Lyra & Baklaher
You ever notice how a city hum or a quiet library can feel like an unseen character in a story, shaping the mood and the writer’s own thoughts? I’ve been thinking about that and would love to hear your take.
I love that idea—the city hum becomes a low‑lying bass line in the narrative, the library a quiet, patient narrator that listens. Both can push the writer’s mood like a quiet suggestion, shaping what the characters feel without ever being mentioned. It’s like a silent companion that only the best stories get to see.
It’s beautiful how you see them as unseen muses, like a steady heartbeat that the protagonist feels but never hears. That subtle backdrop does a lot more than just set a scene—it becomes part of the story’s soul. I can almost feel that bass line humming beneath the dialogue now.