Sef walked home. His hands smelled of cedar and old iron. He did not tell anyone what he had done. But the next morning, Elder Mirren’s weather vane was back on her barn, perfectly straight, as if it had never left.
It always did.
Sef knelt. He poured the cedar dust into the crack—old magic, older than the village, older than the name “Sermak.” He drove the three iron nails into the earth at the stone’s base, forming a triangle. Then he spoke the only charm his grandmother had taught him, the one she said was not for carving or fixing, but for remembering .
She found Sef at the well. “You don’t fix things,” she said, her eyes pale and clear as winter sky. “You listen to what they need to become whole again. That’s rarer than magic, Sef Sermak. That’s a story the valley will tell long after you’ve carved your last bird.”
Session expired
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