Topical matters

Sircom | Size

Sircom | Size

In the village of Thornwell, there was a saying: “A tree’s worth is its sircom size.” The old word sircom meant the full girth of a living thing, measured not in feet but in stories.

But a merchant came, offering gold for the ancient wood. “Size means lumber,” he laughed. “More boards, more coins.”

Elara knelt and pressed her ear to the bark. “Its sircom size,” she said softly, “is the circle of life it holds. Cut it, and you break the ring.” sircom size

Then the ground trembled. From the oak’s full circumference, roots rose like gentle arms, wrapping the merchant in a cocoon of ivy until he agreed to leave. The village cheered.

“The sircom size has grown,” whispered the oak’s bark, rough and wise. “And so have you.” In the village of Thornwell, there was a

Elara refused. That night, she walked the oak’s full sircom — three hundred paces of moss, roots, and hidden hollows where foxes raised their young. She measured not with a rope but with her heartbeat: one hundred for the nests, one hundred for the shade over the well, one hundred for the names of lovers carved into its skin.

From that day, “sircom size” became their word for a different measure — not how big something is, but how much it holds together. If you meant something else, just let me know! “More boards, more coins

The merchant returned with axes. “Prove its worth,” he sneered.

Young Elara was the Keeper of the Grove. Each spring, she wrapped her arms around the great elder oak, trying to touch her fingertips. The first year, she fell short by a handspan. The second, by three fingers. On the tenth spring, her fingers finally met.

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