glowing forest

Captured Tales

View

Gobsmacked in the Glade

by Bill Tiepelman

Gobsmacked in the Glade

The Lily Pad Incident At precisely β€œoh no o’clock,” a rainbow-haired goblin named Peeb discovered that lily pads are terrible chairs and even worse life choices. He’d crouched on one like a suspicious frog, hands pressed to his cheeks, and released a whispery β€œoooo” that traveled across the enchanted pond like a gossip column with webbed feet. Peeb wasn’t built for stealth. His hair was a gossip of colorβ€”cobalt, tangerine, electric mossβ€”standing out like a neon sign that screamed TRY ME. His ears, the architectural wonder of the glade, collected every sound: the tilt-tock of water beetles, the distant honk of an aggrieved swan, and, more importantly, the crunch of someone stepping on a twig that did not sign up for this. β€œShow yourself,” Peeb stage-whispered, which for him meant β€œplease announce your plot twist.” A ripple rolled past his toes. The lily pad burped. He adjusted his existential squat. β€œIf this is a dramatic entrance, you’re late and I’m judging.” From the cattails emerged a figure in travel-stained leathers: a human woman with a map shoved into her belt and the facial expression of someone who’d headbutted destiny and won on points. She carried a backpack the size of a small moon and the attitude of an unpaid invoice. β€œYou must be the Guide,” she said. β€œGuide? I am an Experience,” Peeb said, flicking hair like a discount thunderstorm. β€œAlso, hello. I charge by the gasp, and you’re already two in.” β€œName’s Renn,” she said. β€œHere for a job. Need a goblin who knows the shortcuts through the Glarewood, preferably one who won’t eat my boots.” Peeb held up both hands. β€œI only nibble ethically sourced footwear.” His eyes narrowed, tracking a dragonfly practicing irresponsible aerobatics. β€œBut the Glarewood? That place stares back. Why go?” Renn unsheathed a rolled parchment. It glintedβ€”literally glintedβ€”like a guilty conscience. β€œTreasure map. Also a curse. Long story. Think β€˜family drama meets hostile cartography.’ I was told the goblin with the loud hair and louder opinions could get me through.” Peeb perked. Treasure was his love language, followed closely by snacks and malicious compliance. β€œI have routes,” he said. β€œSecret ones. One involves a polite troll. Another requires emotionally negotiating with a bridge.” Behind them, the pond plopped. Something large exhaled bubbles the size of soup bowls. A golden water lily tilted, showering them in sparkles that were frankly showing off. The air smelled of wet coins and wishful thinking. β€œFine,” Renn said. β€œTerms?” β€œOne: I pick snacks. Two: If we encounter any prophecies, we ignore them out of spite. Three: You don’t ask what’s in my pocket.” β€œCounter-offer: I pick the route. You don’t steal my map. And if something with teeth smiles at me, you explain that’s just their face.” They shook on it. The pond hiccuped again, and Peeb’s lily pad sank an inch. β€œRight,” he said brightly, β€œtime to go before my seat becomes a metaphor.” They made it as far as the reeds when the water boomed. A shadow rolled up from the pond’s belly like a thought nobody wanted to admit having. Two bulbous eyes surfaced, each the size of a teacup saucer. A mouth followed, wide enough to register its own postal code. β€œFriend of yours?” Renn asked, already drawing a knife that did not look ceremonial. Peeb squared his shoulders. β€œThat,” he said, β€œis Bubbles the Approximately Gentle. He’s usually friendly as long as you don’t—” Bubbles snapped up the sinking lily pad with a single slurp and burped out a crown of pondweed. β€œβ€”insult his dΓ©cor,” Peeb finished weakly. The giant amphibian blinked. Then, in a voice like wet drums, it spoke: β€œToll.” Renn glanced at Peeb. Peeb glanced at fate. Somewhere, a prophecy tried to stand up and tripped over its robes. β€œAll right,” Peeb sighed, fishing in his pocket. β€œLet’s pay the frog and pray it’s not with our dignity.” The Toll of Bubbles and Other Unpaid Debts Peeb’s hand emerged from his pocket with an assortment of glittering nonsense: two bent copper buttons, a marble that faintly hummed with regret, and a coin bearing the face of someone who looked suspiciously like Peeb doing his best impression of royalty. β€œThat’s your currency?” Renn asked, eyebrow performing interpretive skepticism. β€œOf course not,” Peeb said indignantly. β€œThat’s my emergency charm collection. You can’t just pay a frog king with anything. There are rules. Amphibious etiquette is sacred.” He turned to Bubbles, who had begun drumming his webbed fingers on the pond’s surface, creating small tidal waves that gently insulted physics. β€œO Mighty Lord of Moist Surfaces,” Peeb began in an overly theatrical voice, β€œwe humbly