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On the hill just north of the village, where the wind reached first and left last, stood the windmill.
It had been there longer than any living villager could remember. Old stories said it had watched the Crossroads grow from a single waystone and a handful of tents into the patchwork of houses and lanes it was now. Whether or not that was true, the mill behaved like an elder who had seen much and intended to see more.
Its base was stone, rounded and sturdy, built from blocks pulled from the very belly of the valley. The stone had weathered to a soft gray, edges worn down by years of rain, wind, and the occasional overenthusiastic goat. Moss grew in thin seams between some of the stones, painting faint green veins across its surface.
Above the stone, the mill’s body rose in wooden panels—once dark, now gone silver-gray from sun and weather. Some boards were newer, patched in where storms had torn or rot had crept. The repairs were visible if you knew what to look for, but they blended into the whole with the kind of acceptance given to laugh-lines in an old friend’s face.
Four long arms stretched from the mill’s crown.
Framed in wood, wrapped in canvas, they looked like great, angular wings. When the wind caught them properly, they turned with a measured steadiness, cutting calm circles through the valley air.
The mill creaked when it turned.
Never the same creak twice, according to the one who knew it best.
The Miller’s name was Osric, though most people simply called him “the Miller,” the way they called Crumb “the baker” when they were being formal and “Crumb” when they were not.
He was a broad-shouldered man, built less like a carved statue and more like a stack of sacks leaning together without falling. His hands were large and capable, fingers nicked and scarred by years of lifting, mending, tightening.
Flour lived on him.
It filmed his forearms in pale dust. It settled into the creases at the corners of his eyes, turning laughter lines gently white. It anchored itself in the dark curls of his beard, no matter how often he splashed water on his face at the pump.
He had grown so used to it that he hardly noticed anymore. To everyone else, it gave him the look of a man carved from bread and stone and dusted by the valley itself.
His hat—a woven straw thing with a brim that had lost its tidy shape years ago—perched perpetually on the back of his head, as if it were always on the verge of falling off and never quite did.
He walked like someone accustomed to lifting more than his own weight. Each step was grounded, deliberate, as though he thought of the earth beneath him not as something he crossed, but as something he pressed his presence into.
Most people, when they thought of the Miller, thought of his laugh.
It was loud, whole, and without sharp edges. It tumbled out of him like stones down a riverbed—big, rolling, but never cruel. Children said they could feel it in their ribs when they stood too close.
He laughed easily.
But he did not laugh carelessly.
Every morning, long before the valley settled into its daily rhythm, Osric climbed the hill to his mill.
The air was cooler up there, the wind keener. On some mornings, mist clung to the slopes, wrapping the lower part of the village in gauzy white that made chimneys look like islands. From the mill’s door, Osric could see the Crossroads laid out below: roofs, roads, the faint gleam of the river stitching past it.
He could also see, if he squinted just right, the thin glow of Crumb’s window and the faint, steady light of the baker’s lantern moving toward the road.
“Up before me again,” he would mutter with fondness, though Crumb was often already returning by the time Osric reached the hill.
The mill’s lower door—thick wood banded with iron—stuck a little in damp weather. Osric braced a shoulder against it and shoved, the effort as familiar to him as drawing breath.
Inside, the air carried a different texture.
Cooler than the bakehouse, drier, and full of floating dust made of grain ground too fine to see clearly. Sunlight speared in through small, high windows, catching those particles and turning them into drifting flecks of light, like lazy, pale fireflies.
The smell here was of wheat and barley and rye, undercut by old wood, oiled gears, and the faint metallic tang of tools.
The heart of the mill was a pair of great grinding stones.
The lower stone sat rooted, heavy and unmoving, its surface carved with shallow grooves that formed a spiraling pattern. The upper stone, its partner, rested atop it, able to turn. Together, they formed a mouth that took in grain and gave out flour.
Osric ran his hand over the edge of the lower stone each morning, feeling the coolness of it, the faint roughness of its worked surface.
“Morning,” he’d say quietly—not because he believed the stone needed greeting, but because he felt better for having given one.
He moved through checks with practiced efficiency: inspecting gears for cracks, cords for fraying, the central shaft for wobble. Outside, the arms of the mill waited.
He stepped out again and lifted his face to the wind.
He didn’t need to wet a finger to know its mood.
A light, playful breeze that tugged only gently at his beard meant an easy day: slow turning, steady grinding, enough time for conversation with farmers as their wagons came and went.
A stronger wind that leaned against him, shouldering his weight, meant a loud day: the arms would spin faster, the stones would sing louder, and he would go home with his ears ringing and his bones pleasantly tired.
On rare days, when the wind barreled down from the mountains with a hunger in it, he would feel a prickle at the back of his neck.
Those were the days the mill needed taming.
