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When the Lake Whispers, Part XVII:  The Last Storm...

9/16/2025

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"The Last Storm" (Text & Image Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
“The storm does not come from the sky, but from what stirs beneath the waves.”

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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When the Lake Whispers, Part XV:  The Day After...

9/14/2025

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"The Day After" (Image & Text Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
“Every toll is but an echo of the last, and a shadow of the next.”

Morning came to White Harbor beneath a ceiling of gray, the rain falling steady and cold. Not the wild rage of last night’s storm, but a patient, unyielding curtain that soaked the streets, streaked the windows, and turned the alleys to rivulets. It was the kind of rain that lasted, that settled into bone and soul, that made even silence feel damp.

Parents kept their children home; the schoolhouse bell tolled once and fell quiet, its note swallowed by the rain. Fishermen lingered at the bluffs, staring at the restless lake, but their boats remained lashed to their moorings. The ridges above, draped in black pines, seemed to lean closer, their needles sighing with a breath that was too knowing, too deliberate, as though the trees themselves bent to listen. Along the shore, the waves pressed and pulled with a rhythm like murmured words — not hissing this time, but murmuring, repeating, promising.

In the tavern, Anders worked the rag across the bar with nervous devotion. The mirror behind him was shrouded still, its heavy cloth dark with damp, but shadows flitted across it from time to time as though the lake itself strained to look in. He muttered under his breath when he saw them, words too soft for prayer but too urgent for habit. The fire burned bright in the hearth, logs spitting and crackling, yet its warmth could not chase the chill that clung to the room.

The old men had lined up at the bar, each with his drink as though ritual kept the world intact. Henrik nursed a glass of schnapps. Oskar sipped his cloudy beer. Martin, with hands that shook, clutched his whiskey like a man holds onto breath. Their voices carried in low threads, weaving tales that all sounded like doom. Henrik muttered that the drowned would return before the week was out. Oskar shook his head and said the storm had been the herald, not the feast. Martin whispered of shadows he thought he’d seen outside his shuttered window, moving like men but heavier, slower, deliberate. The others hushed him — and yet all three leaned closer, unable to stop listening, their fear feeding on itself like a fire that refused to die.

The door banged open.

Ephraim entered. Tall and stooped, his cloak heavy with rain, he moved with the stillness of someone who had carried centuries in his bones. His face was gaunt, his skin pale as candlewax, his eyes deep-set and strangely luminous. The villagers called him a scholar, a teacher once, but others whispered older names — watcher, seer, something less than human and more than man. Some said he had always been here, since before White Harbor had a church bell, since before the tavern was built of stone.

He carried a ledger bound in cracked leather, the cover blackened with age. His long, bony fingers traced the spine as though it had weight beyond its paper. Without a word, he laid it on the bar and turned its brittle pages, pausing at a passage inked in a hand not only long dead, but familiar — the looping script of his own, though written in another century.

“When the ship anchors,” he said, his voice carrying through the tavern like the bell tolling in fog, “the toll is complete. The living will follow.”

His finger lingered on the page, pointing to a passage beneath the warning. The words crawled like old scars across the parchment:

It has happened before. In the year of the black gale, when twenty were taken. In the season of famine, when the lake claimed a family whole. In the winter of long ice, when the drowned walked the ridges and the ship rode high in the harbor. Each time the toll was taken, the storm broke, the dead departed, and the living remained. But the toll grows. The hunger deepens. And the day will come when the ship does not depart, and the drowned do not return to the water. Then the cycle ends. Then all is claimed.

The tavern was silent save for the rain pattering against the windows and the steady pop of the fire. Anders leaned on the bar as if the weight of Ephraim’s words pressed him down. Henrik, Oskar, and Martin stared into their glasses, unwilling to look at the book but unable to turn away from its shadow.
​
And for a moment, in the tremor of the ledger’s pages stirred by the draft, all felt the same certainty: they were no longer reading the past. They were staring at the present. Perhaps even the future.

~Wylddane

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When the Lake Whispers, Part XIV:  The Apparitions...

