I’ve been working on a new novel, and like many fantasy stories, it carries with it old legends—stories whispered long before the events of the main tale begin. This is one of them. It tells of a wish, a unicorn, and the moment the worlds were first divided.
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Long before the worlds were parted, when forests were older than the names of kings and rivers had not yet chosen their courses, there lived a woman who kept a small gray rat.
The rat’s name was Rick.
He was not remarkable among rats. He knew the scent of grain and the comfort of warm hands. He knew the quiet rustle of cloth and the shadowed spaces beneath cupboards where the world felt safe and still.
He knew the woman’s voice, and the kindness of being fed. But he did not know why any of these things mattered.
For a rat does not ask such questions.
As a rat, he knew no more of meaning than a chair or a table knows meaning. He lived by warmth and hunger and the smallest contentment of being alive, and that was enough.
The woman loved him gently, the way one loves a small creature that curls beside the hearth in the evenings. Yet sometimes she looked beyond her window and wondered if there might be something greater waiting for her in the world.
One night, beneath a pale and watchful moon, she wandered into a forest where the trees grew tall and quiet.
There she met a unicorn.
The unicorn regarded her with bright, untroubled eyes, for unicorns did not then hide themselves from the world, nor did they understand the fragile sorrows of mortal hearts.
“What do you wish?” asked the unicorn. For unicorns were generous with miracles, though they were not always careful with them.
The woman hesitated only a moment.
“I wish my rat could become a beautiful man,” she said softly, “so that I might love him as he loves me.”
The unicorn tilted her head. For unicorns understood beauty very well. And to a unicorn, beauty and eternity were the same thing.
So the unicorn granted the wish. Rick the rat became a handsome man.
He stood beneath the pale trees, tall and radiant in the moonlight, and the woman cried out with joy. She gave him a name worthy of the miracle she believed she had been given.
She called him Shadrick.
At first the world seemed a wonder to him.
He could speak. He could think. He could look upon the woman and understand the strange ache that lived in his chest when she smiled.
But with that understanding came something else.
Time.
He watched the woman grow older. The brightness of her laughter softened, the steadiness of her hands began to tremble like candlelight in a restless wind.
Shadrick, however, never changed.
The unicorn had made him beautiful. And beauty—so the unicorn believed—could never fade.
When the woman died, Shadrick stood beside her grave while the rain fell quietly through the grass. He wept the sorrowful tears that only meaning can bring. After his cries of longing had gone unanswered by the tomb and the larger world, he said nothing for a great while.
Then at last he spoke.
“What was the meaning of it?”
He remembered the life he had lived before. The life where nothing had meaning at all. The rat had known hunger and comfort and fear, but never the terrible knowledge that all things must end.
It was meaning that had given him that knowledge.
Meaning had given him love.
Meaning had given him grief.
And so the immortal Shadrick came to believe something no mortal man nor immortal unicorn would ever understand: that meaning itself was the cruelest magic in the world.
In the centuries that followed, he searched for a way to quiet that cruelty and unmake meaning.
From his sorrow he shaped a strange and subtle hunger—something that fed not upon flesh, but upon the desires born from the knowledge of mortality. It grew wherever a finite life claimed purpose, gathered love, or found longing.
The unicorns began to notice the thinning of mortal hearts. They did not understand grief the way mortals do, nor did they trouble themselves much with the quiet tragedies of human hearts. Unicorns loved beauty and innocence, and they tended their forests and the creatures within them as one keeps a garden.
They cared for their woods. They cared for the living things that wandered through them. And they wished men, women and all mortals to remain as beautiful and clean as their capacity allowed—indeed, as they ought to yearn to be.
But the dulling of their hearts was not beautiful.
Where Shadrick's devouring beast passed, the world seemed thinner. The songs of birds lost their brightness. The green of leaves grew dull. Creatures wandered without purpose, as though something quiet and important had been taken from them.
And the unicorns would not have their world made hollow, so they did what no creature had ever done before. They separated the realm of mortals from their own.
The lands of wonder and the lands of humankind were drawn apart like two pages of a book, slowly and carefully, so that neither would tear.
But the unicorns did not simply push the emptiness away.
Instead they gathered it.
They removed the hungry thing Shadrick had made from the roots of the world and the quiet corners of mortal longing, and with their ancient magic they extracted and shaped it. The emptiness that had once threatened to swallow meaning became the very thing that held the realms apart. They wove it into a boundary between worlds.
This boundary was called the Null.
On one side lay the lands of humankind, where time moved quickly and hearts were fragile. On the other side lay Luminwood. The deep forest where unicorns walked beneath leaves that never lost their brightness.
Yet even such a boundary could not stand alone.
A single set of beautiful, cloven hooves must continue to walk the mortal side, where wishes were still spoken and careless miracles might yet be born.
And so one unicorn stepped forward.
She left the forests of Luminwood and entered the world of humans, taking a shape that could walk quietly among them. She did not go because she understood sorrow better than the others.
Unicorns never forget.
They remember every flower that has ever bloomed in their woods, every stream that has ever run beneath their trees. And she remembered one small thing that had once grown in the world.
A wish.
A small gray rat.
And the man he had become.
And the ravenous spirit he unleashed.
So she crossed the barrier to tend the forest of that unforgotten thing, and to see that it never again grew wild enough to hollow the world.
Centuries passed.
Kingdoms rose and fell. Forests were cut and planted again. The old stories became little more than quiet legends whispered at the edges of memory.
But boundaries weaken. Old magic stirs.
And somewhere, in the silent places between worlds, something still listens for the moment when the barrier trembles.
A Modern Footnote
Centuries later, when the barrier finally trembled again, no one in the human world noticed at first.
The news spoke only of an explosion in a research building and the strange garden that had appeared overnight where concrete and glass had once stood.
Most people watched the footage and forgot it before the evening ended.
But somewhere in an office break room, a woman stood very still as the broadcast played. She still had a child waiting for her at home when the workday ended.
For a moment—just a moment—the camera caught the trunk of a tree in the center of that impossible garden.
The bark was silver, and she longed for home.





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