Chapter One: The Hidden Legacy

984 Words
Sylvanglade was the kind of village people forgot about on purpose. Nothing ever happened there. Not really. Days followed the same pattern—sunlight through crystal-leaf trees, the soft hum of magic stitched into the air, neighbors smiling and waving like they’d rehearsed it. Safe. Predictable. Boring, if you asked Dalia. Sienna used to love it. Until things started acting… weird. It started small. Birds chirped out of rhythm. Crystals in the trees flickered too brightly at night, pulsing like they were nervous. Animals didn’t come near the village paths, and the river gurgled strangely, almost… impatiently. The air felt thicker, heavier, humming beneath her skin in ways she couldn’t explain. No one talked about it. That was the strangest part. At dinner, Sienna watched her parents. Her mother stirred the stew far too slowly, glancing over her shoulder at something invisible. Her father’s voice dropped whenever she asked a question. “You’re staring again,” Dalia muttered under her breath. “Am I?” Sienna asked, eyes still locked on her mother. “Yeah. And it’s creepy.” Her mother cleared her throat. “Girls, eat.” Dalia shoved a spoonful of stew in her mouth. “Delicious as always,” she said, sarcasm dripping like the gravy. Sienna wasn’t eating. She felt like the walls themselves were listening, holding secrets they weren’t meant to know. Later, whispers slid through the walls, urgent and hushed. Words she almost recognized—*it’s waking*, *they can’t know yet*, *soon*—floated just out of reach. Dalia rolled over in bed. “If this is about the forest,” she whispered, “I swear I didn’t touch anything.” Sienna snorted softly. “For once, I don’t think this is your fault.” “That’s new.” The next evening, the village bell rang twice at dusk. People paused. Looked around. Then walked on like nothing had happened. Sienna slowed her steps on the path home, her eyes scanning. Something was shifting. She could feel it, like the air was leaning in to watch. “Okay,” Dalia said, noticing her hesitation. “Now you’re officially creeping me out.” “Do you ever get the feeling,” Sienna asked quietly, “that everyone knows something… except us?” Dalia frowned, but didn’t answer. By the time night fell, the forest at the village’s edge glowed again—brighter, alive, and restless. Threads of crystal light twisted between the trees, pulling toward something deeper, something… urgent. Sienna could barely breathe. “This isn’t normal.” Dalia muttered something sarcastic. “No kidding, Sherlock.” But her eyes were wide, shining in the forest’s glow. They crept closer. Leaves shimmered as they brushed past, and the air smelled faintly metallic, like electricity and secrets mixed together. A small rabbit froze, then darted past in a streak of light. Both girls jumped. “Relax,” Sienna whispered. “It’s just a rabbit.” “Yeah,” Dalia muttered. “A *glowing* rabbit. Totally normal.” A low rustle came from the bushes. Dalia yelped and grabbed Sienna’s arm. “Okay, nope. Definitely not normal.” Sienna held up a finger. “Shh. Probably just a… squirrel?” The squirrel shot out, trailing sparks of light, leaving a sparkling puddle where it landed. Dalia wiped her hand on her sleeve. “I’m *so* trusting you right now.” They rounded a twisted crystal tree and stumbled onto a clearing. Half-buried beneath roots and earth was a wall—or maybe a door. Symbols faintly glowed on its surface. Ancient, carved with care. Someone had been keeping this hidden. “Uh… Sienna?” Dalia whispered. “What *is* that?” Sienna knelt to touch it. The symbols pulsed beneath her fingers, humming. She felt it tug at her, calling her forward. “Do you feel that?” she asked. Dalia’s voice wavered. “Feel what? Oh no. Don’t tell me it’s alive.” Sienna smiled, though her stomach flipped. “Maybe it is.” A soft click echoed beneath their feet, and the wall slid back just enough to reveal a narrow stairway descending into shadow. The air that spilled out was cool and heavy, smelling of dust, earth, and something sharper… something electric. Dalia swallowed. “We should probably go back.” “Not yet,” Sienna said, stepping forward. “Just a look.” Dalia groaned, muttering about cursed houses and sibling bad ideas. But curiosity won. The stairway led to a hidden chamber, small and circular. Crystals grew from the walls, faintly humming, glowing brighter when the girls approached. In the center was a small pedestal with a folded piece of parchment and a crystal shard. Sienna carefully unfolded the note. Only a few words were written: > *The City waits. Choose wisely.* The shard shimmered in her hand, light threading through it like it had a heartbeat. Dalia rolled her eyes, trying to hide her awe. “Great. A cryptic note. Could we be any more obvious as doomed adventurers?” Sienna laughed, despite herself. “Exactly. That’s the fun part.” Outside, the forest shivered, a low, melodic hum spreading through the clearing. Small crystal lights hovered along the edges of the trees, like tiny lanterns pointing the way. Sienna and Dalia glanced at each other, hearts hammering. Sparks flickered along the ground. One of them arced upward like a miniature firework, landing near Dalia’s boot. She jumped back. “Seriously? Fireworks? We are so doomed.” “Or… maybe the path wants us,” Sienna whispered, eyes wide. The Crystal Narrow Path unfolded ahead of them, glowing and winding through the trees like a ribbon stitched from stars. It pulsed gently, calling them forward. Neither girl spoke. Both knew what it meant. The path was waiting. And Sylvanglade—safe, predictable, ordinary Sylvanglade—was already behind them. Some secrets don’t stay buried forever.
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