

Willa's body dissolved, her consciousness merging with Mother's. She saw the 

history of the world: the first covenant, the betrayal, the centuries of theft. 

And she saw the future—a chance. 

Elias screamed as Mother's Heart rejected him, the backlash of magic consuming 

him in fire. 

Kael cradled what remained of Willa, his tears falling on dust. 

"You were supposed to live," he whispered. 

Her voice echoed in his mind, one last time: 

"Now we are human again." 

Chapter 16: The Magic Fails 

"When the lightning died, we finally saw the stars—and remembered how cold the 

dark actually was." 

Argentum collapsed without magic. 

Essence coins turned to lead. War-Golems fell. The Aether-Grid died, releasing 

trapped souls into the sky. 

Kael and Liora fled the chamber as it crumbled, carrying Louis's unconscious 

body. 

Above, the Spirit Oak lay fallen. 

Thorn knelt beside it, weeping. 

The age of exploitation was over. 

The age of reckoning had begun. 

Chapter 17: The Last Seed 

"Hope is a small, hard thing that survives the fire simply because it refuses to be 

anything else." 

Three days later, Thorn found it: a single seed, hidden in the Spirit Oak's rings. 

"Mother preserved it," he said. "For us." 

The planting ceremony was simple. 

They carried the seed to the Oracle Network headquarters—the heart of 

Argentum's magic. Kael bled for it. Liora wept for it. Thorn sweated for it. 

As the seed took root, Willa's voice whispered: 

"Now we are human again." 

A shoot broke the soil. 

Chapter 18: Children of Mother 

"We spent centuries trying to master the wild, only to find that our greatest joy was 

in being mastered by it." 

Six months later, the sapling stood ten feet tall. 

Newgrowth—formerly Argentum—was changing. Gardens replaced refineries. 

Councils replaced High-Mages. The Children of Mother spread Spirit Oak seeds 

across the world. 

Kael taught ethical alchemy. Liora led with humility. Thorn trained new guardians. 

And sometimes, when the light was just right, the sapling's leaves formed a face. 

Smiling. 

Chapter 19: The New Covenant 

"The world does not belong to us; we are merely the breath the world takes 

between seasons." 

One year after the fall, the sapling flowered. 

Petals fell on the gathered crowd. Each person saw, for a moment, the world as 

Willa had: interconnected, alive, whole. 

Mother's voice echoed: 

"Magic will return. Not as a resource. As a gift." 

The flowers became seeds. 

The first of many. 

Chapter 20: Willa's Legacy 

"She is no longer the voice of the city; she is the rustle in the leaves that tells us we 

are doing well." 

Five years later, Newgrowth thrived. 

The Spirit Oak was thirty feet tall, its branches sheltering the university where 

Kael taught. Liora represented Newgrowth on the global council. Thorn, ancient 

and content, prepared to pass his knowledge to the next generation. 

Kael sat beneath the tree, speaking to it as he often did. 

"I miss her," he admitted. 

The leaves shimmered. 

For a moment, Willa's face appeared in the branches. 

No words. Just presence. 

Just peace. 

A child—small, dark-eyed, her gaze too knowing—stood at the edge of the garden. 

"What do you see?" Kael asked. 

She smiled. 

"Everything connected. Like Mother's heartbeat." 

Epilogue: The First Breath 

"A forest is not just a collection of trees; it is a thousand years of stories finally 

learning how to breathe together." 

The girl's name was Sight. 

She was the first of the new generation, born after the fall of magic, after the rise of 

the Spirit Oak's descendants. Her eyes saw what others could not: the threads of 

life, the heartbeat of the world. 

And when she touched the trees, they whispered back. 

"The last tree fell," the old stories said. "But from its roots, a forest rose." 

And so it had. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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