They say, “The Ash remembers.” That Every branch carries the weight of what once was, and what will be.
That every root drinks memories lost. The Ash's leaves tremble not from wind alone but
from the murmurs of lives lived and undone — of beginnings forgotten and endings yet to be
written. The Ash holds three truths: All things Grow, All things Decay, And all
things return. Some call that cycle mercy. Others, punishment.
Beneath its shade, time does not move forward but spirals — a slow turning of things that have been, things that could have been and things that still might be. Its
branches ever reach for warm light, its roots delve only for cold silence. And between them hangs
existence — threads strung between creation and decay.
The Ash does not speak in words, but in whispers — in cycles of growth and decay. Its roots claw through the bones of
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forgotten worlds. Its branches, blackened by the weight of
ages, reach toward a sky that has long since turned away.
Every leaf shed, a death retold. Every sprout, a cycle of renewal. There is no mercy in its growth — only memory.
The Ash remembers every soul that ever wept beneath its bough, every name that was carried into the
dark never to return. To the Ash, life and death are not opposites, but echoes — the same
breath, once in to let the forgotten rest, once out creating new hope.
From its crown hangs a thousand worlds, trembling like lanterns in the wind. Each one a moment — life, an ever-repeating dream. And
among them — one spark flickers stubbornly against the wind. A fragile soul, nursing fresh
grief — unaware it bears the weight of roots and branches both.
The Ash stirs, its whispers gather like a storm.
“The Ash remembers.”
The world exhales, and with it, so does Elior
Wyrden.

