1047: Story 1047: Descendants of Rot 1047: Story 1047: Descendants of Rot When the apocalypse came, it wasn’t with fire or flood.
It came with roots—black, gnarled, and pulsing with ancient hunger.
Deep beneath the ruined cities, the earth itself had soured.
Spores of a forgotten god, buried long ago, stirred in the marrow of the dead.
Trees began to twist.
Grass grew black.
And in the villages left untouched by fire or war, children began to change.
They called them the Descendants of Rot.
In the forgotten valley of Greywhistle, nestled among sickened hills and swaying fungal trees, a child named Aelin was born.
Her skin bore the hue of moss.
Her eyes glowed faintly in the dark.
Vines coiled in her hair like living thoughts.
She didn’t cry when born.
She only stared at her mother with wide, ancient eyes.
And outside the house, the crops withered.
The villagers whispered, as villagers always do.
“She’s one of them.”
“A plague child.”
“Burn her now or we all rot.”
But Aelin’s father, Bram, stood tall, axe in hand.
“If she’s cursed, then so am I.”
He built a wall of thorns around their home.
Not to keep the villagers out—but to keep what watched her from beyond the trees… from coming in.
As Aelin grew, so did her power.
Flowers bloomed when she bled.
Animals followed her, but they too began to change—growing eyes where none should be, blooming fungal antlers, bleeding amber sap.
She dreamt of a great tree—its trunk riddled with mouths, its roots spreading across the world like veins.
And always… it whispered.
“Return to me, daughter.”
One by one, other children began to wander into Greywhistle—barefoot and blank-eyed, their bodies riddled with bark and fungus.
None remembered their names.
But they knew Aelin’s.
“You’re the first,” one rasped.
“The Seedmother.”
Bram tried to protect her.
But the earth would not be denied.
The dead beneath Greywhistle’s soil—long buried and forgotten—began to claw their way up, their bodies overgrown with tendrils and bark.
They weren’t zombies.
They were reclaimed.
“Come home, child,” they moaned in unison.
Bram, desperate, took Aelin to the old cathedral at the edge of the rotwood.
A place where light once held sway.
Inside, she wept.
Not for herself.
But for what was coming.
“I don’t want to become it,” she sobbed.
“But it’s in me.
I am it.”
Bram held her close, even as mold spread from her tears, cracking the floor, curling around his boots.
“I’ll love you no matter what grows from your bones,” he whispered.
That night, Aelin stood beneath the full moon, surrounded by her kin—the twisted children of decay, the reborn dead, the roots that coiled and writhed.
She raised her hand.
And the forest answered.
The cathedral crumbled.
Greywhistle vanished.
And in its place, a tree rose.
Tall.
Terrible.
Alive.
And from its branches, a thousand eyes blinked open.