
A myth made intimate.
Because the wild still speaks.
A memory of the future. A signal from the past.
What do we remember when the sky changes?
Set in a nearly timeless wilderness—where silence teaches, animals watch, and the land is still alive—Elouise follows a father and his two daughters living in sacred rhythm with the earth.
Their days are shaped by ritual: feeding the wildlife, tending the fire, collecting water, tracking the forest, and creating through voice, art, and stillness. The father is loving and battle-forged—raising his daughters through presence, not rules. To him they are not simply children, but carriers of signal: instinct, lineage, and something older than memory.
Then one daughter begins to draw a comet she has never seen.
What follows is a shift felt before it is understood.
Ancient myths whisper of a long white-tailed comet that marked past endings—and beginnings. The forest grows uneasy. The animals move differently. The lake deepens into something aware. Something is returning.
As winter tightens and the veil between now and long-ago thins, the family moves through firelit nights, quiet hunts, lake rituals, and the relentless beauty of survival—each moment threaded with love, skill, and the knowledge that legacy is not what you leave behind.
It is what you raise in front of you.
Prehistoric Europe — Younger Dryas
~12,000 years ago, just before the ice remembered the fire.
The Savage / Hunter / Teacher
Belongs to the wild, not above it.
Elder Daughter / The Future Matriarch
The future matriarch with quiet fire.
Younger Daughter / The Wild Child
The wild child who remembers before remembering.
Bond
Their bond is the real protagonist.


