There once was a young woman who lived in the woods and had lived there all her life. From her budding as a tiny girl, she had opened and blossomed into maturity, living all alone except for her aged grandmother. It was now the early spring of her twenty-first year. She was walking in the woods at sunset when she heard something. A voice. She often walked in the woods at all hours, having no fear of this familiar land, and occasionally she thought she could hear half-words in the voices of birds, slanting along shafts of mellow light. Rhymes and riddles woven from nonsense sound. But this time it was different.
"Come to me," said the soft, sexless voice. "Come closer. Here. I'm over here."
"Come where?" she replied, vibrato in her throat.
"Here. Follow the scent and find me."
Tilting her face to the breeze, she tasted more than smelt it: a thick fur of sweetness on her tongue. It was the scent of flowers, heavier than lilac, richer than honeysuckle. This was odd since only the purest, most delicate of flowers, the snowdrops and crocuses, were blooming at this time of year, and they had little odour. Curious, she traced the scent through angled bars of blue shadow and golden sun. Over dry leaves and moss, under canted logs and around low brush-branches that seemed to tug at her skirt-hem and lift it up. Unheeding, she was drawn and she sought it out. The voice, the source.
There in a glade stood the flowering tree. One half of it crooked to the sky, and the other to the earth like a vast arm reaching down to embrace an empty space. Its downward-curving branch seemed for all the world like a hand yearning to be touched, a hand with a thousand fingers, each covered in soft pink blossom. She moved towards it without a moment's hesitation. The flowers were little cups of round petals with peaked white edges deepening to pink, their blushing centres crowned by fringes of thick gold pollen. She brushed first one, then another, circling until she was within the tree's curving grasp.