9/13/2025

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"The Storm" (Image & Text Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
The storm passed, but peace did not follow. White Harbor awoke to streets strewn with broken shutters, torn nets, and branches ripped from the ridges. The pines that ringed the village leaned and hissed, their needles whispering words no one wished to hear, as if the trees themselves had become witnesses to some ancient vow. Along the shoreline, the lake still stirred restlessly, waves slapping against the stones in uneven rhythms, carrying whispers that seemed almost like voices — garbled, urgent, threatening. Though the clouds thinned, the air carried the taste of iron, and no one in the village believed the storm had truly gone.

By midday, a hush had fallen, heavy and strange. The schoolhouse remained empty, parents keeping children home though no lessons were called. Mothers stitched by the window but their eyes were fixed outward, as if expecting something to move along the road. Even the church bell, silent since the storm, gave a sudden low groan in its tower — no wind moved it, yet it swung once, ringing hollow as though warning the village of what was to come.

It began with whispers of sightings. A fisherman swore he saw Jonas standing on the far rocks, dripping wet, clothes torn, smiling that same icy smile. A child on the ridge claimed to have heard Isaac’s voice calling her name from the tree line. Ruth was seen in a reflection on the water, her pale face hovering above the ripples until the waves devoured it. Each tale was met with disbelief, but disbelief quickly turned brittle in the face of repetition. Too many had seen. Too many had heard.

Inside the tavern, Anders stoked the fire, but its warmth would not settle. The old men huddled close, muttering like prophets of doom, their tankards left half-full. They spoke of the taken — Jonas, Caleb, Isaac, Ruth — and now whispered that the storm had broken some barrier, loosed them to walk once more. In the mirror behind the bar, a shadow flickered, pale hands pressing against the glass before fading into nothing.

Old Henrik saw it and crossed himself, his lips quivering as he whispered, “They want us to join them.”

At dusk the pines seemed to lean closer, their trunks black against the reddened sky. The waves struck the docks with hollow knocks, steady as a heartbeat, louder, louder, until all of White Harbor seemed to be listening. Then, in the gathering dark, the lake birthed shapes — half-seen, half-formed, figures walking along the shore in dripping clothes of another century, their faces blank and watching. Bells tolled from the ghost ship beyond the bay, faint and distant, though no sails stirred.

At first the figures stayed by the waterline, their dripping forms wavering in the last of the light. But as the villagers watched, doors bolted and curtains trembling, the shapes began to move. Step by step, they turned toward the village — up from the shore, toward the lanes of weathered houses, toward the tavern’s faint glow, toward the silent church whose bell still hung heavy in its tower.

A child screamed when one of the figures paused at the edge of the square, lifting a hand as if to knock upon an unseen door. The sound carried through the stillness, but the figure did not vanish. It only tilted its head, as if listening.

And then the knocking came again — not from the docks this time, but from everywhere. On doors. On shutters. On walls. The hollow pounding grew, louder, insistent, echoing like a hundred fists. The villagers clutched one another, breath held tight, waiting for the next strike.

But it did not come.

The silence that followed was worse than the noise — heavy, watchful, like prey knowing the hunter was near. The pines whispered, the lake whispered, and all of White Harbor whispered the same question into the night:
​
What happens when they cross the threshold?

~Wylddane




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When the Lake Whispers, Part XIII:  The Gathering Storm...

9/9/2025

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"The Storm Breaks" (Image & Text Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
“The storm outside is nothing compared to the storm within.”

Morning came, but it brought no relief. White Harbor lay under a sky the color of iron, low clouds pressing so near it seemed they might crush the crooked rooftops. The lake was uncharacteristically still, its black surface unbroken, as though it too held its breath. Yet beneath the silence lay a tension — a humming, unseen vibration that lived in every wall and floorboard, in every chest and vein.

The procession from the night before had scattered like mist, but its memory clung sharp as salt. Villagers crossed themselves in the street, speaking in whispers, afraid the drowned might be listening. Mothers herded children indoors, barring shutters even though it was day. The little schoolhouse stood empty, its door locked, the bell rope unmoved. No lesson could compete with the terror of the drowned, and no parent dared let their child out of sight. The cobblestones glistened though no rain had fallen, damp with a cold that seeped upward from the ground.

