1065: Story 1065: The Bone Orchard 1065: Story 1065: The Bone Orchard They say it only blooms in the dead of night.
On the outskirts of Marrow’s Hollow, nestled beyond the fog-drenched ravine and past the whispering trees, lies a place untouched by time.
A garden that never withers, never changes—because it is not nourished by soil, but by bones.
They call it the Bone Orchard.
And it is alive.
The story begins with Brother Eckhart, an exorcist-turned-wanderer whose faith had cracked under the weight of what he’d seen in the Eldritch Wars.
After losing his entire congregation to a plague that screamed through the walls, he sought solace in isolation.
But dreams—red and writhing—dragged him to Marrow’s Hollow.
In his visions, a voice called:
“Return what was borrowed.
Feed the root.”
The townsfolk had long since abandoned that part of the valley.
Children vanished when they strayed too close.
Graves refused to remain filled.
Flowers bloomed from skulls.
Still, Eckhart went.
The orchard was beautiful in a way that made the soul recoil.
Tree trunks of pale femurs twisted toward the heavens, their branches hung with vertebrae like wind chimes.
Flowers blossomed from sockets—lilies with teeth, roses of cartilage.
The wind didn’t whistle.
It moaned.
Eckhart ventured deeper, the air thick with rot and incense.
At the orchard’s heart, he found an altar grown from ribs, pulsing like a living lung.
And before it—knelt in prayer—was a figure robed in stitched skin.
The Caretaker.
Once human.
Now…
something more.
The Caretaker turned to him, empty eyes filled with eldritch luminescence.
“You were called,” it said.
“You carry the final seed.”
Eckhart’s hand trembled.
His crucifix burned his chest.
But something within him—something old—stirred.
He felt it in his blood.
In his marrow.
The orchard had been planted by forgotten gods, using humanity’s fallen as fertilizer.
Each bloom a memory.
Each root a soul.
And the orchard was incomplete.
One final offering was needed to awaken what slept beneath.
“Will you grow with us?” the Caretaker whispered.
Eckhart screamed.
But not in denial.
In acceptance.
Days later, travelers found the orchard had spread.
Its roots now encroached upon nearby roads.
Skeletons bloomed like springtime weeds.
No one who entered returned.
Except one.
A girl with thorn-scars on her arms.
Eyes wide, voice trembling.
“They’re not dead,” she whispered.
“They’re dreaming.
And the orchard dreams with them.”
Now, on blood moon nights, if you press your ear to the bone trees, you can hear them whisper.
Names.
Secrets.
Songs older than language.
The orchard hungers still, blooming with the sins of man.
And beneath it, something waits.
Gnawing.
Grinning.
Growing.