seek passage across your most glistening domain. In return, we offer tribute most shiny and irrelevant!” Renn whispered, β€œYou sound like a con artist in a poetry contest.” Peeb whispered back, β€œThank you.” From his satchel, the goblin produced a single item of magnificence: a polished spoon with an engraving of a duck doing yoga. He held it aloft. The world seemed to pause for a moment, confused but intrigued. Bubbles’ massive eyes blinked. β€œAcceptable.” The frog’s tongueβ€”longer than necessary by several legal definitionsβ€”snapped out and took the spoon. He swallowed it in one heroic gulp, then leaned in close enough that Peeb could see his reflection trembling in an ocean of amphibian disinterest. β€œGo,” the frog rumbled. β€œBefore I remember my dietary restrictions.” They didn’t wait for a second invitation. The reeds gave way to damp earth and a winding trail that glowed faintly underfoot, like moonlight had decided to join the conspiracy. Trees here grew in eccentric shapesβ€”one looked like it was trying to hug itself, another had grown a perfect window through its trunk, framing a sliver of sky that looked suspiciously judgmental. Renn’s boots squelched rhythmically, the sound of someone too practical to be impressed by whimsy. β€œSo what’s the deal with the Glarewood?” she asked. β€œWhy’s everyone so afraid of it?” β€œOh, the usual,” Peeb said, skipping over a root that was clearly plotting something. β€œHaunted trees, cursed air, sentient moss that critiques your posture. It’s a place that feeds on overconfidence and snacks on poor decisions. You’ll love it.” β€œSounds like my last relationship,” Renn muttered. They walked in uneasy silence until the ground began to shimmer with a subtle blue sheen. Ahead, the trees leaned closer, forming an archway of twisted branches that seemed to breathe. The air shimmered with lazy motes of light, floating like tiny glowing lies. β€œThat’s it,” Peeb said, suddenly serious. β€œThe border. Once we cross, there’s no turning back without paperwork, and trust meβ€”you do not want to deal with the bureaucratic dryads.” β€œCan’t be worse than the Department of Magical Licensing,” Renn said dryly. β€œOh, it’s worse,” Peeb said. β€œThey charge emotional tolls.” Renn stepped through first. For a heartbeat, she vanishedβ€”then reappeared on the other side, slightly blurry, like reality hadn’t finished loading her. Peeb followed, holding his breath, and the world changed in a blink. The Glarewood was alive in a way normal forests weren’t. Colors moved. Shadows gossiped. The trees bent closer to listen to secrets they weren’t supposed to hear. The air was heavy with perfume and potential bad ideas. β€œOkay,” Renn said, pulling out the map. β€œWe head north until the path forks. One route leads to the Cackling Brook, the other to the Weeping Hill. We want the one that’s less emotionally unstable.” Peeb squinted at the parchment. β€œIt’s moving.” Indeed, the ink shimmered and rearranged itself like it was trying out new fonts. Words twisted, forming a sentence that hadn’t been there before: β€˜You’re being followed.’ Renn folded the map very slowly. β€œThat’s comforting.” Behind them came a faint jinglingβ€”like tiny bells being carried by the wind. Then laughter. Soft, overlapping, too cheerful to be friendly. β€œPixies,” Peeb hissed. β€œDon’t make eye contact. Don’t make eye anything. They weaponize attention.” β€œWhat happens if we ignore them?” Renn asked. β€œThey’ll feel neglected and emotionally spiral until they turn into wasps. Or they’ll braid our eyebrows. Fifty-fifty.” Unfortunately, the pixies had already noticed them. A dozen of them swirled out of the treesβ€”tiny, glittering beings with wings that sounded like gossip. Their leader, wearing a thimble crown, landed on Peeb’s nose. β€œYou’re in our glen,” she said in a voice that could curdle honey. β€œPay toll or perform dance.” Peeb sighed. β€œI just paid a toll. I’m starting to feel financially targeted.” β€œDance,” the pixie insisted, poking him with a twig-sized spear. β€œFunny dance. With feelings.” Renn grinned. β€œOh, I have to see this.” Peeb rolled his eyes so hard they nearly relocated. β€œFine,” he said, hopping onto a nearby log. β€œPrepare yourselves for interpretive goblin jazz.” What followed could not legally be described as dancing. It was more like an argument between gravity and self-respect. Peeb flailed, spun, and occasionally made finger-gun gestures at invisible haters. The pixies were delighted. Renn laughed so hard she nearly dropped her knife. Even the trees seemed to lean closer in horrified fascination. When Peeb finished, panting and triumphant, the pixie queen clapped. β€œAdequate,” she declared. β€œYou may pass. Also, your aura needs moisturizer.” β€œI’ll put that in my next therapy session,” Peeb