The forest just outside of Gridania was not difficult to navigate. It wasn't heavily logged, gods forfend, like some wooded regions near towns or cities. The elementals wouldn't have stood for that- but at the same time, thanks to the respect afforded them, the trees of the Black Shroud were less dense there, as a respect paid to the Hearers and whoever would listen to them. It was somewhere where winding dirt roads still cut through the moss and fallen leaves, where the dappled sunlight easily counterbalanced the cool green shade and where the ground was unbroken by the Calamity.
It sent a tingle of worry down Ahlek'zi's spine, fluffing out the fur on his tail as though he was actually in physical danger. That wouldn't do at all. His path had led him out of Gridania's gates and quickly off the main road, through scrubby undergrowth and unruly saplings, and though he was fairly certain nobody could see him, he still felt a crawling guilt for showing outward signs of worry.
The fact that he was traveling through so much underbrush in a place where none could see him was just as worrisome, however. A few years ago, there was a path here. Now there was a faint track where the plants were younger than the surrounding ones, cutting through the undergrowth that made it nigh-impossible for even one as small as Ahlek'zi to navigate. He'd thought to carry a botanist's axe, but without proper clearance and understanding of the area's environment, it would be unwise to hack away at young shrubbery with wild abandon. This place was being reclaimed by the forest- that wasn't something to get upset over. It was the cycle of nature.
It made Ahlek'zi feel ill.
Up ahead, he could see an area where the plants didn't yet grow above head level, not quite a clearing but close enough to count. This was, by all accounts, his destination. Disregarding the tangle of branches and leaves between point a and point b, the boy rushed ahead, pushing foliage out of his way and stumbling over unseen obstacles in amongst the small shoots already carpeting the former path. Twigs snagged on his robe and broke off, but he no longer cared- nervous energy coursed through his veins, heating him up like a fever, and he finally burst through the bushes to the other side.
There was a tree here- not an impressive tree, not huge like the Guardian or imbued with magical significance like the hedgetrees. It was large and old, and very centrally located, but by all accounts it was an ordinary sort of tree. No markings or decorations, nothing at all to differentiate it from any other similar elm. The ground around it was unsurprisingly covered in leaf litter, fungus, and small plants, whichever could grow in the spotty sunlight that made it through the canopy above- and in the space of five years.
Ahlek'zi bent over to catch his breath, and looked around more thoroughly, not just at the plants. There were houses here. Small wooden houses, not unlike the ones being constructed in the Lavender Beds, but abandoned, faded and rotting. There were no overt signs of damage to any of them, nor old bloodstains. Not a single skeleton or cast-off weapon. No signs of Voidsent, Ixal, or even the greenwrath. Just a collection of six little houses, silent and empty, wearing moss and young plants like a funeral shroud. There was no sound, no movement here, save for the light summer breeze through the leaves above and the distant calls of birds- certainly nothing approaching a voice.
When the Calamity came, not all was destroyed with a bang, all fire and bloodshed and falling rock. This destruction was the gangrene that set in after the wound- families, businesses, and communities falling apart with deaths and loss of capacity to be self-sustaining. And certainly, some things that had started to fester deserved nothing worse than a merciful death, so that nature could reclaim what was hers in the end.
But the sight of the forest taking back this place only brought a dull ache to Ahlek'zi's chest, and he found himself sitting down amongst the ferns, staring at nothing in particular until the ache would leave him.