Silent Hope -

And Kaelen, the Listener, smiled. Not because the world was safe. But because hope, once silent, had finally found its voice.

She nodded. “Not a scream. Not a crash. A sound of offering . A lullaby his daughter used to hum. If he hears it and remembers love before loss, the silence will break. But whoever sings it must walk into his throne of mud, alone, and keep singing even as the dark pulls at their feet.”

In the drowned village of Mirefen, the fog never lifted. It coiled between the skeletal trees and clung to the shattered bell tower like a shroud. For seven years, the people had survived on silence—no loud voices, no barking dogs, no ringing of metal on stone. Sound, they whispered, woke the Drowned King.

“Who are you?” he breathed.

It was simple—three falling notes, like rain on a tin roof, then a rise, like a breath caught in wonder. The woman hummed it once. Kaelen closed his eyes and let it settle in his chest, next to the small, quiet thing he had protected for seven years: the memory of his mother laughing.

Kaelen understood before she finished. “You need someone to make a sound he cannot swallow.”

The king’s throne was a mire of sunken houses and half-eaten faces pressed against the glass of memory. The mud tugged at Kaelen’s ankles, then his knees, whispering in a thousand wet mouths: You are alone. You are forgotten. Make no sound. Silent Hope

Kaelen remembered the day the king rose. He had been seven, hiding in the root cellar as the river surged backward, as the earth groaned, and as the thing that had once been the village lord crawled from the mud with eyes like swallowed moons. The Drowned King did not speak. He did not rage. He simply listened . And wherever sound grew too bold—a child’s laugh, a smith’s hammer, a festival drum—the mud came alive. It would rise in silent waves and pull the noisy ones down into the dark.

Kaelen descended the oak without a rustle and approached her across the mud-cracked square. When he was close enough to see the pale map of veins on her hands, she smiled.

He walked into the mud at midnight.

Kaelen opened his mouth.

“He’s waiting for a voice he can’t hear because it hasn’t been born yet,” the woman said. “But there is another way.”