Anna walked with her mother to fetch water from the pump and swore she heard her name breathed in her ear — Jonas’s voice, but not Jonas’s, and behind it a chorus of others she half-knew but could not place. She clutched her mother’s hand until her knuckles blanched white, saying nothing, for she feared the words themselves might bring the voices closer.

At the tavern, Anders worked silently, though his face was pale and sleepless. The towel he used to cover the mirror remained in place, and no one dared to remove it. Patrons sat stiff and fearful, drinking not for warmth but for courage. The fire in the hearth burned steadily, yet the chill of the lake seeped into the room all the same, curling into bones no flame could touch. Anders wiped the bar slowly, his hand steady but his eyes hollow. Around him, the old men leaned close, whispering like ancient sirens of doom.

“It’s the storm,” Nils muttered, his voice like gravel. “It comes each time.”
“Storms are storms,” Henrik growled, though his knuckles were white around his glass. “But this… this is the lake.”
“They’ll take more with it,” another said. “The procession grows. You saw the soldier. You saw the girl.”
A thin voice quavered from the corner: “And we’ll join them, one by one. Until no one’s left.”

Their whispers coiled together, a dirge carried on the stale air, filling the tavern until even Anders’s silence seemed part of the lament.

From the pine ridges above the town, the sound of wind rose and fell, though no branches moved. The hissing seemed to form syllables, broken words that darted away the moment one tried to listen. The old men spoke of the past: how storms had once rolled in after the drowned returned, storms that lasted days, stripping roofs from houses and ships from moorings. Some swore it was not the weather at all but the lake itself thrashing, hungry.

Out on the horizon, a shape lingered: the ghost ship, dim in the daylight mist, its sails slack yet somehow taut. Its hull creaked, and the faint toll of its bell drifted on the air, too far and too close at once. Fishermen who saw it refused to take their boats onto the water. Nets lay in piles, empty. The harbor was silent, save for the gulls — and even they wheeled uneasily, their cries sharp and strange, as if warning rather than scavenging.

In his old house at the forest’s edge, Ephraim bent over his library table, the air thick with the dust of centuries. Ancient tomes lay open in heaps around him, their spines cracked, their pages inked with warnings and half-forgotten spells. The shelves pressed close like watchful sentries, the windows peering into the pines and the lake beyond. He found the ledger again, its pages brittle as autumn leaves. In the margin a note scrawled by a long-dead hand read:

“The storm is both sign and summons. The ship is its herald. When it anchors, the living will follow.”

His hand trembled as he closed the book. Candlelight guttered, shadows flinched along the shelves. Through the nearest window he saw the first drops of rain strike the glass, though the sky above remained unbroken. Each drop slid downward like a tear.

Then the storm broke.

Thunder cracked so near it shook the timbers of every house. Wind roared down the streets, tearing shutters from hinges and flinging them into the night. Rain lashed the rooftops in sheets, flooding the cobblestones until they gleamed black. The church bell clanged wildly, though no rope was pulled, its bent steeple swaying like a mast about to snap. From the lake, a low groan rose — not thunder, not wave, but something deeper, as if the water itself had found a voice.

In the tavern, men leapt from their seats, glasses shattering against the floor. Anders gripped the counter, eyes wide, as the mirror rattled against the wall under its towel covering. One of the old men began to pray, another to weep. The storm howled through the cracks in the walls, carrying with it the faint, unmistakable sound of dripping — though no one inside was wet.

And through a flash of lightning, the ghost ship loomed closer than before, its sails stretched like torn wings, its lanterns glowing bone-pale. Another toll of its bell drifted across the water, hollow and hungry.

The church bell answered, iron against iron, their notes overlapping — one from land, one from water. The twin tolls rose together, a dreadful harmony that rang through every house and soul in White Harbor.
​
White Harbor braced, but no one believed the storm belonged to the sky.

~Wylddane
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When the Lake Whispers, Part XII:  The Rising Fear...

9/5/2025

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"The Rising Fear" (Text & Image Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
“The drowned do not sleep; they wait.”