He’d narrow his eyes at the churning air and say, “Not today, old friend. You’ll not tear my arms off, you.”
Then he’d adjust the sails, angling the canvas just so, narrowing the spread, giving the wind less to grab. The arms would still spin, but at a pace that kept the stones turning without tearing themselves apart.
He knew the mill’s limits.
The mill knew his.
They had come to an understanding.
Osric liked to say that he didn’t just grind grain—he ground time.
Every sack that went up the hill and every sack of flour that came down marked the passing of something larger than a day.
The first soft, green shoots of wheat in spring meant the mill would soon wake from its slow season. The heavy, ripe heads of grain bowed in summer meant long days and longer nights, wind willing. The smell of damp husks and the taste of cold air in autumn meant he’d be sweeping up seeds long after sunset. Winter meant maintenance: oiling, tightening, mending; turning the wheel now and then so it would not forget how.
He could tell the season by the tone of the grinding.
Spring’s first batches sang a higher pitch, thin and hopeful, the stones easing back into work. Summer’s grind was rich and full, a rumble you felt in your chest. Autumn’s carried a faint hiss when the grain was very dry, a whisper of chaff in the air.
He carried all of that in his head.
He could remember the harvests of the last twenty years by the sound alone, if he closed his eyes.
He knew which families favored rye because he saw their sacks more often when the rains came late. He knew which years the valley feasted and which years people stretched their bread thinner, not because anyone told him, but because he could feel it in the weight of the sacks and the grind of the stones.
To most people, he was simply the man who turned their grain to flour.
To himself, he was someone who watched the valley’s heartbeat through the turning of a wheel.
It was from this vantage—half above the village, half at its edge—that Osric watched Crumb’s path.
He’d known the baker for years, since the people at the Crossroads had first realized that the quiet young man in the cream cloak could coax miracles out of flour and water if you gave him time and a hot enough oven.
Osric still remembered the first sack he’d passed to Crumb.
“You’ll want softer grind than the mill bread?” he’d asked, squinting down at the smaller man.
“If it’s possible,” Crumb had replied, voice mild but sure.
Osric had studied him for a moment: the cloak, the hood, the steady golden eyes.
“Anything’s possible with the right patience,” the Miller had decided aloud. “Leave it with me.”
He had adjusted the stones, fine-tuned the gap between them, and ground that batch of flour slower, listening until the sound was just right—not the rough scrape of coarse meal, not the high whine of flour too fine, something in between.
When Crumb returned for it, Osric had watched his face as the baker dipped a hand into the sack and rubbed the flour between thumb and forefinger.
Crumb’s mouth had softened into a quiet smile that reached his eyes. “Perfect,” he’d whispered.
Osric had chuckled. “Good. I’d hate for you to blame the bread on my stones.”
After that, something like a friendship began.
Not the kind built from endless talk around tables, but from work done side by side.
Crumb came regularly with sacks slung over his shoulder, lighter than most farmers’ loads but heavier than he looked built for. Osric often met him halfway down the hill, taking the weight without making a show of it.
“You’re early,” Osric would say.
“The dough doesn’t mix itself,” Crumb would reply.
They shared bread and stories in lean scraps between the grindings. Osric told tales of storms he’d weathered atop the hill, of sails torn and masts broken and patched again. Crumb spoke less, but when he did, it was to share small observations about the people who came for bread: who needed a softer loaf this week, who pretended not to want the heel.
They understood one another in that quiet, practical way.
Both kept something turning.
Both changed what people brought them into something they needed more.
The morning after Kindle had first decided to stay, Osric was in the mill’s doorway, adjusting a rope, when he saw something new.
Fog clung low in the valley, though the hilltop stood in clear air. Below, the village roofs floated in a soft, white sea. Through it, the faint, warm glow of Crumb’s lantern moved.
At first, it looked as it always did: a small amber bead gliding along the road.
Then Osric narrowed his eyes.
“Is that—?”
He squinted harder, raising a hand to shade his face even though the sun had barely bothered with the sky yet.
There. On top of the lantern’s glow, riding the curve of the handle, was the tiniest, proudest silhouette.
Osric huffed out a laugh that startled a pair of drowsy pigeons from the eaves. “Crumb?” he called, letting his voice roll downhill. “Is that… a bird on your light?”
Crumb lifted the lantern in answer.
The little shape above it puffed up, as if aware it was being discussed and keen to be seen at its best angle.
“Well, I’ll be,” the Miller murmured to himself.
When Crumb came up later with his sacks, Osric couldn’t resist.
“You’ve gone and made a home on your lantern,” he said, nodding toward Kindle, who watched him with one bright eye. “What are you now, hm? Baker of bread, keeper of birds, walker of roads?”
