Pocahontas and the River of Voices
The wind still speaks — but not all who listen survive.

After the settlers left, Pocahontas returned to the forest. The trees whispered her name, the river hummed the song she once followed. But the voice of the wind had changed.
Now, it spoke of things buried deep — bones beneath roots, ashes in the water, promises never kept.
Each night, she sat by the riverbank, asking the spirits to be still. But the current began to twist backward, whispering in many tongues — some not human.
The river showed her visions: empires rising, cities drowning, people forgetting. It begged her to speak for it again.
“I’m tired,” she said. “You never listen.”
“Then be our voice forever.”
When her people came searching, they found her footprints leading into the water — but none returning. The current shimmered with her hair’s dark hue, and the wind sang louder than ever.
Some say she became the river itself — not flowing to the sea, but watching, waiting, whispering to every ear that dares to listen too closely.



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