White Harbor looked the same, but it was not the same. Its narrow streets, paved in uneven cobblestone, seemed darker now, as if the stones themselves absorbed the light. Weathered houses sagged with age, their clapboard walls gray and splitting, their windows like tired eyes that watched but never slept. The old church stood above them all, its steeple bent slightly by storms long past. From its bell tower, a single toll rang out at dusk — no rope pulled, no hand to swing the iron tongue. The note fell cold and hollow across the town, desperate, hungry, and wrong.

The silence afterward was not peace but presence. It was a silence that listened back, pressing heavy into every room. By day, footsteps on cobblestones were muffled, as if the air wished to hush the living. At night, even the owls refused to speak. The Norway pines hissed and whispered above, their needles shifting like words that nearly formed but never did.

The children dreamed first. Some woke sobbing, swearing that pale hands dragged them into black water. Others whispered of voices calling them by name, low and sweet, promising warmth in the cold. Mothers barred shutters, but no wood could keep out the sense of being watched.

Then came the sights.

On the rocks near the outer point, little Elsa saw Ruth Miller — long dead, shawl trailing in a phantom wind, streaming as if soaked through. Ruth lifted a hand, lips shaping hush.

A fisherman swore he saw Caleb Dorn standing upright in a skiff that wasn’t there. The glow of a lantern burned inside his chest, light pulsing faintly through his ribs.

And old Marta, her hair white as frost, gasped at her window to see Isaac, hat dripping lakewater, his hand lifted not in greeting but in summons.

Word spread like fire through dry grass. By dusk the tavern was full, though no one drank to joy. Anders worked the bar silently, his towel moving over glass after glass, his eyes never lifting from the wood. Behind him the mirror shone dim, streaked with age and candle smoke.

It was Nils who saw it first — Jonas’s reflection standing behind Anders, his hair clinging dark to his skull, water dripping steadily onto the unseen floor. His mouth opened and closed in slow, deliberate rhythm. Come. Come. Nils cried out, and when the others turned, they too saw it: not just Jonas, but flickering behind him the shifting faces of others taken, dressed in clothes of years long gone. A woman in a bonnet stained dark. A logger in wool trousers, suspenders soaked. A child in a sailor’s blouse, hand clutching a sodden toy horse. The images quivered like breath on glass, yet none stood in the real room.

Anders, pale but steady, reached up and covered the mirror with a bar towel. The tavern went deathly quiet.

“They’ve come to warn us,” one man muttered, clutching his aquavit like a shield.
“They’re fetches,” Henrik spat, slamming his glass. “Not warnings. Lures.”
“Then why our dead?” someone whispered.
“Because we’ll follow them,” another answered, his voice trembling.

On the edge of town, Ephraim pored over a crumbling ledger, a local record no one else had thought to read. His candle sputtered, wax running down like tears as he traced the faded script:

“The year the lantern entered the harbor, three walked from the water. We buried none, for they did not die again. They simply left — and others followed.”

He slammed the book shut, heart pounding. He knew now that the cycle was not new. It was returning.

Then came the sound. Not water — but knocking. A deep, hollow pounding against every door in White Harbor at once. Slow. Deliberate. Each strike reverberated through beams and floorboards, rattling crockery, shaking lamps.

Inside houses, mothers clutched their children close. Little Mikkel buried his face in his mother’s skirts, while Anna, older but trembling, whispered that she could hear someone calling her name through the knocking.

Yet when pressed, she said the voices sounded like many at once — voices she knew but could not name, promising warmth and home yet curdling her blood. Fathers held oil lamps toward the doors, knuckles white around the handles. In the tavern, Anders froze mid-pour, bottle tilting, brandy spilling across the counter as the knocking grew louder. Between each beat there was a pause — a silence so taut that every chest forgot to breathe. Then another knock, harder. And harder still. Until the silence that followed pressed more heavily than the sound.

And outside, along the shore, a procession gathered. Dripping figures stood ankle-deep in black water. Jonas among them, Caleb, Ruth, Isaac — and others from generations past. A soldier in a Union jacket bleached pale, buttons glinting faintly. A fisherman in oilskins stiff with salt, seaweed snarled at his boots. A girl in a lace Sunday dress, hem tangled with weeds, her hair plastered dark against her skull. They swayed slightly, as if rocked by a tide only they could feel.

