In the Grasp of the Forgotten Thicket
A thick haze lingered. Sunlight barely bled through the thick tops of the trees, and you’d wonder if it was still day. Akira pushed past another tangled root and spoke without turning, “Ren, do you see it yet?” There was a pause then, the bird calls falling behind them as the woods got thick and heavy, like wool around akira’s mind.
Ren walked near, always nervous in these deep wild woods. She squeezed the silver-bound map that Ki had given them back at the border village. “If we’re on the right trail, we’ll find the shining fern by dusk.” Days mattered in the Lost Thicket, though neither really knew why. The map itself bent and shifted, the lines redrawing with every twelve paces. Is something guiding their way—or something leading them off it?
They weren’t alone. Small brown eyes tracked the pair from up in the old brush, faces vanishing in far-off leaves. Kiyo (the third, and smallest of them) gave the silent hand signal and they dropped flat to the ground. “You feel that?” he mouthed. His voice didn’t carry. Native whisperwood: no sound travels far in here. Even with all that fear, he smiled—he wasn’t one to run when it got odd out.
Every word felt too loud. Akira—once the playful one, quick with a joke—barely let his shoe touch earth without thought to who might hear. Still, as the minutes went on and some odd shimmering began among thorns ahead, he slipped back into his own head. Here was the odd promise: just past that wild bush, odds were the “shining fern” lay, but fewer than one in ten ever came back.
“Doesn’t this place feel like it’s moving?” asked Ren, just above a hush. She looked down. The moss spiraled under her foot, green veins curling where she pressed, then pulling away as if it could breathe on its own. One of the reasons locals had dubbed the heart of the Lost Thicket ‘Whisperground’. There are some woods that listen when you talk—or so the old ironwood radio forecast out post used to say, before it lost signal altogether.
All of them, in secret, were hoping the map would fix itself and point home. Instead, it showed a symbol now: a circle around some roots, only a stone’s throw on. “We have to trust each other here no matter what we find,” Akira told them. He’d sworn to Ki (as payment and penance) to find that shining fern. Supposedly, petals could undo lost days—or let you recall almost-forgotten faces lost by those who wandered too far.

No way was he stopping, even if when they pushed farther ahead—brambles locked an area tight like a trap. Kiyo reached out to feel past them, and something caught his sleeve. Not thorn, but thread. Like there’s been someone here recently…or something stands right beside them, spinning as they go. “Turn around slowly and look down—tell me if that’s a footpath,” Kiyo whispered. Sure enough, a single line at ground level: pressed, pulled, made with purpose.
But for every hint, there was a warning too: old signs, paint flickered on stones, marks worn from passing back, but always in odd patterns—three at a time, then nothing. Akira knew this was Ki’s design: past stories said only sparing signs guide the chosen all the way. “If the ground wants us here, it’d show, right?” Ren asked tight-lipped, eyes big and dark now. Nobody answered. Each brushed aside another low pine branch—no telling if it was the last before the fern, or the start of the real test.
That’s when a soft bell rang. No way there’s a village so deep—the notes left their chests aching anyway. The quiet wasn’t empty anymore. Not with each step heavier, color leaking out as everything ahead became washed in a white glow that pulsed with every move and every bit of hope and fear they had left. Who cares what waits? Do you think you’d rush ahead for hope alone—or back if you knew it was too late to turn?
Climax comes as they round the final twisted pine. The shining fern stands in throat-high light. Dozens of ghostly faces reflect off the silvery dew, among them a flicker of Ki’s. Over Ren’s shoulder, shapes like running animals—but hunched, pale, way quieter.
The episode cut ends with Akira, waiting, hand out and tears painting vertical paths in leaf-yellow dust on his face. “Ki, if you’re really here, show us the way home.” Behind him, strange bells swell, louder and closer than before. Will the Fern grant that hope—or darken their hearts?
