Mist Over Ashen Fields

The dead never truly left the Petrivian Plains. They clung to the air—sometimes as whispers, sometimes as the metallic tang that stuck to your tongue after a storm. Ilan knew it all too well. He had walked these fields before as a medic, patching up soldiers who believed their cause was just. Now, in the uneasy silence after war, he returned alone to tend wounds no bandage could cover.

Above him, ragged banners still fluttered from half-buried drones and shattered exosuits. The horizon was painted with spectral blue light as dusk pressed down. Ilan’s breath rasped in his mask; the air was thick with old toxins and memory. In his battered pack, he carried what little comfort survived: rations, a battered holobook of lullabies, and a compact device he’d found in an abandoned nursery bunker—the 3-in-1 cool mist humidifier.

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He set up camp beneath a twisted steel girder that once marked the edge of the hospital tent. The humidifier’s reservoir filled with filtered water from his canteen; he set it on low. Almost instantly, gentle vapor spilled out, dissolving the dry sting in his throat and softening the ache in his chest. With each breath, the ghosts felt farther away—less hostile, more like old friends waiting for closure.

That night, as Ilan ate protein bread by moonlight, he heard footsteps crunching through ash. A child’s silhouette emerged: Jin, barely ten years old and draped in her mother’s uniform jacket. She had survived on her own since the ceasefire—sharp-witted but shivering from lingering chemical burns.

“Who are you?” she demanded, though her voice wavered.

“Someone who remembers,” Ilan answered quietly. “I can help.”

He guided Jin into his makeshift shelter. She coughed—a dry sound that echoed what he heard from so many others before her. Ilan gestured to the humidifier as its soft light rotated slowly through calming blues and greens. “Breathe near this,” he said gently. “It’ll make it easier.”

Jin eyed it suspiciously but sat close, huddling against her knees. After a few minutes, her cough subsided; she drew deeper breaths than she had in days. The vapor softened the chemical-laced air, giving her lungs a reprieve.

“Why do you still come here?” she asked at last.

Ilan thought of justice—the kind promised by commanders and politicians—and injustice—the kind suffered by those who never got their say. “To remember what was lost,” he replied. “And maybe to find something worth saving.”

Later that night, a different sort of visitor appeared. Not flesh and blood: a flickering figure composed of fractured light—the digital ghost of Captain Ravel, once Ilan’s commanding officer.

“Ilan,” the projection rasped through broken speakers embedded in a helmet lost to time. “You swore an oath.”

“To heal,” Ilan whispered back, anger tightening his jaw.

“And yet you walk these fields where justice was denied.”

Justice—Ravel’s version—had sent unready soldiers into slaughter; justice had overlooked Jin’s family when they called for evacuation. Injustice had bled into every inch of this ground.

Jin stirred at Ravel’s voice and clutched Ilan’s arm.

“Not all ghosts want revenge,” Ilan told her softly. He turned back to Ravel’s specter. “You’re wrong if you think nothing good can grow here.”

He reached into his kit for a small vial of lavender oil—the last remnant from an aid drop years ago—and added two drops to the humidifier’s diffuser tray. The vapor shifted: now it carried gentle scent alongside moisture and light.

“Here,” Ilan said quietly to both living child and digital phantom alike, “we make space for peace.”

The ghost shimmered uncertainly at the edge of camp before flickering out altogether.

Over days that blurred together like rain on old glass, more survivors wandered into Ilan’s circle—a limping drone tech with haunted eyes; an old nurse who carried field reports etched on synth-paper; even an enemy scout whose only crime was following orders too late to matter. For each one, Ilan offered water and food—but always first he pointed them toward the humidifier’s gentle plume.

It became more than a machine; it was ritual and refuge—a place where breathing grew easier and memories hurt less under shifting lights.

When arguments flared over guilt and forgiveness—when justice seemed impossible amid so much ruin—Ilan would refill the reservoir or switch scents in the diffuser: chamomile for nightmares, peppermint for headaches wrought by old gas attacks. The color-shifting nightlight became their signal of safety on sleepless nights.

The battlefield remained haunted—but now its ghosts were met not with fear or anger but with quiet resolve: to remember rightly, to comfort those who suffered most unjustly.

In time, Jin learned to sleep without flinching at every distant echo; she helped repair drones for other survivors and sang lullabies beneath pastel lights cast by the humble machine at camp’s heart.

Justice wasn’t delivered by verdicts or retribution here—it came with each shared breath made easier by mist and memory; with each small act of care amid wreckage that refused easy answers.

One morning as dawn broke over ashen fields still heavy with loss but lighter than before, Ilan packed up his things—the humidifier last—and walked on toward whatever peace could be built from injustice endured together.

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