The smell of rot drifted through the streets, mingling with brine and the faint sweetness of drowned flowers. The sound of steady dripping filled the night, each drop striking the sand like a clock counting down.

Beyond them, in the harbor’s mist, a shape loomed: a sailing ship of ghostly timber, its masts crooked, its sails both tattered and impossibly taut. Lanterns glowed faintly along its rails, though no flame burned. From its deck came the creak of wood and the groan of ropes — sounds that echoed without wind, sounds too far yet too close. A ship’s bell rang, a cold and distant peal that carried across the water, hollow and without source. Then silence, as if the lake itself had swallowed the sound.

Their mouths moved in unison, forming the same word, soundless yet heard in every heart:

Come.

And from the harbor mouth, the lantern burned brighter now, bone-white, breathing like a lung beneath the waves.
​
Above it all, from the bent steeple, the church bell tolled once more — a hollow, desperate note that rang out over the water, as if answering the drowned.

~Wylddane
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When the Lake Whispers, Part XI:  The Visitor...

9/2/2025

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"The Visitor" (Image & Text Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
“It is not always the living who knock upon our doors.”

The quiet that settled over White Harbor after Jonas’s disappearance was unlike any quiet the village had ever known. It was not peace but an uncertainty, a listening quiet, as though the air itself held its breath. It clung to the cobbled streets, invaded parlors and bedchambers, and pressed heavy on every soul. The Norway pines hissed above the town, restless with whispers that shifted like speech but carried no meaning. Along the shore, the waves stroked the stones with voices too soft to understand, yet they vibrated in the bones of those who listened. Everything looked the same — yet beneath, all was altered.

By day, villagers felt eyes on their backs though no one was near. Shadows slipped where there should have been none. At night, even the owls were silent, and those attuned to such things — the dreamers, the empaths — woke screaming from visions of drowning hands, of voices calling from black water. They shared their dreams reluctantly, for fear that speaking them aloud might give them life. Mothers tightened shutters, and fathers barred doors, but no barrier kept out the sense of being watched.

The tavern became the village’s refuge, though its wooden beams trembled with fear. The men gathered, voices low, telling and retelling the tales. The bartender, Anders — a broad-shouldered man with a furrowed brow and a gentleness behind his weathered eyes — polished glasses as he listened. He heard it all: the murmurs of patterns, of other times the lake had taken, of dreams that left men waking in sweat. To Anders, it felt as if the tavern itself had become a confessional of dread, each whispered story another log thrown on a growing fire.

It was in this tense stillness that the children saw him. Just before dusk, they lingered by the shore, daring one another to throw pebbles into the waves. Then came the silence — so sudden, so complete, that their laughter froze in their throats. A shape stood further down the shoreline. Jonas. Or what looked like him. His body dripped with water that never fell, his hair slicked flat though no rain had touched the town. His eyes gleamed too brightly in the half-light, and his smile stretched wide — too wide — as if pulled by invisible hands. His mouth worked slowly, silently, shaping words no ear could catch, words that seemed to ripple the air like icy currents, making the children’s bones ache.

They shrieked and fled, their cries breaking open the hush of the streets. That night, no mother could soothe her child; every home echoed with terror retold: Jonas’s smile, Jonas’s lips moving, Jonas’s gaze that seemed to reach into their very chests.

In the tavern, Anders poured brandy and aquavit, his hands steady though his patrons’ were not. The old men drank in fearful silence until Nils rasped, “It begins again.”
Henrik slammed his fist on the table. “You’re a fool if you think it ever ended.”

Another, pale and trembling, muttered, “Every generation. One taken, one returned — but not returned as they were.”

Anders listened, saying nothing, his silence a vessel for their fear.

On the edge of White Harbor, Ephraim bent over his tomes by candlelight. His old house of many rooms seemed to breathe with the pines around it, each window staring like an old eye into the blackness. He had sought answers, but the answers had been waiting for him: stories of fetches that mimicked the living, of revenants who came not to comfort but to lure. The cycle was not ending. It was deepening.

