RSS

Tag Archives: moon

The Golden Supermoon

The Gleam of the Gilded Trap in Bushmantle

The air over Bushmantle was the color of old, oxidized gold, thick and humming. Elias, the town’s lone amateur astronomer and professional cynic, was the first to feel it. Not the gravitational pull on the ocean tides, but the pull on the mind.

The November Supermoon—closest, brightest, and most unnervingly golden of the year—had risen. It didn’t look silver-white; it looked like a monstrous, luminous coin hung low in the velvet blackness, shedding a sickly, buttery light that seemed to press down on the quaint, slightly crumbling homes of Bushmantle.

Elias had been trying to photograph the perigee from his roof, aiming his camera towards the peculiar glow over the old watermill. The moment he looked through the lens, the world warped. The golden light didn’t illuminate; it saturated. It didn’t reflect; it demanded.

The next morning, the town of Bushmantle was subtly, terrifyingly different.

 

The Beaver’s Blind Ambition

 

The ancient folklore held that the November moon was the Beaver Moon, the time when the industrious little creatures worked tirelessly to build their dams and stock their winter larders. But tonight, that focus had become a fever in Bushmantle.

The golden light didn’t just shine on the town; it seemed to leach out the very essence of human preparation, twisting it into a single, maddening obsession: Acquisition.

First, it was the beavers themselves, their usual dam-building activities becoming unnervingly frantic in the river that snaked through Bushmantle. Elias saw them, but they weren’t building with sticks and mud anymore. They were dragging stolen heirlooms, antique silverware, and anything that glittered under the unnatural light—into the colossal, impossible dam they were building near the old mill. They had an insane gleam in their tiny black eyes, their chattering a high, desperate frequency. The structure was a towering, grotesque monument of scavenged wealth and junk, rising obscenely from the water, all to block a river that didn’t need blocking.

 

The Town’s Twisted Treasure

 

The humans were worse.

Under the Supermoon’s hypnotic, golden glow, the need to collect became the need to possess. It started with hoarding. Old Mr. Henderson, the clockmaker, was found attempting to dismantle the town’s ancient clock tower, convinced he needed to “own all the time” before it ran out. He was muttering about the moon’s ‘golden promise’ of eternal moments. Mrs. Gable, the proprietor of the general store, had locked herself inside, frantically trying to count every single item, from rusty nails to dusty tins of sardines, claiming the moon demanded a full inventory of her domain.

The gold light had made the people of Bushmantle’s deepest, most primal fear—loss—into a terrible, manic engine of collection. They were gathering not just objects, but abstract concepts, desperate to hold onto anything that might slip away.

Elias realized the moon wasn’t just a light; it was a filter. It was amplifying a single, terrible thought in every mind: You don’t have enough. You must take more. You must never lose what is yours.

The scariest moment came when he saw his neighbor, kindly old Mrs. Peterson. She wasn’t carrying gold or books. She was carrying a large kitchen knife, its blade reflecting the eerie golden light, and stalking the cobblestone streets of Bushmantle with a terrifying, purposeful stride.

Elias asked her what she was looking for. Her eyes, usually gentle and blue, were now like polished amber in the golden light.

“My youth,” she hissed, her voice dry and brittle, echoing slightly in the quiet, unnaturally lit street. “The Moon promised me I must collect what I lost. The Moon promised it must be taken back from those who still possess it.”

She wasn’t looking for a treasure chest. She was looking for life, for time, for the potential of the young girls down the street. The Supermoon, hanging like a colossal, gilded trap above them, had driven the town of Bushmantle mad with the lust for what they had lost and could lose. They were gathering wealth, youth, time, and sanity with the panicked ferocity of beavers stockpiling for an eternal, uncoming winter.

Elias dropped his camera and ran, the suffocating, beautiful, golden light of the closest moon of the year following him like the glare of a jealous, all-possessing god, casting long, wavering shadows down the familiar, now terrifying, streets of Bushmantle.

 
 

Tags: , ,

The Whistling Moon

The Whistling Moon

The Whispering Woods were always a place of mystery, but none was as profound as the legend of the Whistling Moon. Old Man Tiber, his beard as white as winter snow, would spin tales by the crackling fire, his voice a low rumble. “They say,” he’d begin, “that when the moon hangs full and low, a melody drifts down from the heavens, a song of forgotten dreams and futures yet unwritten.”

Ríona (pronounced REE-uh-na), a young girl with eyes the color of the forest moss, listened intently to every word. She longed to hear the Whistling Moon, to feel its magic weave through her soul. One crisp autumn evening, as the moon, round and luminous, began its ascent, Ríona ventured out, leaving the warm glow of Tiber’s cottage behind.

The forest was alive with the hushed sounds of the night. Leaves rustled like whispered secrets, and the distant hoot of an owl echoed through the trees. Ríona walked deeper, her heart thrumming with anticipation. Finally, she reached a clearing she knew, a place where the ancient oaks formed a natural amphitheater, open to the vast, inky sky.

She settled on a bed of soft moss, gazing up at the celestial orb. It hung there, a pearlescent disc against the velvet black, seemingly larger and closer than ever before. A gentle breeze stirred, carrying with it a faint, ethereal sound. It was soft at first, like the sigh of the wind through reeds, then it grew, weaving intricate patterns of sound that seemed to dance in the air around her. It wasn’t a tune she recognized, yet it felt intimately familiar, a melody that resonated deep within her spirit.

