In the seventh winter after the Dream Beneath the Mountain, the bells of the Rain Kingdom began to fail.
At first the failures appeared trivial.
Certain towers rang late. Others sounded tones no longer recognised in the older ceremonial books. In distant provinces entire villages ceased observing the Hours of Continuance altogether, claiming the bells no longer carried meaning.
The scholars of the lower courts dismissed this as fatigue among the provinces.
The merchants called it efficiency.
The governors called it adaptation.
But in the Hall of Ember Lamps, the Keeper said quietly:
“The weaving is loosening.”
Merrow heard this with unease.
For he had spent many years attempting to live within the revelations granted beneath the mountain. He had learned to endure instability without immediately fleeing toward false foundations. He had even come to understand that worlds survived not through metaphysical isolation, but through ongoing participation.
Yet some part of him still imagined that certain structures, once established, would continue of their own accord.
Now he began to suspect otherwise.
The first true disturbance came in the eastern districts.
There a boundary treaty nearly four centuries old lost recognition among three neighbouring cities after copies of the agreement were found to differ slightly in wording. The older ceremonial phrasing had gradually disappeared from common usage, and with it vanished the shared interpretation that had maintained peace between the regions.
Within weeks caravans halted.
Then guards appeared along the river crossings.
Then blood.
“It was only language,” said the provincial ministers in disbelief.
But the Listener answered:
“Yes. That is why entire kingdoms moved around it.”
Soon other failures emerged.
Debts once honoured became negotiable.
Marriage rites fragmented into incompatible forms.
Ancient songs preserving navigation routes were forgotten in coastal settlements, and ships vanished into the black reefs during winter fog.
One evening Merrow stood beside the high windows of the Hall while rain crossed the courtyards below like dissolving threads.
“I thought worlds were more stable than this,” he admitted.
The Keeper placed another branch of cedar upon the fire basin.
“No world has ever survived neglect indefinitely.”
Merrow frowned.
“But these institutions stood for centuries.”
“Yes,” said the Keeper. “Because generations carried them.”
The Listener looked up from her manuscripts.
“Continuity is not self-sustaining,” she said softly. “It is inherited participation.”
This disturbed Merrow more deeply than the old dream.
For the dream had merely threatened the independence of reality.
But this revealed its vulnerability.
Outside the kingdom, rumours spread of northern territories where calendars no longer aligned between cities, where laws altered faster than memory could stabilise them, and where entire populations had ceased trusting official names for things.
Merrow asked the Keeper:
“How can people live like that?”
The Keeper regarded him carefully.
“They cannot,” he said.
Silence settled heavily through the Hall.
The rain continued.
The lamps burned.
At length Merrow spoke again.
“So this is the responsibility.”
The Keeper nodded.
“Yes.”
“To maintain the world?”
The old man smiled faintly.
“No one maintains the world alone. That is precisely the point.”
Merrow became quiet.
For the first time he understood why the oldest rituals of the kingdom involved not belief, but repetition.
Why laws had to be spoken publicly.
Why vows required witnesses.
Why the dead were named aloud each winter.
Why stories were retold even when everyone already knew them.
The kingdom had never merely been preserving information.
It had been preserving continuity.
And continuity, he now understood, was not a substance hidden beneath the world.
It was an ongoing relational achievement.
The Listener closed her final manuscript for the evening.
“There is no stable world,” she said softly, “outside the practices that continuously stabilise it.”
Merrow looked toward the rain-dark glass.
Far beyond the Hall, bells continued sounding across the kingdom — some clear, some fractured, some already forgotten.
At last he asked the question that had followed him since the mountain dream years before:
“And what happens when too many people stop participating?”
Neither the Keeper nor the Listener answered immediately.
Only the fire spoke for a while.
Then the Keeper said quietly:
“Worlds do not vanish all at once.”
The Hall fell silent.
And in that silence Merrow finally understood that reality had never been a thing merely waiting to be observed correctly.
It was also something entrusted.
Outside, through rain and darkness, the distant bells continued attempting to remember the kingdom.