A knock came against his window. Slow. Deliberate. Not the tap of a branch, nor the rap of wind. Ephraim froze, breath caught in his chest. The candle guttered, shadows writhing along the shelves. Against the glass a face pressed forward — Jonas, pale and dripping, his smile distorted, mouth moving with unnatural slowness. This time, Ephraim could read the shape of a single word: Come.
​

The flame died, and the room filled with darkness thick as water.

~Wylddane
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The Lantern of September...

9/1/2025

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"The Lantern of September" (Image & Text Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
On the back porch, where summer still lingered in blossoms and faded paint, an old lantern stood guard. By day it was ordinary—a glass belly holding a stub of candle, forgotten among the chairs and flowerpots. But when September came, the lantern stirred.

Each evening, just as the sun slipped low and shadows stretched long, the flame lit itself. It did not blaze; it glowed gently, like a heart remembering. And in its glow, the air changed. The garden hummed with crickets, yes, but also with voices too soft to be ordinary sound. Echoes of summers past drifted near—laughter on porch swings, the hush of a first kiss, the rustle of leaves from long-ago winds.

If you sat in the wooden chair beside it and kept still, the lantern would show you something. A vision, perhaps—a memory that was yours, or one you had forgotten, or even one that belonged to someone before you. September’s gift was not to promise forever, but to remind: this moment matters, because all moments do.

On one such evening, a passerby stopped at the gate, drawn by the glow. They leaned close, and in the shimmer saw a vision of their grandmother’s kitchen—apple pies cooling, steam rising, laughter carrying like warm music. Tears welled, but so did a smile. When they turned back, the lantern stood quiet again, the flame gone out. Only the faint scent of apples remained.
​
The next morning, the porch was the same: flowers nodding, wood weathered, lantern still. Yet September had brushed its quiet magic across the night, reminding anyone who cared to notice that memory is never gone. It only waits for the light to show the way.

~Wylddane

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When the Lake Whispers, Part X:  The Lantern Below...

8/30/2025

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"Looking for Answers" (Image & Text Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
“A lantern still burns beneath the water, and those who follow it are never seen again.”   ~White Harbor tale

Two nights after Jonas Miller was claimed, the glow did not fade. If anything, it grew sharper, steadier, no longer a wavering shimmer but a pale beacon burning in the black water. By day, it was barely there — a trick of light if one didn’t look too long. But when evening fell, the whole village could see it: a lantern’s glow, far out from the docks, swaying gently as if carried by unseen hands.

The white pines hissed overhead, their long needles sighing in restless gusts. To the villagers, it sounded like whispers — the trees repeating secrets carried from the lake. The waves lapped softly at the rocks, but even they seemed to murmur, a hushed language of half-heard words and garbled calls, vibrating in the air and slipping into the bones.

The old men muttered in the tavern, fear palpable in their whiskey-laden breaths. Henrik spat into his glass. “Lanterns don’t burn in water. Not unless the lake wills it.”

Paulsen leaned forward. “It was the same when Caleb Dorn vanished. Lantern bobbing for days, daring someone to row out. His brother tried once. Came back with his hair white and his hands shaking. Never fished again.”

Lars shook his head. “It ain’t a lantern at all. It’s a lure. Same as a fish takes a hook. And we’re the fish.”
But on the edge of White Harbor, in a weathered house of many rooms crouched beneath the whispering pines, another pair of eyes watched the glow.

Ephraim Cutter had been a teacher once, a scholar in a town that barely knew what to do with such men. His windows were tall and old, peering like ancient eyes through the trees and down toward the lake. He had filled his house with books — some modern, some so old the bindings crumbled at a touch. The villagers said his library was larger than his pantry, and that he could go weeks without being seen.

Now Ephraim walked his rooms at night, a candle guttering in his hand, searching the shelves for what he already feared he would find. He read of drowned towns, of phantom fires, of waters that remembered the blood spilled into them. His fingers lingered on passages of lights beneath rivers in old Europe, of spirits who beckoned from the shore in Norse sagas.

But his thoughts always circled back to White Harbor. Its history. Its pattern. Its hunger.

