The storm came without warning. No slow build of clouds, no whisper of rain, but a sudden roar that tore across White Harbor as though the lake itself had exhaled. Wind screamed through the ridges, wrenching branches from the black pines, flinging them into the streets. Rain slashed the village in sheets, drowning alleys, pounding rooftops until shingles broke loose like scales. And through it all, the bell tolled in the church tower — wild, unbidden, frantic — though no rope swung it.
The villagers crowded into Anders’s tavern, the only building with walls stout enough to feel safe, though no one believed safety was real anymore. The fire blazed, but its warmth could not push back the damp chill that clung to the air. The shrouded mirror behind the bar trembled as if straining against its cover. Sometimes, when the lightning flared, shadowy faces pressed against the cloth from within, as though begging release.
Anders moved among them, his face pale, his hands steady only by force of will. He poured schnapps for Henrik, whiskey for Martin, cloudy beer for Oskar. He lit candles in every corner, muttering that light would hold back the dark, though none of them believed it. The old men whispered among themselves, voices hoarse, their words carrying like fragments of doom.
“They’re in the streets already,” Henrik hissed, staring into his glass. “I saw them — dripping, pale, with eyes like the lake at midnight.”
“Not the first time,” Oskar muttered. “It’s always the same. One taken, then silence. But this…” He shook his head, staring toward the door as though it might burst open. “This is different. This feels like the end.”
Martin leaned forward, his hands trembling. “Last night, I heard my brother’s voice outside my window. He’s been dead thirty years. He called my name. Said it was time.” His words trailed into a whisper, but no one contradicted him.
A scream rose from the back of the tavern — a child clutching at her mother’s skirts, eyes fixed on the rain-streaked window. Lightning flared, and faces peered in from the darkness outside — drowned faces, half-rotted, their mouths moving in unison. The word they shaped was not spoken but felt in the marrow of every villager’s bones: Come.
The tavern erupted. Some cried prayers, some cursed, others wept aloud. Children screamed as mothers tried to hush them, though their own throats trembled. Anders dropped the bottle in his hands, glass shattering across the floor, whiskey pooling like blood.
Outside, the shapes wandered the streets like souls lost, yet each step seemed deliberate, purposeful. They knocked at doors, leaned toward windows, called in hollow voices that wavered between invitation and command. Always the same word, carried on wind and storm: Come.
The tavern door creaked. The storm seemed to hush for a heartbeat.
Ephraim entered.
He seemed taller than before, though stooped, as if the weight of centuries pressed upon him. His cloak dripped rain in steady rivulets onto the tavern floor. His eyes gleamed in the candlelight — not young, not old, but something apart, something endless. He carried the cracked ledger again, and when he laid it upon the bar, the room fell into silence.
His voice was low, but it carried as though the storm itself paused to listen.
“It has happened before. In the year of the black gale, when twenty were taken. In the season of famine, when a family vanished, house and all. In the winter of long ice, when the drowned walked the ridges. Each time, the ship came. Each time, the toll was taken. Each time, the cycle resumed. But now—”
He turned the book toward them, his bony finger stabbing at the ink.
“Now the cycle ends. The ship does not come to take one. It comes to claim all. I can warn you, but I cannot save you. My place is to bear witness. To record. To remember. Nothing more.”
A murmur of protest broke out, villagers crying for him to stay, to fight, to lead. But Ephraim only closed the ledger with a snap that sounded like final judgment. His eyes burned as they swept the room — not cruel, not kind, but heavy with inevitability.
And then he was gone. The door swung shut behind him, leaving only rain, only storm. Some whispered he had returned to his house of many windows in the pines, where candlelight flickered through warped glass and pages turned on their own. A place where he chronicled, where he waited, where he endured.
As if summoned by his absence, a flash of lightning split the clouds. Through the tavern’s rattling shutters, the villagers saw it: the ship sliding into the harbor, impossibly vast, sails torn, lanterns blazing with unnatural fire. No oars moved, no wind filled its sails, yet it advanced with implacable certainty. Its timbers groaned with the weight of centuries, every creak like a dirge. And at its prow stood a figure cloaked in darkness, no face, no form, only the essence of command — a captain wrought from shadow and hunger.
The anchor dropped with a roar that shook the village to its foundations, the sound rolling like thunder through their bones.
The bell in the church tower answered, tolling in time with the anchor’s descent.
The storm had only begun.
~Wylddane
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