muttered. The pixies vanished as suddenly as they’d appeared, leaving behind a faint smell of mischief and sparkles that clung like regrets. Renn wiped her eyes. β€œYou’re surprisingly good at humiliation.” β€œIt’s a survival skill,” Peeb said. β€œAlso my cardio.” They pressed on, following the twisting glow of the trail deeper into the Glarewood. The trees grew taller, the air thicker. Somewhere ahead, faint music playedβ€”slow, mournful, and unsettlingly seductive. It tugged at the edges of reason. Renn frowned. β€œYou hear that?” Peeb nodded, ears twitching. β€œSirens. Wood version. Probably trying to lure us into an emotional flashback.” β€œCharming.” Renn drew her knife again. β€œLead the way, Experience.” Peeb bowed dramatically. β€œAfter you, Customer Satisfaction Guarantee.” Together, they stepped into the clearing where the music pulsed like a heartbeat. In the center stood a crystal pool, and in itβ€”something moved. It wasn’t a creature so much as an idea pretending to have a body: long, fluid, beautiful in a slightly threatening way. Its eyes glowed like bottled daydreams. β€œWelcome,” it purred. β€œYou’ve come far. Trade me your fears, and I’ll show you the treasure you seek.” Peeb blinked. β€œHard pass. My fears are artisanal and locally sourced.” Renn, however, stepped closer. β€œWhat if she’s telling the truth?” β€œOh, she probably is,” Peeb said. β€œThat’s the scary part. Truth here always has small print.” The creature smiled wider, too wide. β€œAll treasures require a price,” it said softly. β€œFor some, it’s gold. For others…” Its gaze slid over to Peeb. β€œHumor.” β€œNo,” Peeb said instantly. β€œAbsolutely not. You can pry my jokes from my cold, giggling corpse.” β€œThen perhaps…” it turned to Renn, β€œyour name.” Renn’s grip tightened on the knife. β€œYou’ll have to earn it.” The pool rippled. The air thickened. The Glarewood seemed to hold its breath. Peeb groaned, already regretting his entire rΓ©sumΓ©. β€œEvery time I agree to help someone,” he muttered, β€œwe end up negotiating with metaphors.” He reached for his pocket, where something faintly sparkledβ€”the same pocket he’d refused to discuss earlier. Renn noticed. β€œWhat are you hiding in there?” Peeb grinned. β€œPlan B.” He pulled out a tiny glass orb swirling with rainbow mist. β€œIf this doesn’t work,” he said, β€œrun.” He hurled it into the pool. The orb burst in a cloud of colors, releasing a sound halfway between a laugh and an explosion. When the smoke cleared, the creature was gone. The pool shimmered gold for a moment, then faded into silence. Peeb blinked at the empty water. β€œHuh. That actually worked. I was 80% sure that was just a glitter bomb.” Renn lowered her knife slowly. β€œYou’re a menace.” β€œAnd yet,” Peeb said, dusting off his tunic, β€œan effective one.” From the pool’s center rose a small pedestal. On it lay a glowing gemstone, shaped like a tear and pulsing softly with light. The treasure they’d been seeking. Renn stepped forward. β€œFinally.” Peeb, however, didn’t move. His expression was uncharacteristically serious. β€œBe careful,” he said. β€œThe Glarewood doesn’t give gifts. It loans themβ€”with interest.” Renn hesitated, then reached outβ€”and the forest itself seemed to exhale. The Gem, The Goblin, and the Gigglepocalypse Renn’s fingers brushed the gemstone, and instantly the world hiccupped. Colors inverted. Trees gasped. Somewhere, a mushroom screamed in lowercase italics. The Glarewood came alive like a theater audience realizing the play had gone off-script. β€œWell,” Peeb said, blinking through the sudden kaleidoscope of nonsense, β€œthat’s new.” The glowing tear pulsed once, twiceβ€”then melted into a puddle of shimmering light that slithered up Renn’s arm like affectionate mercury. She swore, trying to shake it off, but it climbed higher, wrapping her wrist in luminous threads. β€œPeeb! Fix this!” β€œDefine β€˜fix,’” Peeb said cautiously. β€œBecause my last attempt at fixing something gave a raccoon the power of foresight, and now he keeps mailing me spoilers.” Renn glared at him with the intensity of a thousand unpaid invoices. β€œDo. Something.” The goblin squinted at the light now coiling up her arm like sentient jewelry. β€œOkay, okay! Maybe it’s not evil. Maybe it’s just aggressively friendly.” β€œIt’s humming the same tune from the pool!” Renn snapped. β€œThat’s never good news!” The humming grew louder. The gemstone’s light flaredβ€”and in an instant, the clearing was filled with a burst of magic that tasted like laughter and poor decisions. The trees bent back. The air rippled. And from the puddle of melted gemstone rose a figure… small, winged, and painfully familiar. β€œOh no,” Peeb groaned. β€œNot her.” The figure yawned, stretched, and fixed them both with a smirk. β€œMiss me?” It was the pixie queen. Same thimble