“When the island opens its heart, the seekers shall enter. Those who carry light will find shadow, and those who bear shadow will awaken the flame.” — From The Whispering Stone Codex

Renate and David worked near the bank, stacking stones in a circle. The air smelled of salty sweat on cotton, wet clay, and flinty stone.
David lifted another stone and set it in place in a bed of wet clay. “We’ll need it tight,” he said. “No gaps.”
Renate nodded. “The heat will escape otherwise.”
They worked quietly, the rhythm of their labor steady. The kiln took shape—low, wide, and solid. The clay they had gathered from the creek bank was thick and fine. Renate mixed it with water in a wooden trough, her hands moving slowly through the mud.
David watched her. “We’ll need a throw table,” he said.
She looked up. “For shaping?”
He nodded. “Something that spins smoothly. I can rig a wheel with the old bearings from the boat.”
Renate smiled. “And tools for cutting and inscribing.”
“I’ll make them from the scrap metal we found,” he said. “We have enough.”
She spread the clay along the stones. “We’ll need glaze too,” she said. “Something to make color.”
David scratched his head. “We don’t have much for that.”
Renate looked toward the grove. “Maybe something in the old casks.”
He frowned. “You think so?”
“There were unopened ones,” she said. “We never checked them all.”
David wiped his hands on his shorts. “Let’s look.”
They walked through the trees, the air cool under the canopy. The grove was quiet except for the rustling canopy of leaves. The rock mound stood as it always had, solid and still.
Renate knelt beside the stacked barrels. “These,” she said. “The small ones.”
David pried the lids off one by one with his knife until he came to one that was quite heavy. Inside were cloth bags filled with coins. He opened another bag.
Renate leaned close. “What is it?”
He smiled faintly. “Gold.”
She blinked. “Gold?”
He lifted a handful of coins. They were heavy and dull with age, stamped with Spanish markings. Beneath them were small ingots of gold and silver, wrapped in oilcloth.
Renate held one. “It’s beautiful.”
David nodded. “Payment for soldiers, maybe. Or trade.”
She looked at the coins. “We don’t want to melt these for glaze.”
He thought for a moment. “Gold and silver would make interesting jewelry. We can use this for trade on the other islands if we need to. Other than that, I have no idea what we need all this gold and silver for.”
Renate smiled. “It’s so strange to find all of that treasure and we can’t think of much to do with it.”
They sat in the dimly lit cave, the cask open beside them. The coins gleamed faintly in the filtered light.
David turned one over in his hand. “Strange to think of soldiers here,” he said.
Renate nodded. “They must have lived well for a time.”
He looked toward the mound. “And left it all behind.”
She smiled softly. “For us, no doubt.”
They placed the small cask of coins and ingots back behind the others and returned to the kiln site without finding anything usable for glaze. The creek shimmered in the afternoon light. David sat down beside the stones.
Renate mixed more clay, her hands moving with purpose. “We’ll finish the kiln today,” she said.
David nodded. “Then test it tomorrow.”
They worked until the sun dropped low. The kiln stood firm, its walls smooth and solid. The clay would dry in the heat, turning pale and hard.
Renate wiped her hands. “It’s good,” she said.
David looked at it. “It’ll hold.”
They sat on the creek bank, tired but content. The air was cool now, and the sound of the water was mesmerizing.
Renate looked at the kiln. “We’ll make cups first,” she said. “Then jars.”
David smiled. “And tiles for the hearth.”
She nodded. “And maybe a vase.”
He laughed softly. “You always think ahead.”
She smiled. “Someone has to.”
The light faded, and the first stars came out. The kiln stood silent beside the creek, waiting.
David looked at the sky. “We’ve done well,” he said.
Renate leaned against him. “We have.”
They sat like that for a long time, the sound of the creek and the whisper of the trees around them. The island was quiet, the air full of promise.
“Tomorrow, we can fire the kiln and see if it works,” David said. That night, they rested, the gold and silver safe in its fortress of stones, the future waiting in the glow of the setting sun.
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