He closed one cracked tome with a trembling hand and stared out his narrow window toward the swaying glow. The pine branches hissed against the glass like voices urging him to speak, to warn. But what warning could he give a people who already knew?

The lake had fed. The lantern burned.
​
And Ephraim Cutter, in his lonely house of many rooms, whispered to the empty air:
“It is not finished. It never is.”

~Wylddane
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When the Lake Whispers, Part IX:  The Empty Chair

8/27/2025

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"Watching, Waiting" (Image & Text Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
“The lake does not return what it takes.”   ~White Harbor proverb

The bells tolled at noon the next day, slow and hollow. A different kind of quiet had settled into White Harbor — not the peace of a calm morning, but a silence that invaded its streets and seeped beneath its doors. It was an uncertain quiet, heavy with what had happened and heavier still with what might come. Down at the shoreline, the waves whispered against the rocks, carrying garbled and jumbled secrets from the deep. Everything looked the same — the cottages, the pines, the docks — but beneath that sameness, nothing was quite the same. The lake had seen to that.

They called it a funeral, though all it truly was, was an acknowledgment of loss. Jonas Miller had been beloved — brash, broad-shouldered, quick with laughter. His boots had stood at the tavern door more times than anyone could count, his voice had rung out in the streets, his hands had helped mend nets, chop wood, haul sledges. Now those boots stood empty by his mother’s hearth. She sat beside them, staring at the cold leather, her face ashen. All morning she had kept vigil at the window, her eyes fixed on the docks where the lake had swallowed her son, as though sheer will might return him.

The children whispered as they huddled in twos and threes. “The lake wanted him,” one said. “Because he was strong.” Another shook his head, insisting, “No — it wanted him because he laughed at it.” Some repeated the superstition they had overheard the night before: once for warning, twice for naming, thrice for claiming. They repeated it like a skipping rhyme, their voices thin and uneasy, half-play, half-prayer. They understood enough to be afraid, but not enough to know of what.

The old men sat close in the tavern, the air thick with pipe smoke and the sharp bite of whiskey. Henrik’s hands shook as he lifted his glass, amber spilling over his knuckles. Paulsen stared into his drink as if it might hold an answer. Lars hunched low, his voice breaking the silence:
“We keep thinking it’ll stop. That it’ll take one and be done. But the lake don’t make promises. It feeds when it wants. And who’s to say it won’t want again tomorrow?”

Henrik muttered, “Every generation, it takes one. My father told me the same, and his father before him. Annie in the ’40s. Caleb in the ’60s. Now Jonas. The lake remembers.”

Paulsen’s voice was low, heavy: “Jonas’s bloodline was already marked. Isaac. Ruth. Now him. But what if bloodlines don’t matter? What if it just wants the living — any of us?”

The men drank deeply, but the whiskey gave no warmth. The tavern was full that night, every chair taken, but it seemed to all of them that something sat empty. Not of wood and nail, but of laughter, of youth, of hope.

The gouges on the dock remained, dark stains in the boards. No one dared scrub them clean. The rope lay where it had fallen, sodden and stiff. The lake had fed.
​
And yet, when darkness fell and the white pines hissed overhead, not one soul in White Harbor believed the hunger was truly satisfied.

~Wylddane

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When the Lake Whispers, Part VIII: The Taken...

8/24/2025

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"The Taken" (Image & Text Copyright Wylddane Productions, LLC)
“Once for warning, twice for naming, thrice for claiming.”   ~White Harbor superstition

The people of White Harbor rose uneasy. After the knocks on the docks the night before, no one had slept well. Doors had been bolted, lamps kept burning through the night, and yet the silence pressed heavier than dreams.

By morning, the whispers had begun: who had the lake named? Some said Matthew Carlson, the boy who had seen the hand. Others feared it would be one of the fishermen, whose nets and oars had long angered the deep. A few whispered of Henrik, Paulsen, or Lars—the old men who had spoken too much in the tavern, drawing the lake’s attention by daring to give its hunger a voice.

Even the birds were subdued. The gulls wheeled high above but made no sound. The songbirds in the pines had gone still. And the people remembered that the night before, even the owls had held their tongues, as though every living thing feared to break the hush the lake demanded.

