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Love with the Bitterness of Wormwood

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LOVE WITH THE BITTERNESS OF WORMWOOD
Their love didnt smell of roses or honey, but of dusty country lanes and crushed stems of wild wormwood. In the village, folk whispered, If they come together, the world will tumble; if they part, the woods will burn.
Mary was a healer; her family had tended wounds and brewed remedies for generations. She knew the murmur of every herb and could soothe injuries that clung stubbornly. Her palms were always gentle, carrying the scent of thyme.
Edward, on the other hand, was an outsider. A sorcerer whose power sprang not from the whisper of earth but from sharp commands to the wind and rain. His magic was as incisive as a blade and as cold as water pulled from a winter well.
They crossed paths on a foggy evening, hunting for the same thing: witchs root, blossoming only once every ten years.
Leave it be, Marys voice sliced through the stillness. It isnt for greedy hands like yours, warlock. The earth offers it for healing, not for your shadows.
Healing is just a delay, healer, Edward replied, smirking without turning. I want to see things as they truly are.
They never became enemies, but they could not be friends either. Something greater than sense drew them together. Theirs was a love of contest, an endless struggle between nurture and command.
Mary would bring him wild honey and infusions for sleepless nights when his magic threatened to consume him from within.
Edward left rare stones at her doorstep jewels with trapped starlight so she wouldn’t be lost in the long winter dark.
Yet the bitterness of wormwood was ever near. Mary saw Edward draw his strength from emptiness, and it frightened her. Edward was frustrated by her gentleness, thinking she wasted her gift on thankless villagers.
Then illness swept through the village, sparing no favourites.
Mary spent herself, drawing fevers into her own veins, while Edward for the first time was afraid. Not for the world, but for her.
To save her, he did what he despised most: he surrendered his power to the land so it might restore the exhausted healer.
When Mary opened her eyes, Edward stood by the window. For the first time, silver streaked his hair, and the fire no longer danced in his hands.
Why? she whispered.
Wormwood is bitter, Mary, he answered, still facing away. But without its bitterness, any sweetness is nothing more than dust. I chose you over eternity.
They remained together at the edge of the woods. She continued to heal, and he learned to hear the secrets of the herbs he once silenced. Their love stayed rough, thorny, and dry as the scent of wormwood at sunset. Yet neither would exchange its bite for the sweetest honey in England.
They moved to a rambling cottage on the boundary of Black Hollow that odd patch where neither woodsmen nor village gossips dared tread.
Edward, unable to command lightning any longer, discovered a gift for sensing metal. He became a blacksmith; not an ordinary one he forged knives that never dulled and horseshoes that brought luck. Each strike of his hammer echoed his former fury, transformed into creation. This became his purpose.
Mary cultivated a treasure of a garden, with poisonous monkshood growing beside healing sage. She was no longer wary of Edwards darkness, knowing that the richest earth is always black.
Their love never turned saccharine. It was the everyday work of two strong characters, grinding against each other like millstones of granite.
Sometimes Edward, out of habit, tried to bend circumstances to his will. When drought threatened Marys garden, hed sit for hours on the threshold, fists clenched, determined to conjure even a drop of rain.
Let it go, Mary would gently say, placing her hand on his shoulder. The earth is no servant. Ask her, dont command.
I dont know how to ask, hed growl.
But by evening, they fetched water together from the distant spring, and in that, there was more magic than in any spell.
Shadows often visited their cottage: old pupils wanting Edward to return to the circle of magicians, or the sick whom Mary couldnt heal alone.
One night, Edwards old foe arrived a wizard shrouded in black.
He came to collect what Edward owed to magic. He demanded Marys voice in exchange for Edwards lost power.
Edward looked at his calloused blacksmiths hands and then at Mary, who was just then brewing wormwood tea. She didnt beg for protection; she only gazed at him with endless faith.
Power bought with the silence of the one you love isnt power its bondage, Edward said.
He did not reach for magic. He simply took his heavy blacksmiths hammer and stepped outside. Its said that night the woods shuddered not from spells but from the pure, human rage of a man defending his home. The shadow receded.
They grew old with grace. Marys hair turned white as hawthorn blossom, and Edwards beard became grey as cooling ashes.
When their time came, they didnt pass separately. They simply walked deep into the woods during wormwood bloom. Now, two trees stand on that spot: a mighty oak whose roots grip the iron ore below, and a wild willow entwined around its trunk.
And if a traveller plucks a leaf from that willow, hell taste the same bitterness the bitterness of true, undiluted love, stronger than any sorcery.

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