Manawydan stood in the chill mist, listening as sound thinned to nothing—something had slipped away from Dyfed and taken its voice with it. Across the mossy hills and deep forests of medieval Wales, the border between the known world and the strange was thin as fog. Here, where legend and land met, Manawydan, son of Llyr, kept watch against forces that could hollow a kingdom.
The Vanishing of Dyfed
The morning after the grand wedding feast in Dyfed dawned crisp and bright. The air was sweet with dew and the promise of a new beginning. Pryderi, prince of Dyfed and son of Rhiannon, walked arm-in-arm with his wife Cigfa through the castle gardens, laughter still ringing from the previous night.
Manawydan, brother of the mighty Bran, watched them with a gentle smile—his own heart lighter than it had been since the loss of his homeland. For years, he’d wandered as an exile, the legacy of his father Llyr a distant memory. Now, as Rhiannon’s guest and Pryderi’s friend, Manawydan found solace in Dyfed’s peace and beauty.
They paused beneath hedgerows and hedged promises, but peace is a fragile thing. That very day, as the sun reached its zenith, a low mist rose across the fields. It crept through the woods and over the hedgerows, swirling around the castle walls until the world outside blurred. The laughter faded.
The birds fell silent. When the mist finally lifted, Manawydan and his companions stepped outside to a land transformed. Dyfed was empty. Where once there had been villages and farms, there was nothing but tangled thickets and echoing silence.
Every living soul—save Manawydan, Rhiannon, Pryderi, and Cigfa—had vanished. No oxen plowed the fields, no dogs barked in the distance, no smoke curled from the thatched roofs. The land itself felt hollowed out, as if some great hand had swept it clean.
Panic threatened to rise, but Manawydan’s voice steadied the group. "Let us search for survivors," he said, his words measured and calm. They traveled the breadth of Dyfed for seven days and seven nights, venturing into forests and valleys once vibrant with life. All the while, an uncanny hush followed them.
There were no answers to their calls, no tracks or traces left behind. At night, they gathered by the dying embers of their campfires, each gripped by their own fears. Pryderi raged against the injustice; Rhiannon’s eyes shone with quiet pain; Cigfa clung to hope that this was only a passing nightmare.
At last, Manawydan spoke: "We cannot linger in sorrow. If Dyfed is lost to us for now, let us make a life elsewhere until this enchantment passes." The suggestion brought little comfort, but the four companions had little choice. Gathering what provisions they could, they set out for England.
In Hereford, they tried their hands at various crafts—saddlery, shield-making, shoemaking—each time gaining such fame for their skill that local tradesmen, threatened by their artistry, drove them out. Each attempt at building a new life was undone by jealousy and misfortune. Yet through all this, Manawydan remained resolute, his patience unyielding. He urged his friends to return with him to Dyfed, reasoning that it was better to endure hardship on familiar soil than to face hostility as strangers.
Back in the empty kingdom, they resumed their wandering. Time in that ghostly land folded into slow, ritual motions: dawn-light checking the horizon, noon bringing only the faintest glint on abandoned ox-plows, and evening lowering a hush that felt almost physical. Pryderi, unable to bear idleness and hunting for a shape to pin his grief onto, suggested they take the hounds and track some game.
For days the hunt offered only silence and the impression of being watched where no one stood. On one fateful day, they chased a white boar into a hidden valley whose slopes were carpeted with bracken and the faint scent of crushed herbs. The creature vanished into a mysterious fortress that stood where no building had been before—a place of smooth, black stone that drank the light.
Against Manawydan’s warnings, Pryderi entered the castle alone—and did not return. Rhiannon, desperate to save her son, followed the narrow stone corridors, calling his name into rooms that answered with cold air. Each step she took seemed to echo from a different time.
She was caught by the same sorcery that had hollowed the fields. Now only Manawydan and Cigfa remained, their small labors and quiet conversations the only proof that the world still held reason. The valley and fortress left a whisper of explanation—a trick of pride, a fault line in an old feud—but no clear map home.
Through it all, Manawydan’s determination did not waver. He comforted Cigfa and took up simple farming, sowing wheat in Dyfed’s empty fields. Yet even his crops were not spared: each night, as the wheat ripened, it was stolen—devoured down to the earth. Manawydan kept watch and discovered the thieves were no ordinary men but a horde of enchanted mice.
With quiet cunning, he captured one mouse, slow and heavy with grain. As he prepared to punish it, three mysterious strangers appeared in turn, each offering ransoms for the mouse’s life. The third, a druid of powerful magic, revealed himself as Llwyd ap Cil Coed—the very wizard who had enchanted Dyfed in vengeance for an ancient wrong.
Manawydan bargained with wisdom and restraint. He demanded the release of Pryderi and Rhiannon, and the restoration of Dyfed to its former glory. The druid, seeing he could not outwit Manawydan, agreed.
In a swirl of magic, the land blossomed back to life. Villages reappeared; laughter returned to the fields; friends and kin found their way home. The enchantment was lifted not by force or violence, but by the patient courage and cleverness of Manawydan, who held fast when all seemed lost.


















