Arianne's breath came in quiet puffs, each exhale blending into the crisp evening air of the forest. The woods were silent but for the occasional rustle of leaves, the only sound breaking the spell of stillness. She had ventured far from the village today, deeper than she normally dared, but the rare herbs she sought would be worth the risk.
The sun had dipped low, casting long shadows between the trees, but the sky was still tinged with the soft hues of dusk. Her basket, woven from vines, swayed at her side, half-filled with various plants—basil, thyme, and the delicate moonshade flowers she needed to treat fever and ailments. She had almost turned back when the sound reached her.
It was faint at first, like a whisper carried on the wind, but it grew louder with each step she took. The wind did not stir the trees, yet something about the sound felt... wrong. Unnatural. It was a voice—soft, but filled with a desperation that tugged at her heart.
Arianne hesitated, the hairs on her neck rising. She had heard stories of strange happenings in the deep woods, whispers that carried secrets of the old magic. Stories that mothers told to keep children from wandering too far. But she wasn't a child. She was a healer, a woman of reason, and she knew that fear was nothing more than the mind's trickery.
Yet, the voice beckoned her, pulling her forward.
She stepped carefully, each footfall muffled by the thick carpet of moss underfoot. The voice grew clearer, more urgent, and Arianne could now make out words.
"Help… help me…"
Arianne's heart raced. There was someone in the woods—someone in trouble. She followed the sound, her legs moving on instinct, her mind caught between caution and concern.
The whisper led her to a clearing, the trees parting to reveal a strange sight. A figure lay collapsed near the base of an ancient oak, a dark figure against the dimming light. His clothes were torn, his chest rising and falling with shallow breaths. But it wasn't the man's condition that held Arianne's attention—it was the strange aura around him. There was an unmistakable pulse of magic in the air, thick and heavy, like a storm waiting to break.
Her breath caught in her throat. This man wasn't just a traveler lost in the woods—he was something else.
Arianne knelt beside him, her healer's instincts kicking in despite the odd feeling that churned in her gut. She reached out, her fingers brushing his chest to feel for a heartbeat. It was faint, but it was there. A pulse that felt wrong, like it was too slow, too deep, as if it didn't belong to a mortal man.
He groaned, his eyes flickering open, revealing eyes that gleamed like starlight—unnatural and piercing. His gaze locked with hers, and for a moment, the world seemed to still around them.
"What are you?" Arianne whispered, before she could stop herself.
The man's lips parted, but only a strangled whisper escaped. "The Veil… it weakens… you must—"
He fell silent, his head lolling to the side, his eyes closing once more.
Arianne's mind raced. The Veil? The barrier that kept the magical world separate from her own? No one spoke of it openly; it was a legend, a myth whispered in the dark corners of the world. But here, before her, was undeniable proof that something ancient and powerful was at work.
His skin was cold, far colder than it should have been for a man who had just been lying in the woods. Arianne bit her lip in frustration. She needed to help him, but she had no idea how to heal someone so… foreign.
With a sudden, involuntary movement, she pressed her palm against his chest, feeling the pulse of magic under her fingers. The power in his body seemed to surge, responding to her touch. And then, just as quickly, it withdrew, leaving her breathless.
The man's eyes snapped open, no longer filled with the gentle haze of weakness but burning with an otherworldly light.
"You…" His voice was hoarse but filled with urgency. "You are the one. The one who can restore it. The Veil…"
Arianne recoiled slightly, her mind swirling. She had no magic of her own, no ability to heal this man—or whatever he was—but he spoke as though she held the key to something far greater.
"Please…" he continued, his voice weaker now, "The Veil… it's failing. You must come with me."
Arianne didn't know what drew her to him—perhaps it was the desperation in his voice or the undeniable force that seemed to tug at her soul—but she knew one thing: her life had just changed forever.