crown. Same weaponized smugness. β€œThanks for the lift. You broke my prison, darlings.” β€œWe what now?” Renn asked. β€œMy essence was sealed in that gem ages ago,” the queen said, inspecting her nails. β€œSomething about excessive mischief and minor war crimes. But now I’m free! Which means—” She spread her arms dramatically. β€œParty time!” With a flick of her wrist, glitter detonated across the clearing. Every tree started humming in harmony. Flowers burst into applause. Bubblesβ€”the giant frogβ€”rose from a nearby swamp puddle wearing a crown of disco lights and began to dance with terrifying grace. β€œOh stars,” Peeb muttered, ducking as a confetti tornado spun past him. β€œShe’s triggered the Gigglepocalypse.” β€œThe what?” Renn demanded, wiping glitter off her face. β€œA magical chain reaction of uncontrollable laughter,” Peeb shouted over the chaos. β€œIt feeds on irony and spreads faster than gossip in a tavern!” Sure enough, Renn felt a snort bubble up her throat. Then a giggle. Then a full, uncontrollable laugh that bent her double. β€œStopβ€”can’tβ€”breatheβ€”whyβ€”isβ€”itβ€”funny!” β€œBecause,” Peeb gasped, barely holding back his own fit, β€œthisβ€”forestβ€”runs on punchlines!” The pixie queen twirled midair, laughing like a caffeinated thunderstorm. β€œLet joy reign!” she cried. β€œAlso mild chaos!” Peeb fumbled through his pockets, tossing out increasingly useless trinkets: a singing walnut, a broken compass that pointed toward guilt, and a half-eaten biscuit that might’ve been sentient. Nothing helped. Then he remembered the marbleβ€”the one that hummed with regret. He held it up, eyes wide. β€œThis! This might balance the magic!” β€œHow?” Renn choked out, tears of laughter streaming down her face. β€œRegret cancels joy! It’s basic emotional algebra!” Peeb hurled the marble into the air. It burst in a puff of gray mist that smelled faintly of unfinished apologies. The laughter faltered. The glitter dimmed. Bubbles stopped mid-disco. The pixie queen frowned. β€œWhat did you do?” β€œEmotional dampening,” Peeb wheezed. β€œNever underestimate the power of mild disappointment.” The Glarewood sighed, colors settling back to normal. The pixie queen hovered crossly. β€œYou’re no fun.” β€œFun is subjective,” Peeb said, hands on hips. β€œSome of us enjoy stability and not being turned into interpretive performance art.” Renn, still catching her breath, straightened. β€œSo that’s it? We broke a curse and unleashed a menace?” β€œTechnically,” Peeb said, β€œwe upgraded her from imprisoned evil to freelance chaos consultant.” β€œI like that,” the pixie queen said. β€œPut it on my card.” Before either could respond, she vanished in a sparkle explosion so excessive it probably violated several magical ordinances. Silence returnedβ€”mostly. The forest still glowed faintly, as if chuckling to itself. Renn exhaled, brushing leaves from her hair. β€œSo what now?” Peeb shrugged. β€œWe deliver the good news: the treasure was actually a trapped pixie monarch who now owes us a favor.” β€œA favor,” Renn repeated skeptically. β€œFrom her.” β€œHey,” Peeb grinned, β€œI’m an optimist. Sometimes chaos pays better than gold.” They turned to leave the clearing. Behind them, the pond rippled gently. Bubbles raised one webbed hand in a slow, approving wave. Peeb waved back, solemn. β€œStay moist, big guy.” As they disappeared into the glowing forest, the trees resumed their whispering, the moss exhaled, and a single echo lingered in the airβ€”a soft chuckle that might’ve been the forest’s way of saying, Nice try. Peeb adjusted his satchel and smirked. β€œNext time,” he said, β€œwe charge extra for emotional damage.” Renn laughed againβ€”this time on purpose. β€œYou’re insufferable.” β€œAnd yet,” Peeb said, with a little bow, β€œyou’re still following me.” The path curved ahead, glowing faintly, promising more trouble. The kind that smelled like adventure, bad ideas, and the next great story. Β  Β  Bring a Piece of the Glade Home Can’t get enough of Peeb’s wild adventure through the Glarewood? Bring the magic (and a bit of mischief) home with our exclusive Gobsmacked in the Glade collection, inspired by Bill and Linda Tiepelman’s enchanting artwork. Whether you’re looking to elevate your dΓ©cor or curl up in style, there’s a little goblin charm for everyone: Framed Print β€” perfect for adding a splash of whimsy to your walls. Wood Print β€” rich texture and earthy tones straight from the Glarewood itself. Fleece Blanket β€” because nothing says β€˜cozy chaos’ like wrapping up in goblin-approved softness. Spiral Notebook β€” jot down your own questionable quests and mystical misadventures. Every piece captures the humor, color, and curiosity of Gobsmacked in the Glade β€” a reminder that magic, like good storytelling, belongs everywhere you let it in.