The white pines hissed above the village as the day dragged on, their needles whispering like conspirators. The stillness grew heavy, so heavy it fatigued the soul. It was not rest, not peace, but the feeling of being stalked. As if the lake had slipped into the shape of a predator, circling, patient, deciding when to strike. Mothers kept children inside. Fishermen stood idle, staring out at the docks. Every knock, every silence replayed in their heads until it felt as if the whole town were prey.

Evening brought a stillness so complete it hurt. The gulls were gone. No ripple disturbed the bay. The glow beneath the water pulsed faintly, steady as breath.

Jonas Miller was at the docks. Only twenty, he had become the village’s favorite in recent years—broad-shouldered, quick to laugh, brash with his talk, but always ready with a hand to help. Children followed him, wide-eyed at his stories. Young women smiled when he passed. To the old, he was a reminder of what White Harbor could be if youth dared stay instead of drifting away.

But there was another truth, one older than Jonas himself. His grandfather, Isaac Miller, had been a fisherman in the hard years after the Great War—quiet, dependable, respected. Isaac was known for his patience on the water, waiting longer than others, drawing nets heavy when others came back light. In the spring of 1919, he never returned. His skiff was found drifting, nets cut to tatters, lantern still burning. Some whispered the lake favored his quiet strength, his ability to endure.

And before Isaac, there was Ruth Miller—Jonas’s great-aunt. She had been unlike others in her time: sharp-minded, unafraid to speak her thoughts when most women in White Harbor kept silent. People said she heard things others could not—the voices of wind and water, secrets whispered in the trees. One April morning she walked down to the shore and vanished. All they ever found was her shawl tangled in the rocks, damp with spray. Some swore she had been called, chosen for the uniqueness of her being.

So it was whispered in White Harbor: perhaps it was not merely blood the lake remembered, but the spark of something singular within that bloodline. Something the lake recognized, coveted, claimed.

And now it had come for Jonas.

He stooped to coil a rope, the lantern bobbing beside him. The glow beneath him brightened. The boards rattled under his boots. Then came the sound—three booming knocks, louder than before, shaking the pilings.

Jonas froze. He turned, eyes wide. The lantern swung wildly, spilling light across the planks. And then the hand rose—long, pale, dripping, deliberate. It seized his ankle.

Jonas screamed, a raw cry that tore through the village. He kicked wildly, boot heel striking sparks on the planks, but the grip only tightened. He threw himself flat, clawing at the dock with desperate hands. Fingernails split and bled as he raked against the wood, leaving red smears across the gray boards.

“Help me!” he shouted, voice breaking into sobs. “God help me!”

Doors flew open. Men and women ran toward the sound, but the lake was faster. Jonas’s body jerked, dragged inch by inch toward the edge. His hands caught a cleat, knuckles white with strain. For a heartbeat, it seemed he might hold. Then the cleat ripped free with a splintering crack, and Jonas’s cry became a choking gurgle as the glow swallowed him whole.

The lantern toppled, rolling across the boards. Its glass shattered, flame sputtering before hissing into the water. By the time the first villagers reached the dock, only bloodied gouges on the planks and the soaked rope remained.

The village erupted in panic. A woman screamed his name into the twilight. A child sobbed openly in the street. Doors slammed shut in a rush, curtains yanked closed as if to bar the glow from peering in. Jonas was gone, and every soul in White Harbor knew the lake had claimed him.

Inside the tavern, no one spoke for a long time. Finally, Henrik rasped:

“It has taken its prey.”

Paulsen’s hand shook as he reached for his glass. “Jonas was strong. If it can take him, it can take any of us.”

Lars muttered, his voice thin: “I told you—the lake don’t suffer mockery. He was bold, never feared the docks. And now he’s gone.”

Henrik leaned closer, his eyes pale and wet. “Mark me—the lake remembers bloodlines. It took Isaac. It took Ruth. And now Jonas. Maybe it’s their uniqueness, maybe their blood. Either way, the lake don’t let go once it has a family in its grasp.”
​

A silence deeper than grief settled over the room. Outside, beyond the windows, the water lay dark and patient, holding its silence as tightly as its secrets.

~Wylddane

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