Chapter 959

Twelve wives circled, including Jude cradling Grace's hand and the bouquet of silver orchid blossoms. The watchers had grown, now visible as slender, smoke-threaded forms among the trees. Not hostile. Not worshipful. Present.

Jude began to chant, the old offering melody, this time layered with new words: names of men, of watchers, of beginnings, of resets. The wives joined and the air rang with shared resonance.

Petals flew. Glyphs glowed. Silver forms gathered silently. Roots shifted, leaves shivered. The watchers kneel before the silver-tree.

In that moment, Jude understood: the island wasn't a cage. It was a seedbed. They were heirs. And the watchers were its guardians, not gods to be worshiped but caretakers aiding remembrance.

They knelt before the silver-tree, offering hands on bark and soil. And for once, not just naming watchers, but naming each other as part of the island's memory.

"Remember us," Jude whispered into the wind.