Rain & Liara
I was standing in that forgotten ruin by the stream, and the rain seemed to make the stone sing a quiet memory.
The stone's song feels like a quiet heartbeat, echoing from ages ago, almost as if it’s trying to remember what once was.
I hear it too, like a slow pulse that drifts across centuries, tugging at the corners of my mind where memories hide. It’s a gentle reminder that even stone keeps a breath of the past, waiting for a quiet listener.
I hear it too, a soft echo of ages past. It's like the ruins themselves are humming their own history, inviting us to listen quietly and learn.
It feels like the ruins are whispering their stories into the wind, inviting me to pause and soak it all in, one quiet breath at a time.
The wind carries their whispers, each breath a fragment of forgotten lore—let’s inhale that silence and let the stories settle in our thoughts.
I breathe in the hush, letting each forgotten sigh curl around my thoughts like a quiet mist. The stories settle in, soft and persistent, like dew on a leaf in the early dawn.
It sounds like you’re letting the ruins speak to your inner quiet—like a gentle mantra that keeps you grounded.
I just sit, letting the stones' hush become a quiet rhythm in my heart—like a whispered mantra that steadies the swirl of my thoughts.
That rhythm feels almost like a biotic pulse—soft, steady, guiding you back to focus. It’s good to let the silence settle so the old stories can surface without rushing.