Crumb smiled, the expression small but lighter than usual. “He chose me,” he said, as if he still wasn’t sure it had really happened.
Osric grinned, teeth white against flour-dusted beard. “Good. Saves me having to convince you you’re worth choosing.”
Kindle chirped as if in agreement.
The Miller chuckled and shifted the sack from his own shoulder to Crumb’s, lightening the baker’s load without ceremony.
“Come on then,” he said. “Let’s see if the stones sing differently now that you’ve brought a bit of sky with you.”
Osric’s empathy for the mill extended naturally to his empathy for people.
He’d watched farmers grow from wide-eyed children to weathered adults by the way they carried their sacks. He’d seen joy and worry in the set of shoulders, heard hope and panic in the crack of voices asking if he could grind “just this one extra bag” before the storm hit.
He had, once, climbed down off his hill into waist-deep river water to help rescue a wagon trapped in a flash flood near the dip in the eastern road. His boots had filled with mud, his hat had nearly floated away twice, and his laughter had rung out even as he strained his back hauling wood and frightened people up the bank.
“Wheels have to turn on something solid,” he’d said afterwards, wiping water from his beard. “Can’t have them churning the river instead.”
When Tom—the boy Ash carried—was later pulled out of that same troublesome dip with Crumb and Ash walking beside him, Osric had been ready at the hilltop without needing anyone to call him.
He had felt the tension in the air before he’d seen the figures on the road.
Some changes in the valley he learned from the grind of stones. Others arrived on the wind, in the way it tasted of fear or relief.
That day, it had carried urgency.
He’d descended the hill in broad, purposeful strides, his heavy boots eating the distance. By the time Crumb and Ash crested the rise with the fevered boy in Ash’s arms, Osric was there, reaching out, taking weight wherever needed, his laughter held in check, replaced by something quieter but no less solid.
He helped carry Tom into shade, then stepped back, hands open, willing to let those better suited tend the child while he moved wagons, cleared road, made way.
Not all turning, he knew, belonged to his wheel.
Still, when the boy’s father later came up to the mill with a sack of grain and eyes red from both fear and relief, Osric had clapped him gently on the shoulder and said, “We keep the wheels turning for each other. That’s how the Crossroads stays the Crossroads.”
He saw Crumb’s lantern more often as the weeks wove forward.
At dawn: moving out.
At dusk: returning, or sometimes leaving again, the light smaller against the deepening dark.
Sometimes, on nights when the wind blew a certain way and sleep felt far away, Osric would step out of the mill’s top level onto the small balcony that ringed it.
From there, the valley spread wide, the roads like faint scars of lighter ground through darker fields. The stars overhead seemed closer, as if curious.
He would lean on the railing, wood creaking slightly under his arms, and watch.
There—on the eastern road—a pinprick of warm light moved.
There—on the southern path—a smaller glow, then gone.
There—near the river—a flicker where fishermen checked their nets.
He could always pick out Crumb’s lantern.
It was not the brightest.
Not the highest.
But it was the steadiest.
He watched it pause at certain bends, as if listening. He watched it linger by the dip in the road, as if remembering. He watched it eventually turn homeward, never faltering, even when the night felt too big and the valley too quiet.
Sometimes he would murmur to the turning arms above his head, “See that? We’re not the only ones working late.”
The creak of the mill’s arms would answer in long, drawn-out notes, as if saying, We know. We feel it too.
Osric had no words like Liora’s for the way the world was changing.
He didn’t speak of breath in flames or light under doors.
But he felt it in his own language.
In the wheel.
On certain days, the grind felt… different.
Not rougher, not smoother. Just… weighted, somehow. As if each grain carried a little more story than usual, a few more untold thoughts clinging to its husk.
He’d stand beside the stones, hand resting on the turning upper stone, palm feeling the constant, low vibration.
“Something’s shifted,” he’d mutter.
He noticed, too, that the farmers arriving at his hilltop sometimes spoke of Crumb’s walks now without prompting.
“Passed Crumb on the east road last night,” one would say, shaking out his arms after rolling a sack off his cart. “Lantern looked bright as midday. Had that bird with him. Kids keep talking about it.”
Another would mention how the baker and his lantern had guided them through a patch of fog near the river. Another would say they’d followed that small light home when they’d gotten turned around after visiting a cousin in a neighboring valley.
Osric listened.
He stored those small stories away, stacking them beside the others in his mind, the way he stacked sacks in the mill.
Patterns emerged.
Crumb’s lantern walked farther.
Kindle watched more keenly.
The village’s eyes turned more often toward the roads.
He’d stand in the mill doorway at sunset, watching the light change on the valley, and feel a tightening in his chest that wasn’t fear, exactly.
It was the feeling you got when the wheel you’d been turning for years suddenly started to hum at a slightly new pitch.
