The Second Light
From that night on, Mune walked the lunar path alone, but never lonely. He learned to polish the craters until they glowed like old silver. He learned to wax and wane the Moon according to the grief and joy of the earth below. He even learned to smile at the Sun when they passed—once every eclipse—two brothers of different fire. Mune The Guardian of the Moon
The Moon answered not with words, but with a memory. Before the Sun, before the first Guardian, there was only dark. And the dark was not evil—it was patient. Waiting for a light that could hold silence without breaking it. The Second Light From that night on, Mune
He chased the Moon through the constellations, scraping his knees on the rings of Saturn, catching his breath in the hollow of Orion’s belt. When he finally caught it—cradling it against his chest like a wounded bird—he noticed something strange. The Moon had changed. One of its ancient scars had cracked open, and from inside, a soft new light was bleeding out: silver, trembling, alive. He even learned to smile at the Sun
For the dark, he knew now, was not the enemy of light. It was the place where light learned to rest.