The fold of the letter smelled of peat and iron; when Etain opened it, the single silver pin inside caught the low light and seemed to hum with a memory she could not name. She tightened her fingers around the sill and felt the room tilt—there was someone pressing at the border of her life, an old claim trying to climb back in.
She had come to a house where no gods routinely answered doors. Child of other courts once, now tending a mortal hearth, Etain kept small rituals: she swept the fire, set a bowl for passing winds. That morning the token sent a song under her skin—the kind of song that belonged to mounds and long nights, not to kings and gardens. In the margins of Tara, people whispered of a woman whose envy bent the weather; the name Fuamnach had begun to move like a shadow in those whispers, and with it came small changes in the air.
Word of her beauty moved like a bright bird through the courts. Suitors arrived with gifts and soft promises, but Etain’s gaze returned to the token and the thin line of sky beyond the hill. Under that gray light she remembered a harp and a hand she had once trusted; she remembered laughter that tasted of silver and rain. The memory carried a cost: a woman named Fuamnach had watched and sharpened her envy until it cut. Fuamnach’s envy moved beyond glare and gossip; she began to weave small magics—seeds of wind and forgetting—that would, if left to grow, scatter the life Etain and Midir had built.
She had learned to keep small orders inside the house: sweep, water, mend. Child of other courts, now of hearth and field, she moved between chores and quiet like someone practicing a new language. Yet the pin at her sill thrummed, and songs she could not place slid under her ribs.
Fuamnach’s contempt began in small violences: missing laughter, sudden drafts in sunlit rooms, a bird of shadow perched on the edge of a dream. When petty spells failed, the sorceress used older magics—wind that would not carry sound, waters that refused to hold reflection. She meant to empty Midir’s heart; when she could not take his love outright, she set out to scatter it.
That night the magic took more than a laugh; it lifted the ground from beneath her and made her light as a sigh. Etain felt her body thin until only a bright bead of life remained—a dragonfly no larger than a fingernail but burning with the memory of halls and harps. She beat herself free of the pool’s skin and rode wind-lines between reed and rock, her wings catching light in facets like scattered glass.
She learned to read weather by the tilt of a reed and to hide in the salt of a gull’s wing when storms came. For seven seasons she was a traveler without a map: skimming over thatch and bog, finding warmth in hearth-smoke and cold on wet stone; tasting hearth-steam and peat and the iron tang of men’s sweat. Sometimes she hovered near a human hand and felt, for a breath, the comfort of a palm.
Once, when a gust had pushed her too close to a feast, a cup of mead waited unwatched at the edge of a table. A hand reached, the rim met lips, and the insect slid down warm throat where the bright light folded into another shape. The world folded and Etain returned as a woman plunged whole into a different life. The first air she drew tasted of leaven and smoke; the first light that touched her eyes was narrower, shaped by walls and hands.
Memory came in flares—harp measures, a name mouthed under breath—but the mortal world demanded work, names, a slow learning of how to milk a goat and mend a hem. She grew rooted among folk who kept the old tales in their mouths like small stones but who did not live by them. Even so, at dawn the harp-song threaded into bone and left her with a hunger that answered to rivers she had never crossed; at night she dreamed of mounds that opened and closed like mouths.
In those mornings she learned to braid stories into daily tasks: washing, sewing, tending fires. The bridge moments arrived in small acts—a child asking for a story that echoed a lost chorus, an elder pressing a hand to a bowl and whispering a name that mattered—moments that tied the strange to the human in a way that kept both true.
In Tara, news of Etain’s presence came like a banner in wind. Eochaid Airem, king with the steady eye and a hunger for renown, rode with poets and silver to ask for her hand. He offered land, song, and the honor of his house; the court sang for seven days and Tara shone. Etain married not for power but for steadiness—human steadiness that might keep a wandering thing from falling apart.
At Tara she pressed her hands to soil, laid music in garden rows, and made small rooms where the world could hold sorrow. She loved a quiet that was earned and brittle. Still memory tugged; it was not always shaped by language but by a pull at the throat when wind turned certain ways. Midir, in places beyond men’s sight, burned for what he had lost. His steps led him to druids and mounds, to women who remembered ways to peel open the world.


















