Salt wind knifes across the windowpane, bringing peat smoke and the iron tang of sea; the cottage's thatch sighs under the moon. Niamh presses her palm to chilled glass as a sound like distant wings threads the dark—an old dread stirring beyond the hedgerow. Tonight, something comes for the dying.
In the far-flung reaches of western Ireland, where the Atlantic wind sculpts stone and bog into strange, stoic beauty, lies Connemara—a land that seems to exist on the threshold of worlds. Long before roads were tamed by cobblestone or abbeys rose from heath and heather, its people told stories of what lurked in the gloaming. The mountains cut dark against the sky, and mist rolled in from the sea to coil around thatched cottages and ancient cairns.
At dusk, the air felt thick with old magic and memory; the boundary between living and dead seemed as thin as morning fog.
Those peat-fire tales warned of the Sluagh: restless spirits who rode the night like invisible flocks, descending upon the dying with the cold of birds’ wings. They did not lie content in graves or churchyards; they drifted between shadows, seeking entry into homes where breath grew shallow, hungry for warmth and the company of a living heart. For generations the Sluagh were both terror and explanation—blame for untimely deaths, sudden chills, or a fear that could not be named.
This is the story of Niamh, a healer’s daughter of the village of Clochán, who found bravery measured not by blade but by the willingness to face what could not be touched or reasoned with.
The Night Wind Carries Sorrow
It was an October like no other, the air sharp enough to cut through wool and bone. Niamh pressed her palm to the window’s warped glass and felt the chill seep into her skin. Outside, darkness leaned against the cottage, thick and suffocating. Her mother’s cough echoed in the small room, a reminder of how close death hovered. But it was not only illness that stalked Clochán—it was something older, something that scraped at the soul.
Each night, as dusk slid into midnight, the wind changed. It brought a keening sound, too faint at first to be more than memory: voices braided in the whistling moor grasses, like a choir half-remembered. The villagers whispered that the Sluagh were stirring again, restless and hungry. In the old tongue, her grandmother had called them the Host: a legion of souls denied rest, bound to each other by regret and bitterness. Once they might have been neighbors or kin; now they were shadows in flight, slipping through cracks in stone and wood to steal a soul from the edge of life.
Niamh tried to sleep, but fear clung to her like a damp blanket. She remembered her mother’s rules: never leave the west-facing window open, for that was the direction from which the Sluagh came; never speak ill of the dead, lest their spirits take offense. She closed her eyes and prayed the old prayers, tracing a circle of salt around her mother’s bed. Yet even as she murmured protection she wondered whether such small acts could hold back a tide of sorrow that swept nightly over Clochán.
The first death came quietly—a fisherman named Eoin, found cold in his bed, terror frozen on his face. A single black feather lay on his windowsill; the dogs would not go near his cottage for days. Then Mairead the midwife followed, her last breath drawn as the wind battered her door and something unseen scratched at the walls. The pattern was clear: the Sluagh always struck those nearest death, as if scenting weakness.
Fear burrowed into the village like a root, twisting every conversation. Windows shut tight. Children were forbidden to stray after sunset. Still, the darkness felt alive with wings and whispers.
By the third week, Niamh’s mother grew weaker. The village priest came to bless the house, scattering holy water and reciting psalms in Latin, but even his hands trembled. Niamh tended her mother with poultices and patience, mixing herbs her grandmother had sworn would ward off evil. The nights, however, only lengthened; the Sluagh’s presence grew heavier.
One night, as she sat by the hearth, she glimpsed a shadow slipping past the window—too tall for a fox, too thin for a man. A chill breathed through the room and the candle wavered and went out. In that brief darkness, voices layered upon each other like a dissonant choir. They whispered her mother’s name.
It was then Niamh understood the stories were true. The Sluagh were real, and they were coming for her mother. But how could one face shapes of shadow? Even the bravest swordsmen could not strike what had no substance.
She remembered an old tale—of a woman who had spoken directly to the Host and learned their sorrow. That woman had survived, though changed.
Niamh clung to that memory as her mother’s breath faltered, vowing she would try the path others had not dared.


