Read more

Stillness Under the Sporelight

by Bill Tiepelman

Stillness Under the Sporelight

The Girl Who Didn't Blink It is saidβ€”by unreliable drunks and slightly more reliable dryadsβ€”that if you wander too far into the gloom-glow of the Bristleback Woods, you might stumble upon a girl who doesn’t blink. She doesn’t flinch. She doesn’t giggle at your forest selfies or ask where you’re from. She just stands there, under a mushroom so large it could double as the Sistine Chapel of the Mycology Realm, radiating both stillness and a low-key vibe of β€œtouch my spores and die.” Her name, if she has one, is Elspa of the Cap, though no one’s ever heard her say it out loud. Her silver hair falls in gravity-defying sheets like she’s perpetually caught mid-turn in a shampoo commercial. Her eyes are the kind of sharp that slice through pretense, and her cloak? A living fabric of moss and firefly-thread, stitched together by whispering mycelium monks who worship the god of decay (who, fun fact, is also the god of excellent cheese). Now, Elspa isn’t just loitering there for aesthetics. She’s a Protector. Capital P. Assigned to the Eastern Sporeshieldβ€”a literal and metaphysical barrier between the mortal world and That Which Seeps. It’s a thankless gig. Her shift is eternal. Her dental plan is nonexistent. And if she had a dime for every time a wandering bard tried to β€œcharm the mushroom maiden,” she could afford a lakeside vacation and a decent exfoliant. But this evening, something is... off. The spores are flickering in odd rhythms, the ground hums with unsettled anticipation, and a group of lost humansβ€”three influencers and one guy named Darren who just wanted to peeβ€”have stepped too far into the border glow. Elspa watches. Still. Silent. Serene. Then she sighs the kind of sigh that could age wine. β€œGreat,” she mutters to no one in particular. β€œDarren’s about to pee on an ancient Root Node and summon a shadow lichen. Again.” And thus, her vigilβ€”eternal and itchy in places no cloak should itchβ€”enters a new, ridiculous chapter. Lichen, Influencers, and the Ancient Sass If Elspa had a silver for every idiot who tried to commune with the forest by urinating on it, she could build a sky-bridge to the upper canopy, install a clawfoot bath, and retire in a hammock spun from cloud silks. But alas, Elspa of the Cap does not operate in silver. She operates in responsibility, rolled eyes, and ancient fungal contracts etched in rootblood. So when Darrenβ€”poor, nasal-voiced, cargo-shorted Darrenβ€”unzipped next to a glowing root and muttered, β€œHope this isn't poison ivy,” the ground didn’t just hum. It thrummed. Like a cello string plucked by a god with regrets. The Root Node pulsed once, angrily, and released a puff of glimmering black spores into Darren’s face. He blinked. Coughed. Then burped a sound that was unmistakably in iambic pentameter. β€œUhh... Darren?” called one of the influencersβ€”Saylor Skye, 28K followers, known for her bioluminescent makeup tutorials and recent controversial opinion that moss is overrated. Darren turned slowly. His eyes glowed with fungal intelligence. His skin had begun to crust over with the papery, rippling texture of creeping shadow lichen. He took a breath, and out came the kind of voice that usually requires two vocal cords and an angry wind deity. β€œTHE SPORE SEES ALL. THE ROOT REMEMBERS. YOU HAVE DISRESPECTED THE CORDYCEPTIC ORDER. WE HUNGER FOR RECKLESS URINATION.” β€œOkay, so that’s new,” Saylor muttered, already positioning her ring light. β€œThis could be amazing content.” Elspa of the Cap, meanwhile, was already five paces closer, her cloak rustling like gossip between old leaves. She did not run. She never runs. Running is for deer, scammers, and emotionally unavailable men. Instead, she glided, slow and deliberate, until she stood