Guide: Cloud Meadow
Elara, a practical geologist who dealt in rocks and isobars, almost laughed. But three days later, after a thunderstorm scrubbed the valley clean, she found herself standing at the edge of her grandmother’s back pasture. The air smelled of ozone and mint. And there, shimmering between two ancient oaks, was a vertical puddle of light.
The Guide wasn't written in any language Elara recognized, but the illustrations were clear. They showed a ladder made of woven wind, a gate shaped like a harp, and—most strangely—a herd of creatures that looked like sheep, but with bodies of dense, fluffy cloud and legs of solidified rainbow.
A large, dark-grey sheep nearby was crackling with tiny lightning bolts. Its hum had turned into a growl. Remembering her grandmother’s childhood lullabies, Elara hummed a deep, rumbling note. The thunderhead sheep’s bristling clouds smoothed. It sneezed a gentle shower of dew, then turned white again.
Elara closed her eyes. She let go of her questions— Where am I? How does this work? —and simply was . When she opened her eyes, the entire herd had gathered around her, their fluffy bodies pressing against her knees, their hums merging into a single, peaceful chord. cloud meadow guide
Elara smiled. She understood now. Her grandmother hadn’t gone walking in the weather. She had gone home. And Elara had just inherited the strangest, most wonderful job in the world: the new Cloud Meadow Guide.
She was back in the pasture. The mundane grass was wet under her boots. The Guide in her hands now showed a new illustration: a small human figure standing in a field of blue, a staff in one hand, a net of pure, empty air in the other.
The Cloud Meadow was not in the sky. It was under everything. The ground was a mirror of the sky above, a soft, springy expanse of twilight blue. And there they were: the cloud sheep. They drifted on invisible currents, grazing on tufts of starlight that grew like thistles. Each one had a soft, low hum, like a distant cello. Elara, a practical geologist who dealt in rocks
She stepped through.
The old leather-bound book had no title on the spine, just a faded smudge where gold leaf used to be. Inside, the first page simply read: The Cloud Meadow Guide.
To move a flock, use your ‘net of silence.’ It is not a physical object. It is the quiet you carry inside you. Think of nothing. Be still. The sheep will follow your emptiness, hoping to fill it. And there, shimmering between two ancient oaks, was
The Guide had fallen open in her hands. She now understood its purpose. It was a pastoral manual.
Elara didn’t run. She walked, calm and silent, the herd parting before her like milk in tea. She stepped through the shrinking puddle of light just as it became a dewdrop and vanished.