The Veil That Chose
A twin survived the crossing. The other became a flower in the field of the forgotten

Sunlight gilded the frost like scattered emeralds,
morning pretending innocence.
A lone bird stitched sound into the silence
while winter’s last breath
hung white and waiting.
Beyond the mist—
rot.
Iron and decay.
The truth of the field.
Carys walked toward it
in mud-streaked boots,
balaclava tight against the taste of death,
yellow gloves bright as warning.
Before the veil, she knelt—
snapping purple trumpets from the frozen grass,
small hymns cupped in wicker and gingham.
The windmill turned lazily behind her.
Chimneys promised bread and warmth.
Somewhere, life continued.
She stepped through.
Fire needled her skin—
then ice—
and she was among them.
Weeks-old mounds.
Months.
Years.
Crows feasting without ceremony.
Black blood swallowing her steps.
At each fresh stillness
she knelt.
Closed green eyes.
Snipped a lock of hair.
Freed rings from stiff fingers,
silver from torn lobes—
tokens for the living,
proof for the town.
One flower folded into folded hands.
A fragile mercy
in a brutal arithmetic.
Body by body
she worked,
methodical as winter.
When the basket brimmed
and only one bloom remained,
a twig cracked.
A red-haired boy—
thin as a question—
watched from a withered tree.
His green eyes mirrored the first woman’s.
He nodded.
So did she.
At the field’s heart
lay the oldest mound.
Once, she had called it sister.
Blue eyes long claimed by crows.
Blonde turned black with ruin.
Teagan.
Twin.
The veil had chosen.
It let one pass.
It kept the other.
Carys placed the final flower
upon a grave of withered purple,
then stepped back through fire and frost.
She did not look behind her.
But the boy did—
keeping vigil
over the Field of the Fallen.
About the Creator
Luna Vani
I gather broken pieces and turn them into light


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