squarely between the possessed Darren and the viral thirst trap crew. She raised a single hand, fingers curled into a sigil known only to Protectors and three heavily intoxicated badgers who once wandered into a secret fungal monastery. The forest quieted. The glow dimmed. Even the lichen pausedβ€”briefly confused, as if realizing it had possessed the most aggressively average man in existence. β€œYou,” Elspa said, her voice flat as a moss mat, β€œhave less intelligence than a damp toadstool with commitment issues.” Darren twitched. β€œTHE ROOT—” β€œNo,” Elspa cut in, and the air around her tightened, like the woods themselves were holding their breath. β€œYou don’t get to use Root Speech while wearing Crocs. I will literally banish you to the mulch plane where the beige lichens go to die of boredom.” The Root Lichen hesitated. Possession is a finicky thing. It depends greatly on the drama and dignity of the host. Darren, gods bless him, was leaking anxiety and ham sandwich energy. Not ideal for ancient fungal vengeance. β€œLet him go,” Elspa ordered, placing her palm gently on Darren’s forehead. A soft pulse of light radiated from her fingers, warm and wet like forest breath. The spores recoiled, hissing like steamed leeches. With a gasp and a burp that smelled alarmingly like button mushrooms, Darren collapsed into the leaf litter, blinking up at Elspa with the awe of a man who’d just seen God, and She had judged his soul and his choice of footwear. Saylor, never one to waste a moment, whispered, β€œGirl, that was badass. Are you like... a woodland dominatrix or something? You need a handle. What about, like, β€˜Mushroom Queen’ or—” β€œI am a Sporelady of the Eastern Sporeshield, sworn to stillness, guardian of the hidden pact, and dispenser of ancient sass,” Elspa replied coolly. β€œBut yes. Sure. β€˜Mushroom Queen’ works.” At this point, the forest had resumed its usual whispering hum of bird-thoughts and moss-logic, but something deeper had stirred. Elspa could feel it. The Root wasn’t just reacting to Darren’s disrespect. Something belowβ€”far belowβ€”had opened one curious eye. A vast consciousness, old and rot-bound, roused from fungal dreaming. And that... was not great. β€œOkay, folks,” Elspa said, hands on her hips. β€œTime to go. Walk exactly where I walk. If you step on a fungus circle or try to pet the singing bark, I will personally feed you to the Sporeshogs.” β€œWhat's a Sporeshog?” asked one influencer with rhinestone eyebrows. β€œA hungry regret with tusks. Now move.” And so, under the watchful hush of the ancient forest, Elspa led them deeperβ€”not out, not yetβ€”but to an old place. A locked place. Because something had awakened beneath the spores, and it remembered her name. The girl who didn’t blink was about to do something she hadn’t done in four centuries: Break a rule. The Pact, the Bloom, and the Girl Who Finally Blinked Beneath the forest, where roots speak in silence and lichen stores secrets in the curve of their growth rings, the door waited. Not a door in the human senseβ€”no hinges, no knob, no angry HOA notices nailed to its frameβ€”but a swelling of bark and memory where all stories end and some begin again. Elspa hadn’t approached it in three hundred and ninety-two years, not since she’d last sealed it with her blood, her oath, and a very sarcastic haiku. Now she stood before it again, the influencers clustered behind her like decorative mushroomsβ€”colorful, vaguely toxic, and very confused. β€œYou sure this is the way out?” asked Saylor, nervously checking her live stream. Only four viewers remained. One of them was her ex. β€œNo,” Elspa said. β€œThis is the way in.” With a flick of her wrist, her cloak unfurled like wings. The mycelium that threaded through it responded, humming in a low, sticky vibration. Elspa knelt and pressed her palm to the door. The