There was a girl named Liora who lived on the edge of a lake that never froze. Not even in winter. The water stayed glass-clear, reflecting stars that weren't there—stars that looked like eyes, soft and silver, blinking slow.
She didn't swim. She just... sat. Bare feet in the shallows.
Listening.
Every night, the lake sang. Not loud. Not words. Just... hums. Like wind through feathers. Like breath on skin.
She'd close her eyes. And the hum would wrap around her—like arms made of light.
One winter, when the snow was thick and the world was quiet, the lake called her closer.
She walked in.
Not deep—just... up to her knees.
The water didn't chill. It warmed. Like milk. Like love.
She felt it—something rising. Not a monster. Not a ghost. Just... wings.
They weren't hers.
They unfolded from the water—white, glowing, edges like moonlight.
They lifted her.
Not high. Not far. Just... above the surface.
She floated.
The lake kept singing.
The wings kept beating—slow, gentle, like a heartbeat.
She looked down.
Her reflection was gone.
Instead—there was light.
Not blinding. Not holy. Just... warm. Like someone had lit a candle inside her chest.
She reached down.
The lake reached up.
Fingers—her fingers—brushed the water.
And the wings folded around her.
Not tight.
Just... safe.
She stayed there.
Hours. Days. Maybe forever.
The snow kept falling.
The lake kept singing.
And somewhere—inside the light—she smiled.
Not because she was saved.
Not because she was gone.
Because... she was whole.
And the wings?
They stayed.
Like they always had.
Like they were hers.
Like they were waiting.
Good story. Sound like the wheel of time story.