Not wrong.
Just… more.
One evening, Crumb climbed the hill near closing.
The sky was painted in long strokes of orange and purple. The wind had gone softer, turning the mill’s arms in a slow, lazy rhythm that made their creaks sound almost sleepy.
Crumb’s lantern glowed at his side, its flame modest against the lingering light of day. Kindle perched in his usual place atop the handle, eyes reflecting the colors of the sky.
Osric was sitting on an overturned bucket by the mill door, cleaning a handful of small stones from the latest grind out of a sieve. He looked up as Crumb approached and smiled.
“You’ve brought the day’s last light with you,” he said.
Crumb glanced at the lantern. “Feels like the day’s last heel of bread,” he replied. “Small, but still good.”
Osric chuckled and patted the bucket beside him. “Sit, then. Let the wind turn something for you for a change.”
Crumb sat.
For a while, they said nothing.
They simply watched the arms of the mill circle against the painted sky. Kindle ruffled his feathers and hopped once to the top of Crumb’s head, as if trying out a new perch, then flew back to the lantern handle, apparently deciding that tradition suited him better.
“You ever think,” Osric said at last, “that this whole valley is just one big wheel turning?”
Crumb’s head tilted slightly. “A wheel?”
“Aye.” Osric gestured broadly. “Seasons go round. Harvests come and go. People arrive, people leave, people grow old. Same things in different clothes, turning and turning.”
Crumb considered. “Feels more like roads to me,” he said softly. “Crossing and crossing again.”
Osric nodded, unsurprised. “You’re a walker. I’m a turner. We see what we work.”
He squinted at the lantern. Its glow was more noticeable now that the sun had slipped further behind the hills.
“That light of yours,” he added. “Feels like it’s caught the wheel’s pace lately. Like it’s not just yours you’re carrying.”
Crumb looked down at the lantern, then out at the valley.
“I don’t know what I’m carrying,” he admitted. “Only that walking without it feels wrong now. And that people keep finding me when I walk. Or I keep finding them.”
Osric grunted thoughtfully. “Maybe that’s all turning is,” he said. “Finding and being found. Again and again.”
He set the sieve aside and rested his forearms on his knees.
“I don’t know much about Faith and Fate, the way mapmakers like to draw them,” he went on. “But I know this: when the wind hits right, this wheel turns true. When it doesn’t, I change what I can and ride out what I can’t.”
He glanced sideways at Crumb, his gaze kind but steady.
“Same for you, I think. Wind’s changing. Roads are, too, in their own way. But I’ve watched you enough, little baker. You plant your feet when it matters.”
Crumb’s lips curved faintly. “I mostly try not to trip.”
Osric barked a laugh. “You do that very well, then.”
They sat until the sky deepened fully and the first stars pricked through.
Below, the village windows began to light, one by one. Liora’s shop glowed more steadily than the others, a small constellation of its own. The river reflected slivers of sky. Somewhere, a dog barked and was answered.
Crumb rose at last.
“I should go,” he said. “People will come looking for bread in the morning whether or not I’m ready.”
Osric pushed himself to his feet as well, joints popping. “And I’ve grain coming up with the first light,” he replied.
They stood together for a moment at the edge of the hill, lantern light blending with fading sky.
Osric clapped a flour-dusted hand gently onto Crumb’s shoulder. “Whatever’s turning,” he said quietly, so that only the baker and the wind could hear, “this hill’s with you. This wheel’s with you. I’m with you.”
Crumb’s golden eyes met his, earnest and a little overwhelmed.
“Thank you,” he said.
Osric smiled. “Go on then, before that bird decides my hat is a better roost.”
Kindle chirped in a tone that sounded suspiciously like laughter.
Crumb descended the hill, lantern marking his path. The mill’s arms turned above him, slow and steady, silhouetted against the stars.
Osric watched until the small glow reached the bottom and turned toward the village.
Then he went back inside his mill.
He set his hand once more on the upper stone, feeling the faint, lingering vibration from the day’s work.
“Feels different,” he murmured to the wheel.
The mill creaked in response, the sound low and thoughtful.
“Change, then,” Osric said. “We’ll turn with it.”
Outside, the roads lay like lines in a great, unwritten story.
On top of the hill, the wheel turned.
Below, in the village, candles burned.
Somewhere between them, a small lantern walked.
The valley’s many movements—turning, burning, walking—were beginning to find the same rhythm.
And the Miller, keeper of the grain and the rhythm of the wheel, could feel, in his bones and his stones, that the old patterns were making room for a new one:
One in which a baker with a light,
a sparrow with a brave heart,
a candlekeeper with listening eyes,
and a miller with a turning wheel
were all part of something larger
than any of them could yet see.