Beneath the dense, grey blanket of
clouds that stretched across the sky, an ancient oak stood alone, the sentinel
of a forgotten meadow, its roots deep and strong, intertwined with the bones of
the earth. If trees could remember, this one surely did. It had stood witness
to the rise and fall of empires, to the slow march of time that turned bustling
villages into ghostly ruins, where ivy crept over crumbling stone and moss
reclaimed the rest.
A figure moved slowly through the tall grass of the meadow.
A woman, wrapped in a faded cloak of green, her face half-hidden beneath a
hood. She walked with a purpose, though her steps were light, barely disturbing
the wildflowers underfoot. In her hand, she held a small bundle, wrapped
tightly in cloth.
As she reached the ancient oak, she paused, her gaze lifting
to the tree’s weathered bark. For a moment, the wind stilled. The woman knelt
at the base of the trunk, her fingers brushing the ground, tracing the shapes
of unseen patterns in the soil.
“This is the place,” she whispered, her voice barely more
than a sigh.
With careful hands, she began to dig, the earth soft and
pliant beneath her touch. When the hole was deep enough, she placed the bundle
gently inside and returned the earth. For a long time, she sat there, her hand
resting over the soil.
And then, as the first raindrop fell, she stood, her eyes lingering on the spot where the bundle lay buried. Without a word, she turned and walked away, her figure growing smaller until she slowly dissolved into the horizon of the meadow. The oak remained, its roots now cradling a secret, a memory long forgotten by the world but held within the heart of the earth.
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