A frost-stitched wind cut through the pines as moonlight spilled over moss and peat, carrying the faint, metallic tang of winter. Somewhere beyond the cottage, a child’s cry—thin and urgent—sliced the night, announcing that the forest still kept accounts of promises unpaid and waking a ledger of old wrongs.
I. The Cry in the Night
Night in Västerbotten comes quickly in autumn. The days shrink until they are little more than blue-tinged sighs between dusk and darkness. Ingrid sat by the window, her hands twisting a ragged handkerchief. Her cottage, neat and sturdy, was quiet—too quiet since she’d buried her baby a month before.
The child’s cradle stood in the corner, untouched, the little knitted blanket folded with care that broke her heart anew each morning. Her husband, Anders, worked later in the woods these days, his grief driving him to long hours with axe and saw. Their words had dwindled to grunts and sighs. Ingrid’s own mother had tried to comfort her, bringing soup and admonitions to pray, but the emptiness in Ingrid’s arms was a wound that no words could heal.
Outside, the wind rattled the shutters and scattered pine needles across the garden. Ingrid shivered, standing to feed the fire, when she heard it—a cry, thin as spider silk but unmistakable. It rose above the wind, then faded as if swallowed by the trees.
Her blood ran cold; the sound threaded through her like glass. The old stories returned to her mind: the Myling, small ghosts with voices like lost birds, children denied baptism who wander until carried to consecrated ground. She hurried to the door, heart pounding.
The village lay hushed beneath the northern stars. The moon was bright, making each branch and stone a sharp black shadow. The lake beyond the fields steamed, its surface ghostly under the sky. Ingrid wrapped her shawl tight and stepped out, trying to convince herself it was only a fox or a nightjar. But the cry had pierced her in a way she couldn’t ignore.
With trembling steps, she walked to the edge of the forest. The trees seemed to lean in, trunks crowding as if to bar her path. Again came the cry—closer now, plaintive and urgent. She called out, her voice breaking.
“Inga? Is that you, little one?â€
Silence answered. Then—a rustle, a flash of white behind a stump. She felt the cold seep through her shoes and up her legs.
Her mind warred between terror and longing; every tale she’d ever heard of the Myling pressed against her reason. The priest had warned them: unbaptized children could not rest. Ingrid’s daughter, born too soon, had never been christened. The thought twisted inside her.
She pressed deeper into the woods, guided by the moon and the memory of her child’s tiny hands. The cry came again, and this time it was unmistakably a child’s voice—her child’s, she was certain. Branches caught at her shawl, roots tangled her steps. She stumbled, weeping, but pressed on.
At the heart of the thicket, she found a clearing where the ground sloped down to a hollow choked with moss and fallen leaves. There, in the cold blue glow, stood a figure—small, thin, with hair like flax and eyes that seemed to shine.
“Inga?†she whispered.
The child looked up. For a moment, Ingrid saw only her daughter—perfect, alive, and smiling. Then the image wavered; the child’s skin was too pale, her mouth too still.
The air grew colder. Ingrid sank to her knees, arms open. The Myling stared, silent now, then raised one tiny hand and pointed to the earth at her feet.
A chill realization crept over Ingrid. The stories were true: Mylings sought only one thing—a proper resting place, a burial in hallowed ground. Tears streaked down her face. She’d been too ill after the birth, too weak to walk to the churchyard.
Anders had buried the baby at the forest’s edge instead, promising to move her later. But later had never come. The Myling’s gaze bored into Ingrid. Shame and love warred in her heart.
She gathered the small figure in her arms, cold as winter water. “I’ll carry you,†she whispered, voice shaking. “I promise.â€


















