If
fate had pushed them to flee together, and somehow led them to that
remote village where springs were cool and early, perhaps it was no
coincidence.
The magical taiga forest, where dense pinewoods alternated with
open clearings of damp meadows and small emerald marshes born from
the thaw, surrounded it like a wreath of wild green. Fresh grass
spread across the bare patches of land still marked by recent snow,
and the air carried the clean scent of wet earth and awakened sap.
Her aunt was waiting in the old wooden dacha that had once been
her home as well. The roof leaned just as it always had, moss
clinging to its corners, and the chimney exhaled a thin ribbon of
blue smoke that vanished into the pale sky. Her face was red and
weathered by wind and cold—the face of someone who had lived long
outdoors in harsh conditions.
— You look beautiful! — she greeted her, kissing her and
holding her tightly. — If only your mother could see you…
— I’m sure she’s watching us from somewhere — Ksenia
replied, offering a faint smile that did not quite reach her eyes.
The woman then turned to Sasha with open curiosity.
— And… this handsome young man, who is he?
Ksenia hesitated for only a second.
— He’s… a friend.
— He must be a very good friend — her aunt added with a
knowing smile — because you’ve never brought anyone to the
village before.
The words lingered in the air like stove smoke. And then the
feeling struck her—the sense that time had stopped in Kalmanka,
that the outside world had no jurisdiction there. As she crossed the
threshold, the floor creaked beneath her boots, and every room
returned a fragment of her childhood: the window from which she had
watched storms roll across the lake, the black iron stove where her
mother warmed beet soup, the old wardrobe scented with resin.
She recognized every corner, but she also felt what was missing:
dreams that had never come true, promises life had diverted onto
other paths—and her mother.
And now she was there. She wasn’t entirely sure why. Beside
someone she barely knew… and yet she felt that fate had woven
something silent between them. Everything was so strange and…
wonderful?
— I’ve come to see Mariya — she finally said, turning back
to her aunt.
Her aunt set the kettle down on the table.
— She still lives in the dacha deep in the forest. Though hardly
anyone goes near her anymore. You know how she is.
— Do you think she’ll remember me?
— She will. Mariya doesn’t forget. Not people… nor what the
forest whispers about them.
Sasha sat at the kitchen table and accepted a cup of strong, thick
coffee served in a mismatched mug. From there he observed the room:
hand-embroidered curtains, an old clock marking the seconds with
infinite patience, the yellowed photograph of Ksenia’s mother
hanging beside the door. And her father?
Unlawfully taken from Royal Road, this story should be reported if seen on Amazon.
Through the window, the lake was visible. The ice had almost
completely withdrawn, leaving floating plates that brushed softly
against one another. The water was a deep emerald green, reflecting
the young birches just beginning to bud.
— It’s beautiful — Sasha murmured.
Ksenia watched him for a few seconds. Was he as good as he seemed?
Perhaps he, too, sensed something different there—an ancient
stillness, a promise.
The wind stirred the branches, and for a moment the forest seemed
to lean toward the house, as if listening.
Mariya. The shaman. The woman who, they said, spoke with the free
spirits of the taiga.
A slight shiver ran through Ksenia. She knew that if she crossed
the path leading to that hidden dacha among the pines, nothing would
ever be exactly the same again.
And for the first time in a long while, she was not sure she
feared it.
The path to Mariya’s dacha cut into the forest like an old scar.
It was not visible to just anyone; one had to know it—remember
where the ground grew softer, where a birch leaned over the peat,
where the roots formed a kind of natural step. Ksenia walked without
thinking, as if her feet obeyed a memory older than her own will.
The valley opened below, cradled between gentle hills covered in
pine and larch. There, the elements were not abstractions. They were
presences.
The earth breathed beneath the thaw—dark, fertile, heavy with
the thick scent of returning life. Each step pressed her boots
slightly into the warm mud, as if the ground wished to hold them, to
recognize them. That soil kept bones, seeds, promises. It kept names.
Water descended in clear threads from the slopes, feeding the lake
that beat at the center of the valley like an ancient heart. Cracked
ice floated in irregular sheets, and the sound of breaking water
carried something ceremonial in it, like a distant drum marking the
passage of time.
The air was cold and clean, filled with resin and moisture. It
moved among the trees with almost conscious intention. It was not
merely wind—it was breath. It carried whispers indistinguishable
yet vibrating against the skin. Sasha felt it at the nape of his
neck, as though someone had spoken his name without sound.
And fire… fire waited in Mariya’s dacha.
The house stood at the forest’s edge beside a small inlet of the
lake. More humble than her aunt’s, older. The logs, blackened by
winters, seemed to have absorbed centuries of smoke. From the chimney
rose a straight column that did not scatter, despite the wind.
Mariya stood at the door when they arrived.
She did not seem surprised.
Her graying hair fell loose over a dark shawl embroidered with red
and ochre threads. Around her neck hung a small carved piece of
bone—perhaps elk, perhaps older still. Her eyes did not merely
look. They pierced.
— You have returned.
It was not a question.
Ksenia felt something settle inside her chest, like a piece
sliding perfectly back into place.
— I have.
Mariya stepped aside to let them enter. Inside, fire burned in a
low iron stove. It was not merely a domestic fire; it had been
arranged with intention. Four stones surrounded its base, aligned
with the cardinal points. On a wooden table rested bowls of lake
water, damp earth, feathers, and a lit candle whose flame remained
steady.
— This valley does not forget its own — Mariya said as she
closed the door. — Here, the ancestors walk with the thaw.
Sasha exchanged a glance with Ksenia but said nothing. There was a
density in the room that commanded respect.
Mariya took a handful of earth and placed it in Ksenia’s hands.
— Your mother ran barefoot on this soil. Her mother too. And
before them, other women whose names you do not know, yet whose blood
you carry. When you step on this ground, you do not walk alone.
Then she guided her toward the bowl of water.
— Look.
The reflection trembled slightly, as if breathing. For a moment,
Ksenia thought she saw another outline behind her own face—a
superimposed feminine shadow.
The air stirred, and the flame bent toward them.
— The elements are memory — Mariya continued in a low voice. —
Earth keeps. Water remembers. Air carries. Fire transforms. When one
of our own is lost, the valley calls them. And if they return, they
must decide whether to listen.
A deep shiver passed through Ksenia. It was not fear. It was
recognition.
Outside, the lake cracked as a great sheet of ice broke apart. The
sound echoed through the valley like something ancient—almost
human.
Mariya lifted her gaze.
— Your ancestors know you have come. Now you must know why.
The silence that followed was not empty. It was absolute. As if
the entire valley awaited her answer.
Some returns are not coincidence.
And when the valley calls your name, ignoring it may no longer be an option.

