The Whispering Grove
The Whitewood Grove was more than just a forest. As the carriage came closer, Constantina felt it like a shift in the air, a change in the pressure inside her own blood. The air grew softer, smelling of pine and rich, damp soil, but underneath was a vibrating energy, a silent note waiting to be played. The trees were ancient and pale, their bark like polished bone, their leaves a shimmering silver-green. They stood in serious, ringed circles, as if they were holding a meeting.
Raymond's men, who were usually loud, grew quiet as they entered the outer edge of the trees. The horses became nervous, their ears twitching at sounds only they could hear.
"Foolish superstition," Raymond muttered, though his own eyes moved over the grove with a hunter's caution, not a woodcutter's plan. He got off his horse, his boots sinking into a carpet of moss that swallowed all sound. "Surveyor! Mark the full-grown trees for cutting. Start with the outer ring."
A man with a notebook and an axe moved forward, but he walked slowly, as if moving through deep water.
Constantina stepped out of the carriage, the song inside her swelling to a protective peak. She could feel the Grove's attention-a huge, slow, plant-like awareness-turning toward the invasion, and toward her. It recognized the blood in her veins.
"It's... very peaceful here," she said, her voice clear in the quiet space. She walked away from Raymond, pulled toward the grove's heart. He let her go, watching, his hand resting on his sword handle.
She placed a gloved hand on the trunk of a great Whitewood. The moment she touched it, a wave of pictures and feelings rushed into her:
Sunlight through leaves for a thousand years. The quiet steps of deer. The soft songs of long-forgotten forest priests. The beat of clean water deep in the rock below. And a sharp, recent pain-the cut of steel in a distant root, the echo of Raymond's mines.
Daughter, the tree seemed to sigh into her soul. The Wolf's teeth scratch at our feet.
I know, she thought back, pouring her will, her memory of her father teaching her to respect these woods, into the touch. I am here. Help me.
She needed to speak the names, as the spirit Ector had told her. But not out loud. Here, they had to be sung in the language of purpose. She focused on the oldest names, the ones from her father's secret histories: "Cael'rhun, Tir'nAill, Fionnghlas, the Heart of the Green Breath..."
A soft wind stirred, though the air outside the grove was still. It moved only the silver leaves of the Whitewoods, making a sound like far-off, whispering voices. The surveyor lowered his axe, looking around, spooked.
Raymond felt it too. His eyes snapped to Constantina, still standing with her hand on the tree. "What are you doing?"
"Admiring it," she said, turning to face him, her hand slipping away. "Before it's gone. Can't you feel it? This place is... alive."
"It's wood for building," he stated, but his voice lacked its usual certainty. The whispering leaves seemed to wrap around his words, weakening them.
At that moment, a shout came from the eastern edge of the grove. One of the scouts came crashing back through the ferns, his face pale. "My lord! Signs of a camp. Well-hidden. Recent. And... this." He pushed forward a piece of cloth tied to a broken branch. It was a rough, simple shirt, and painted on it in what looked like berry juice and ash was the same rising sunbird symbol.
The Phoenix Guard. They were here, in the grove.
Raymond's suspicion toward the grove instantly turned into a more familiar, tactical anger. "Search groups! Now! Four men to a group. The trees are thick; chase them out!" He pulled his sword, its steel a harsh, foreign sound in the musical wood. He turned back to Constantina, his eyes blazing. "You. Back to the carriage. With a guard."
"Maybe they're drawn to the grove for the same reason you are," she said, not moving. "Its useful value."
"Or maybe they're drawn by stories of a princess on tour who feels for them," he shot back. The unspoken blame hung in the air: Did you signal them?
Before she could answer, a strange thing happened. The wind in the grove grew stronger, moving through the trees with purpose. It became a low, moaning whistle that swirled around Raymond's men, confusing their shouts, pulling at their cloaks. A mist, cold and sudden, began to curl up from the mossy ground, hiding the paths between the trees.
It wasn't an attack. It was a barrier. The grove was hiding itself.
Chaos broke out in a muffled, confused way. Men, only steps apart, lost sight of each other. Branches creaked in the wind, sounding like footsteps everywhere and nowhere. Raymond yelled orders, but his voice was swallowed by the grove's whispering choir.
Constantina stood her ground, the mist parting around her as if showing respect. She saw a figure move between two trees-not a soldier, but a lean, quick shape in greens and browns, face smudged with dirt. The same sharp eyes from the stable yard. He saw her, raised a hand not in a wave, but in a fist over his heart-a salute-and then vanished into the thickening white.
The grove was protecting its own.
A hand clamped on her arm. Raymond. His calm was gone, replaced by a shaky mix of fury and something else-a dawning, worried understanding that the world itself was pushing back against him. "We're leaving. Now."
He pulled her roughly through the mist, which seemed to thin for him only enough to let him pass, as if pushing out a poison. Behind them, the confused shouts of his men faded into the forest's steady whisper.
The trip back to the manor at Havenbrook was made in icy silence. The traveling group was smaller; Raymond had left half his men to search the grove, their job changed from cutting trees to hunting rebels who had slipped through their fingers like mist.
Once inside their rooms, Raymond turned on her. "What happened in that grove?"
"A change in weather. Mountain mist is normal."
"Do not treat me as a fool!"he snarled, stepping dangerously close. "The wind came for my men. The mist hid them. And you stood there in the middle of it, untouched." He searched her face, looking for a crack, a sign of guilt or witchcraft. "What did you do?"
She met his gaze, using every bit of royal calm she had. "I touched a tree, Raymond. If the wind and mist are my weapons, then your empire is safer than you think."
He stared at her, breathing fast. The logical part of him fought what his senses had shown him. Finally, he turned away, pouring a drink with a slightly unsteady hand. "There is an old story," he said, his back to her. "Told by country people in these valleys. They say the land loves the true king. That it will bend to protect him and confuse his enemies. My father called it rebel fairy tales."
He took a long drink and turned, his expression now one of cold, rebuilt control. "I am the true power here. Not the land. Not stories. And certainly not you." He moved forward again, his voice dropping to a poisonous whisper. "The tour ends tomorrow. We return to the Wolf's Den. You will not leave the Sun Tower again until I understand exactly what is happening. Your pretty cage just got smaller, Princess. And I will be watching every stone, every shadow, every breath you take."
He left, slamming the door. She heard the lock turn and the bolt slide shut-a physical wall to match the unseen one he now felt.
Alone, Constantina sank into a chair. Her heart raced, but it was with victory, not fear. She had done it. She had awakened a node. The land had answered. It was a subtle, defensive power, but it was real.
And Raymond was terrified of it. He feared what he could not explain, could not control. His empty silence in the Earth-Song was not just an absence; it was a weakness.
She went to the window, looking out at the mist-covered mountains. Somewhere out there, the Phoenix Guard was hiding, armed with a new legend: the princess who could command the woods. The ghost resistance now had a mythical friend.
And deep below the Wolf's Den, the Heartstone pool was waiting. Her path was clear. The return to the fortress was not a loss; it was a need. The most important node, the source of the song, was under his very nose.
The cage had shrunk, but the weaver's threads had multiplied. She had the stones, the rebels, and the slowly waking land itself. Raymond had his sword, his fear, and a fortress built on stone that was beginning to remember it had a heartbeat.
The next part would be the most dangerous yet. She would have to sing the song from inside the wolf's jaws.





