Tainted Synthesis: The Chant Of Vesselwood
Intro
Vesselwood creaks. Fog coils over a small town lost to memory, hip-deep in buckled roots. It’s an out-of-the-way place: dull woods, five shops on Main, one faded game arcade. Some folks still hang dreams on the forest’s soothing quiet—others cross themselves before sundown. It won’t save them.
Yuma Tado stands at the edge where the moss rips down into secret dark. He once thought Vesselwood would be home. Survive high school, move away—typical stuff. But after the rain last night, his right palm is covered in rough, splinter-bark and fast-growing, too-dark veins snaking up like roots around his arm. It hasn’t stopped since. He hides it in his sleeve. What would you do in his place?
First Signs
Yuma meets Kiri—old best friend, amateur with rules, deep red headphones clamped loose on her neck. Her voice drops low when she asks, “That mark. Did you feel it last night too?” She turns her wrist: thin, silvery fibers press under her skin, twitching to match her pulse.
This isn’t some infection you can treat. Yuma wants to kid himself, but Denji from school throws up black sap in homeroom. A teacher—Miss Shima—runs out with her hands to her cheeks, fingers folding like dead leaves as she sheds small cyclones of dry skin.
By lunch, no adult goes near the woods. Can you keep eating a sandwich when you think green-black moss grows in your lungs? 
The Quickening
Evenings turn wrong. As streetlights crackle, Yuma’s hand pulps around the bones—patches where burls knot and gnarls lump together in stubby lumps. His nails go yellow. Deeper cracks appear in his voice; he rasp-speaks at dinner then runs for the bathroom.
Kiri pounds on the door, ears sharp for any change. She whispers, “You can’t cut it off. It’s in us.” Someone unseen rakes slow claws down the window. Nobody sleeps. They cover the windows with torn band posters.
Want a real horror detail? One girl’s lips open and blooming rose thorns squirm behind her eyes, thinking. What’s the best story you’ve heard about there being no help on the way?
The Gathering, And The Choice
Twenty kids sneak to Vesselwood’s heart. Roots creep around their legs but don’t bind; the forest almost drinks them in. Stranded in yellow torchlight, Yuma finds an old tourist sign split wide: “No Entry: This Place Belongs To Us.” Scrawled gashes in new wood under the old. A deeper path, one not marked on any town map, calls.
They approach the well—stumps bent, petals shaking along the water’s black line. Kiri grips his working hand. “We wake it—maybe it leaves us alone. Or we run and it finds us anyway.” Denji gasps out thick spores, coughing deep into his lungs; his eyes bleed mossy filaments. One boy falls, body warping into crawling mound. It’s loose, wrong, so harsh.
What do they owe the town that gave them no explanations?
Confronting The Heart
Inside the root-cave under the black spring, Yuma staggers and nearly slips. Planks hang broken, carved with old names—maybe the past trying to warn them. On the ceiling, veins pulse, feeding into chittering knots of wood-bone gristle and fleshy briars. The group lights torches they barely hold; someone is afraid they’ll catch fire from the sweat on their own hands.
A massive root-heart pulses a meter from their faces. Sounds burst out: moans, cries, almost-gentic songs. Limbs stretch down wet into the pool—it’s feeding. “It needs to choose,” Kiri mutters, jaw locked, eyes filmed thick. Did the grownups know? Should anybody have been forced to carry this burden?
The thing creaks out, wreath-limbs waving, picking at each one and prying at weak points beneath cheeks, pit and ribs.
To buy time, Yuma steps forward. His own marks burn cold—in this place he’s more root than skin. “What do you want from us?” he shouts, voice jagging to wood-slap.
It answers—sort of. With glassy vision the group sees flashes: generations cursed if they leave roots hidden, if wounds left unclosed.
Someone must join the heart so the rest leave free.
Race Against Ruin
Kiri screams defiance. Yuma feels the slow swelling behind his ribs—growth bursting up his esophagus, warping all human sound. He reaches out—not in surrender, but bargaining. “Let everyone go, take just me.” But it drags Kiri too; twin piebald roots sprout, pulling and fusing arms, twining her spirit through him in weird embrace.
Denji staggers back, slick with sap. The other teens try to edge away, clogging the narrow cave outlet. Do you think you’d stay—or would you try to flee? Yuma looks at Kiri—goodbye mixed with hard relief. The town outside starts to thrum, old oaks bending closer as if to hear a new vote sung loud in their marrow.

Cliffhanger: The Changing
Fingers meld to twig and sinew. Eyes bloom wild as hybrid—half-human, half-sapling—refusing to break clean. Smoke churns as rotten bark and nail shatter, a thick blanket lowering across mouth and crown.
Outside, parents hold hands in dull circles around the perimeter, chanting to drown sap-song, but the sound seeps up through the ground. Above roots, things tear new holes into the surface—silent calls for help not meant for any God.
The final shot: Yuma’s eye splits and knots, grafting bright green pain and peace. For the first time in years, he smiles—a thistle-grin wide for anyone watching. Would you trust roots deeper than bones to release you if you loved your town?

Coda (Next Time Tease)
Crickets strike into static. One figure—all flesh, no bark—sharts awake by the rotted shrine, eyes alive with sap and knowledge. The woods are fleeing the heart. Are you ready for episode two?
