As above So below

975 Words
Sometimes there is more to the world than what the eye is allowed to see. Not hidden by distance or darkness—but by design. Beneath the surface of ordinary existence, beneath cities that hum with electricity and oceans that swallow forgotten wreckage, there exists something older. Something patient. A truth carefully folded away from those who would panic at its shape. A world most humans will never be permitted to know. A world of magic. A world of impossible things that learned, long ago, how to survive by becoming invisible. Some call them myths. Others call them monsters. But neither word has ever been entirely correct. Across every discovered continent, every sacred mountain peak, and even within the crushing depths of the sea, there are gateways. Not doors in the human sense, not hinges or stone frames—but ruptures in reality softened by enchantments older than recorded history. Veils. Thresholds. Breathing seams between one existence and another. To the untrained eye, they are nothing at all. A trick of light in a canyon. A strange shimmer in a tide pool. A draft in a forgotten ruin. But to those who know how to see them—and more importantly, how to pass through them—they are passages into places that defy mortal understanding. And they were never built to be prisons. That is a misconception humans often assume about anything they cannot control. The truth is far more complicated. The supernatural world was never locked away. It was hidden. There is a difference. Because the greater danger was never what lay within. It was always what lay without. Humans, for all their brilliance, have proven themselves to be something far more unpredictable than any curse or creature. They conquer what they fear. They cage what they admire. And when neither is possible, they destroy it out of principle. History remembers this in fragments—burned at the edges, rewritten in polite language. Wars. Purges. Witch trials. The quiet disappearance of entire species mislabeled as superstition. And then, more recently, something more subtle: ownership. Menageries of exotic creatures. Private collections. Laboratories. Sanctuaries that were never sanctuaries at all. Anything powerful enough to inspire awe eventually became something to be contained. So the world adapted. Not all at once. Not cleanly. But over time, the oldest surviving sects of magical beings learned the same truth: Survival is easier when you are not seen. Vampires no longer hunted humans in open territory—not because they lacked the desire, but because discretion became more valuable than appetite. Werewolves learned control, their nature no longer a curse to be suppressed but a force to be governed. The Wizkin, once known for weaving enchantments into everyday life, withdrew their magic from public sight, reserving it for necessity and secrecy. Even the Merfolk, once rulers of vast oceanic territories, began constructing hidden harbors—safe points scattered across the world’s coasts where passage between sea and land could be negotiated rather than feared. Though even that became harder with time. Because the oceans were changing. The land was changing. And humanity, in its relentless expansion, did not notice the cost of what it consumed. Forests fell without understanding what held them together. Waters darkened with chemicals that had no place in natural law. The air itself grew heavier, strained beneath invisible damage. If humans ever learned the truth, it might not be magic they feared most. It might be the realization that something had been quietly maintaining balance all along. The world beside their own was not lawless. It was governed. Not by a single throne or empire, but by structure. By agreement. By necessity. At the local level, Clan Councils maintained order—regional assemblies formed from the dominant supernatural groups in any given territory. In more diverse areas, mixed councils ensured representation across species, tempering conflict with negotiation. And above them all stood the Grand Tribunal. A governing body composed of the recognized heads of each major species and lineage, convened only when instability threatened the entire framework of coexistence. Its meetings were rare. Its decisions, final. But even structure cannot prevent imbalance forever. Even law cannot eliminate error. And so, when things inevitably go wrong, there is another layer—less visible, less formal, and far more necessary. The Bureau of Ancient Affairs. Their work is not celebrated. It is not meant to be. They arrive after the damage is done—after a breach of secrecy, after a magical incident bleeds into human awareness, after the fragile boundary between worlds begins to crack in ways that cannot be ignored. Their job is simple in concept and exhausting in practice: contain it, erase it, correct it. Not always cleanly. Not always ethically. But always quickly enough to preserve the illusion. Because illusion, in this case, is survival. Human history is full of almost-memories—encounters dismissed as hysteria, folklore, or mass delusion. There are reasons for that. There have always been reasons. Vampires were never harmed by garlic. Werewolves were never mindless beasts. Witches never bargained with infernal entities for power they already possessed within themselves. But myths are powerful things. Sometimes they conceal the truth. Sometimes they distort it. And sometimes— they protect it. Whether that protection is mercy or deception depends entirely on who you ask. There are those within the supernatural world who argue that coexistence is a fragile lie, maintained only by silence and fear of exposure. Others believe it is the only reason either world has survived as long as it has. And still others— choose not to argue at all. Because in a world built on hidden thresholds and careful balance, belief is rarely what keeps things stable. It is restraint. And restraint, like all things living in the dark, can only be maintained for so long.
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