You
are and will be slaves to your memories and your secrets.
Thus
it was burned into the door of the shaman’s dacha.
A warning to those who seek to unravel the truth weighing upon
their souls, or a reminder of the limits imposed by mortality?
Shadows. Lights. Glimmers. The forest is always restless: vibrant,
extreme, and threatening. It opens only to the brave.
The full moon rose over Kalmanka with slow deliberation, as if
ascending from the very entrails of the earth rather than from the
horizon. It was a colossal moon, golden at first, then white, so
sharp that each crater looked like an open wound in the skin of the
sky. That night was no ordinary full moon: it coincided with the
spring solstice, when—so the elders said—the visible and
invisible worlds touched like two surfaces of water vibrating in
unison.
The entire taiga seemed to hold its breath.
The lake reflected the lunar disk so perfectly that it seemed
there were two skies: one above, one below, both equally infinite.
Between them, Mariya’s dacha glowed like a tiny heart in the middle
of the darkness.
As Ksenia approached, she felt that something recognized her.
It was not an emotional sensation. It was physical. As if every
particle of air touched her with unsettling familiarity, as though
she had returned to a place where she had already been… but in
another life.
Sasha, by contrast, sensed danger.
The forest did not feel welcoming to him, but watchful. The
shadows between the trunks were too dense, too deep, as if they were
not mere absence of light but lurking presences. The silence felt
unnatural: no night bird, no cracking branch, no whisper of wind.
Only his breathing.
Only the pounding of his heart, too loud.
Mariya waited for them outside, motionless, facing the moon as if
listening to something descending from it.
Her figure seemed taller, thinner, almost inhuman under that
silvery clarity. The dark cloak embroidered with red and ochre
threads absorbed the light instead of reflecting it. In her hands she
held a wooden bowl from which rose a whitish smoke that did not
disperse but descended toward the floor like living mist.
—You have arrived when the world opens —she said without
looking at them—. Tonight, the earth remembers.
They entered.
The dacha had been transformed into a primitive sanctuary.
The floor was covered with fresh birch branches and dried petals
of wildflowers. The scent was penetrating: resin, sap, damp earth,
and something metallic, almost like ancient blood. In the center
stretched a large circle traced with ash and bone dust, crossed by
lines that formed archaic symbols impossible to interpret.
Four small fires burned in stone vessels, yet their flames did not
flicker: they rose straight upward, as if they did not belong to the
air of that room.
On a low table lay objects of power: tiny skulls, blackened
feathers, translucent stones, fragments of corroded metal, amulets
carved with intertwined animal and human forms.
—Take off your shoes —Mariya ordered.
The contact with the floor was a shock. It was not simply cold: it
vibrated. A dull pulsation rose from the earth into the soles of
their feet, as if beneath the dacha a gigantic buried heart was
beating.
Stolen content warning: this content belongs on Royal Road. Report any occurrences.
Mariya marked their foreheads with damp ash.
The touch burned.
—So that your eyes may see those who are no longer alive —she
whispered.
She lit a dark resin. The smoke invaded the room with an almost
liquid density. Ksenia felt it enter her lungs, her blood, her
memory. Each inhalation brought fleeting images: unknown hands,
nameless faces, landscapes she had never seen and yet recognized with
devastating nostalgia.
The drum began to sound.
A deep heartbeat. Ancient. Relentless.
It did not mark a human rhythm. It was irregular, like the pulse
of something wild, something never domesticated. With each strike,
the air compressed and expanded, as if the room itself were
breathing.
Mariya sang.
Her voice rose from an impossible depth, rough and cavernous,
laden with sounds that belonged to no living language. At times it
sounded like a lament, at others a growl, at others a lullaby warped
by centuries of pain.
The smoke began to spin.
The flames leaned toward the
center.
The circle came alive.
Ksenia first felt heat at the base of her spine… then an
unbearable cold that climbed up her back like a hand of ice. Her
muscles tensed. Her fingers curled. Something inside her was being
opened without permission.
Then the world vanished.
An endless steppe beneath a sky set ablaze by sunset. The wind
dragged dust and the smell of horses. Thousands of hooves struck the
ground like continuous thunder. Dark banners waved, their symbols
seeming to move like living creatures.
And there she was.
Not Ksenia.
Another.
A young woman of royal bearing, with heavy black braids like
sleeping serpents and a simple crown of dull gold. Her face was
beautiful, but not delicate: it was the face of someone accustomed to
being obeyed. Her eyes—black, deep—held immense sorrow and
unbreakable resolve.
—Sora… —Ksenia whispered, her throat torn by an emotion she
did not understand.
The name pierced her chest like a spear… and at the same time
filled it with unbearable tenderness, with a love so ancient that it
hurt.
The vision spun.
A warrior on horseback emerged from the storm of dust. Tall,
imposing, clad in dark furs and metal plates. His gaze was fierce,
yet anchored to something invisible, as if he obeyed a force greater
than his own will.
A blue amulet gleamed on his chest.
The same one.
Chinggis Yud.
When his eyes met Sora’s, time stopped. There was no smile. No
gesture at all. Only absolute recognition. As if two halves separated
for centuries suddenly fit together in a single instant.
Love… and doom.
The drum became frantic.
Ksenia screamed, arching, pierced by a surge of pain and ecstasy
at once. It was too much. Too intense for a human body.
Sasha tried to help her.
He could not move.
Something held him from within, as if his own history were
claiming him.
The vision dragged him away.
Darkness. Snow. Wind that cut the skin like tiny blades.
A
lost forest.
He walked beside another man in a military uniform. Heavy
breathing. Confusion. The contained panic of those who know they are
completely alone.
—We’re lost… —the companion said.
Sasha felt the tension. The suspicion. That thick silence that
precedes violence.
And then…
The shove.
Brutal. Deliberate. Without hesitation.
The ground vanished beneath his feet. The fall into a white void.
The instant certainty of betrayal.
He looked up.
The colleague’s face appeared through the blizzard. There was no
hatred. Only calculation. Necessity. As if Sasha were an obstacle
that had to disappear for the other to survive.
The snow devoured him.
Absolute cold penetrated his soul.
Sasha screamed inside the dacha, collapsing to his knees, gasping
as if he had truly emerged from an icy grave.
Ksenia tried to reach him, but an invisible barrier stopped her,
vibrating like a membrane of air.
Mariya struck the drum with savage fury.
—The same story! —she cried with a voice that seemed to come
from multiple throats—. Love sealed in blood! Betrayal! Death!
Rebirth!
The shadows stretched toward them like black roots.
—Princess Sora… Prince Chinggis Yud… united beyond death.
Separated again and again by the violence of men. Your spirits seek
each other… and so do your enemies.
The drum fell to the ground with a dry blow.
All the fires
went out at the same time.
The darkness was total… for an eternal second.
Then the moon flooded the room with its cold, spectral light.
Mariya was hunched over, suddenly aged, breathing with difficulty.
—Now you know —she whispered—. You did not meet by chance.
You have found each other again.
Ksenia finally managed to embrace Sasha. His skin was icy, but his
heart pounded with a wild, almost violent force, as if he had
returned from a place where he should not have survived.
They both trembled.
Not from cold.
From the magnitude of
what they had just touched.
Outside, the moon reached its highest point.
The forest
remained silent.
But it was no longer the silence of waiting.
It was the
reverent silence of something very ancient that has been invoked…
and has answered.

