Rain lacquered the Black Forest leaves, and the musk of wet earth rose as a low raven's cry cut through twilight; villagers shuttered their windows against a creeping mist that tasted of iron. In the hush, young Erik felt the forest's heartbeat falter—an ancient balance slipping toward shadow.
In the depths of Germany’s Black Forest, where sunlight fights to pierce the canopy and mist threads itself through ancient oaks, lies the hidden village of Nielsön. Shrouded by legend and forgotten by the wider world, Nielsön is carved out of time: a place where old customs hold fast and the land keeps its own counsel.
Founding of Nielsön: The Knight and the Raven
The origins of Nielsön stretch back nearly seven centuries, to an age when the Holy Roman Empire lay fractured under feuding lords. Sir Wilhelm von Niels, a knight once famed across the region, turned his back on the endless wars after a siege that took his kin. Seeking refuge, he plunged into the forest’s green gloom.
Broken in spirit and low on hope, Wilhelm wandered until, on the seventh night, the sharp cry of a raven pierced the stillness. The bird was larger than any raven he had seen, its onyx feathers catching moonlight, its eyes unsettlingly lucid. It cawed and beckoned; Wilhelm, desperate and strangely compelled, followed.
They came at last to a secluded glade: a valley untroubled by time, a stream clear as glass, and an air that held a calm unlike any Wilhelm had known. There he founded the village of Nielsön and, in gratitude and oath, swore to protect the land and its secrets. He named the raven Nacht, and the two—man and spirit—bound themselves together by a pledge meant to shelter both village and wood.
The Pact and the Prophecy
Nacht proved no ordinary bird but a guardian spirit of the forest. Wilhelm’s vow forged a sacred bond between the von Niels bloodline and the living weave of the woods. In turn, Nacht offered protection: Nielsön would remain hidden and the land would flourish so long as the pact endured. Yet the bargain carried a warning, carved into memory as a prophecy:
> "When the forest wanes, and shadows creep,
> A child of Nielsön the bond must keep.
> Through trials fierce and darkness deep,
> The forest’s soul they must redeem."
For generations the descendants upheld this duty. The raven’s call was a reminder that the land and the family were entwined. Over time, however, the line thinned and the prophecy dimmed into the realm of old stories.
The Birth of Erik von Nielsön
Two centuries later, under a blood-tinted moon, a child was born and his mother died in the birthing hour. Erik von Nielsön arrived amid hushed fear and whispered superstition. Some villagers deemed him cursed; his father Dietrich, a grim woodsman, called him a miracle and raised him with steady hands.
Erik grew apart from the others—silent, with piercing blue eyes that unsettled children and elders alike. Yet animals found him: birds nested near his eaves, wolves kept respectful distance, and deer seemed to bow when he passed. Dietrich taught him the forest’s arts—tracking, plant lore, and the ghostly quiet of moving through trees—while knowing there was something beyond ordinary about his son.
The Discovery of the Ruin
On his fifteenth birthday, Erik strayed farther than usual and found a glade that had never existed on any map he knew. At its heart stood a ruin, its stones softened by moss and ivy but humming with an old power. A pedestal held a raven-shaped amulet: black as obsidian, etched with runes that pulsed faintly.
When Erik’s fingers brushed the amulet, a current went through him. Images flared—the figure of a knight, the silhouette of a raven—and a voice, deep and clear, spoke his name.
> “Erik von Nielsön, you are the keeper of the pact. The forest calls upon you to fulfill your destiny.â€
The amulet fastened itself to his throat as if it had always belonged there. From that hour Nacht’s voice was never far: a companion, an advisor, and a burden that revealed the forest’s hurt.
The Trials Begin
On returning to Nielsön, Erik found the village in quiet alarm. Crops had blackened overnight; animals had turned skittish or violent. At dawn a thick, unnatural mist rolled through the streets. The elders, with reluctance and fear, spoke of the old pact and turned to Erik as its living heir.
Overwhelmed but resolved, Erik accepted the task he had been chosen for. Through the amulet he felt the forest’s weakening: a dimming of sap and song, a fall of harmony. Nacht whispered of trials that would test body and heart.


















