The Great Bird of the Midsummer Moors
In the heart of the moors, where the heather hums and the sky never stays still, there is told the tale of a bird vast beyond imagining—its wings like stormclouds, its cry a falling of glass.
None know its name, for it has none, and none who have seen it close have spoken of it afterward, save in silence.
It comes only once a year, on Midsummer’s Eve, when the sun hovers long and unwilling above the horizon. The air grows heavy, the insects vanish, and the marsh-lights tremble low. Then a wind, cold and without scent, rolls over the land, and the great bird descends.
Some say it is the soul of the sky, shedding its weight for a single night. Others call it a punishment older than sin, still circling in search of something lost.
But Diamante, being of clearer sight, once followed it.
He climbed the White Tor with bare feet, ignoring the cries of those who loved him, for they feared the bird’s shadow more than they feared death. He waited with patience not his own, and at the stroke of dusk, it came—wings beating slow, soundless, immense.
It did not see him at first.
But Diamante, with no weapon and no words, opened his arms—not in defiance, but welcome.
And the bird alighted.
It stood taller than the tallest pine, and yet bent its head to meet him. Its eyes were not eyes, but mirrors of skies he had never seen. It spoke without voice, and this is what he heard:
“I carry the weight of things unsaid. I am memory that will not fade, longing without rest. I have flown a thousand years with no place to land.”
Diamante answered:
“Then rest in me.”
And the bird did. It folded itself into him—into his bones, his breath, his being.
When he descended the tor, he was not the same. He moved slowly, as one who carries something vast within. He no longer feared silence. He no longer needed speech.
That year, the harvest was rich.
Edmond Bailly, 1909