forest’s breath hitched. β€œHey, Root Dad,” she whispered. The earth groaned in a language older than rot. Something enormous and thoughtful pressed its presence upward, like a whale surfacing through soil. β€œElspa.” It wasn’t a voice. It was a knowing. A feeling that settled into your bones like damp regret. β€œYou let a Darren pee on me,” the Root murmured, vaguely wounded. β€œI was on break,” she lied. β€œHad a mushroom smoothie. Terrible idea. Got distracted.” β€œYou are unraveling.” And she was. She could feel it. The Protector’s stillness fraying at the edges. The sarcasm was a symptom. The sass, a defense. After centuries of anchoring the Eastern Sporeshield, her spirit had begun to stir in inconvenient directionsβ€”toward action, toward change. Dangerous things, both. β€œI want out,” she said quietly. β€œI want to blink.” The Root paused for several geological seconds. Then: β€œYou would give up stillness for movement? Spore for spark?” β€œI would give up stillness to stop feeling like furniture with back pain.” Behind her, Darren groaned and rolled over. One of the influencers had found cell service and was watching conspiracy theories about mushroom-based cults on YouTube. Elspa didn’t turn around. She didn’t need to. She was watching them all, in the way that only something still can truly watchβ€”deep, unblinking, patient. β€œI’ll train another,” she said. β€œSomeone younger. Maybe a squirrel. Maybe a girl who doesn’t speak in hashtags. Someone who isn’t tired.” The Root was silent. Then, finally, it cracked. A thin seam opened along the bark, revealing a soft, amber light from withinβ€”a warm glow like a memory you almost forgot, waiting to be held. β€œThen you may pass,” the Root said. β€œBut you must leave the Cloak.” That stopped her. The Cloak was not just fabricβ€”it was every vow, every buried pain, every flicker of fungal wisdom stitched into shape. Without it, she would be... only Elspa. No longer Protector. Just a woman. With a really overdue nap ahead of her. She shrugged it off. It fell to the ground with a whisper that shook sap from the trees. Elspa stepped into the amber light. It smelled like petrichor, fresh mushrooms, and the breath of something that had never stopped loving her, not once, in four hundred years. The influencers watched, mouths open, thumbs frozen over β€œrecord.” Saylor whispered, β€œShe didn’t even grab her cloak. That’s so raw.” Then the Root Door closed, and she was gone. β€” They never saw her again. Well, not as she had been. The new Protector appeared the next spring: a young woman with wild hair, a suspiciously intelligent squirrel assistant, and the Cloak reborn in softer threads. She didn’t speak much, but when she did, her sarcasm could fell a grown troll. And somewhere far away, in a small cottage grown from a ring of mushrooms under a sunset that never quite ended, Elspa blinked. She laughed. She learned to burn food again. She made very bad wine and worse friends. And when she smiled, it always looked just a little like the forest was smiling with her. Because sometimes, even protectors deserve to be protected. Even the still must someday dance. And the sporelight, for once, did not fade. Β  Β  If Elspa’s quiet rebellion, her sacred sarcasm, and the glow of the sporelight linger in your thoughtsβ€”why not bring a little of that stillness home? From enchanted canvas prints that breathe life into your walls, to metal prints that shimmer like bioluminescent bark, you can take a piece of the Eastern Sporeshield with you. Curl up with a plush throw pillow inspired by her legendary cloak, or carry forest magic wherever you wander with a charming tote bag straight from Elspa’s dream cottage. Let her story settle into your spaceβ€”and maybe, just maybe, you’ll feel the forest watching back.

Read more

Explore Our Blogs, News and FAQ