Fantasy
published

The Keep of Lost Days

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A city keeps peace by removing difficult memories into carved hollows tended by keepers. An apprentice stonekeeper uncovers a shard that restores a fragment of her past and sparks a dangerous experiment: returning memories to their owners. The act forces a public confrontation with the Vault's purpose, the man who maintained it, and the costs of enforced forgetting as a city relearns how to hold what it once hid. The atmosphere is taut and intimate, following a restless heroine as she navigates secrecy, public reckoning, and the slow work of repair.

memory
vault
identity
restitution
fantasy

Tending the Hollow

Chapter 1Page 1 of 26

Story Content

Asha had learned the Vault by the weight of its silences. It did not sit empty at all; it was full of small, contained noises, low as winter sap and sweet as an old bell. The hollows, carved from riverstone and set into iron racks like a bone library, kept themselves quiet by degrees and ritual. Each morning she walked the aisles with a cloth and a soft-bristled brush, listening for the places that hummed with unfinished things. Garr taught her to breathe at the threshold, to let the room draw a certain length of breath and let it go before she touched a stone. Keepers called it tuning; to Asha it had become a kind of holy patience. If she hurried, the hollows shivered. If she lingered too long, some memory might remember itself enough to slip a note of song through the seams and scatter through the Vault on a current no one intended. She liked the measured danger of the work. It made each day precise.

The Vault smelled of cold lime mortar, wet leather, and a faint mineral sweetness that hinted at whatever the stones had once been made to hold. Names were cut into tabs of bronze bolted above shells—single words, sometimes two, sometimes none. Some hollows were neat, sealed and labeled with dates, others bled a thin residue of color like old wine. Asha moved slowly, hands steady. Garr's shadow fell across the racks like long punctuation; he walked behind her with the built gravity of a man used to making final judgments. He never praised. He rarely scolded. When he spoke it was to remind them that the Vault existed to preserve the city, and that preservation had teeth.

That day he gave her a hollow that had been boxed away for years, its bronze tab a little greened at the edges. It had been misfiled, he said—older hands, older storms—and he wanted her to unseal its hairline and restitch its breath with a fresh setting. Asha set the hollow on the table and listened. The stone answered faintly, a slow, small murmur like a child counting under its sheet. The label bore a single syllable she did not recognize, and yet when she traced it with the pad of her thumb a small, private shiver went down her spine, the kind that asked a question she did not yet know how to name. She told herself that was not uncommon; after months in the Vault names made private claims on the keepers. Garr watched with his hands clasped behind him, an old posture of patience.

Her first stroke with the soft brush loosened a thin flake along a hairline crack. The hollow sighed. It was the kind of sound that could have been the settling of weather or the giving of a long held breath. Asha's fingers slowed. She felt the old rules come whispering back—the careful wedge of wood to pry without breaking, the small steaming cloth to ease the seam, the single iron hook used only on hollows that had been closed in haste. She worked with the deliberation of someone stitching a wound back together, and for a moment she took comfort in the ritual alone, in the geometry of the work. In the Vault you were always doing two things at once: tending a thing and listening to how it wanted to be kept.

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