The Whistling Moon’s song filled the clearing, a symphony of gentle hums and clear, pure notes. It spoke of journeys across starlit skies, of quiet moments of joy, and of the enduring beauty of the world. Ríona closed her eyes, letting the sound wash over her, feeling a sense of peace she had never known. When the last note faded, leaving only the quiet hum of the night, Ríona opened her eyes. The moon still shone, perhaps a little less brightly now, as if having poured its heart out in its song.

She returned to her cottage a changed girl. The Whistling Moon had not only sung to her, it had sung through her, leaving an echo of its magic in her heart. From that day on, Ríona carried a quiet knowing, a gentle wisdom that seemed to hum just beneath the surface. And sometimes, when the moon was full and bright, if you listened very carefully in the Whispering Woods, you could still hear a faint, beautiful melody, a reminder of the night the Whistling Moon sang its song to a curious young girl named Ríona.


The Silence of the Whistling Moon.

The Silence of the Whispering Woods

 

Years had woven themselves into Ríona’s life since she first heard the moon’s song. She was no longer the wide-eyed girl, but a young woman whose presence brought a quiet stability to the village. Her eyes, still the color of forest moss, held the steady, unchanging rhythm she had learned.

Then came the year of the Silence.

It began on the night of the full Harvest Moon—the very night when the Whistling Moon always poured its melody down upon the earth. The sky was clear, the orb hung low and vast, yet no song came. Not a whisper, not a hum, only a dense, unnatural quiet. It was the absence of sound that felt louder than any storm.

The villagers stirred with immediate dread. Old Man Tiber, now frail and trembling, muttered, “The bond is broken. The moon has turned its face from us.”

And indeed, the earth seemed to follow. Within a week, the apples on the high branches shriveled. The spring-fed stream, usually a rushing source of life, shrank to a sluggish trickle. Fear, cold and sharp, replaced the harmony Ríona had helped maintain. The villagers, desperate, looked to her, but their eyes held a new doubt. Was her wisdom a blessing, or had she somehow angered the celestial muse?

Ríona felt the silence deepest of all. It was not just outside; it was within her, a hollow echo where the moon’s rhythm once resonated. Her inner compass was spinning wildly. She knew then that her quiet knowing was not about hearing the song, but about understanding the silence.

She dressed in her plainest cloak and carried only a simple wooden staff. She knew she couldn’t wait for the sound to return; she had to find out where it had gone. She walked past the borders of the village and plunged into the deepest part of the Whispering Woods, a region known as the Gloomwood, where the trees grew so thick the sun rarely touched the ground.

The air here was heavy, almost resistant. After walking for hours, she came to a small, hidden pool. It was not stagnant, but its surface was eerily still, perfectly reflecting the massive moon above.

She looked up at the moon, then down at its mirrored image in the water. The lunar light felt cold, detached.

“Why the silence?” Ríona whispered, the sound absorbed instantly by the heavy air. “What have we forgotten this time?”

She knelt by the pool and noticed something odd. Beneath the reflected moon, at the very bottom of the pool, was a clump of dark, fibrous roots. They were not water plants; they looked like the aggressive, choking roots of the Gloomwood trees, seeking out the deepest water source. They had woven themselves into a dense, interlocking net, covering a small, smooth stone.

Ríona reached into the icy water and slowly, carefully, began to pull the roots away. They resisted her, slick and strong. She pulled and tugged, remembering the moon’s lesson: patience. She did not rip or tear, but worked them loose, strand by strand, until they finally broke free.

The small, smooth stone was then revealed. It was a piece of pale quartz, naturally shaped like a crescent moon.

As soon as the last root was severed, the air around the pool shimmered. The surface of the water rippled violently, and the reflected moon seemed to breathe.

Suddenly, the silence was shattered. But it wasn’t the sweet, ethereal whistle of the moon above. It was a low, powerful hum, emanating from the little quartz stone in her hand.

Ríona realized the truth: The Whistling Moon did not just sing to the world; it needed the world to receive and amplify its song. The little quartz crescent, a tiny piece of the earth that mirrored the moon, was the community’s receiver. The selfish, tangled roots of the Gloomwood, seeking all the water for themselves, had choked its ability to sing.

As she held the stone, the soft, bright light returned to the stream, and a gentle breeze, carrying the faintest echo of the moon’s true whistle, began to stir the leaves. The bounty would return, for the harmony was found not in a grand song, but in clearing the things that silence the small, essential voices.

Ríona returned to the village, not with a triumphant shout, but with the quiet knowing restored. She did not preach or explain the roots. She simply placed the clean quartz crescent on a stone altar near the now-reviving stream.

That night, the Whistling Moon sang again. And the villagers, hearing the melody, didn’t just feel joy; they felt a sudden, collective understanding: their harmony with the natural world depended not on the grand gestures of the heavens, but on their own vigilance in protecting the small, sacred things that keep the connection alive.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on October 3, 2025 in Uncategorized

 

Tags: , ,

I saw the Moon shining through my window last night

stories for children and adults

I saw the Moon shining through my window last night,

Shining so brightly; I got such a fright,

I pulled up my blanket and fell fast asleep,

Knowing God would protect me safely and keep.

***********

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on October 10, 2014 in Horror, Scary

 

Tags: ,