13: The Last Note on Terra

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The Last Note on Terra

VAULT RECORD

Status: Terminal reflection

Scope: Post‑Weaving Terra

Reliability: High, though surviving testimony is sparse

This record is not a chronicle of events. It is an accounting of what remained.

As Erdia drifted beyond Terra’s final horizon, the old world entered the dimming that had been gathering for millennia. The leygrid, once the pulse of a serene age, no longer failed cleanly. It guttered—surging, collapsing, and reforming without coherence. Skies bore the scars of the shattered lattice. Seasons lost their cadence. The world persisted, but without memory of how it had once sustained itself.

The peoples of Terra endured in fragments. Some clung to Mangalan‑aligned structures, finding temporary stability in systems that prized order over balance. Others survived in isolation, preserving remnants of older practice without the means to restore what had been lost. Conflict no longer defined the age. Attrition did.

Yet the record is careful to note that Terra did not end empty‑handed.

Fragments of its earliest truths survived the crossing. Muralglyphs were carried into Erdia’s vaults. Tablets etched with foundational harmonics were preserved. Warnings—often incomplete, sometimes misunderstood—were recorded by those few who still remembered the shape of the first wisdom. These remnants did not restore Terra. They became seedstones.

The chapter resists elegy. It does not mourn the world as it was. Instead, it frames Terra’s fall as cumulative rather than singular. No single mistake is identified. No moment of betrayal is elevated above others. The loss is attributed to forgetting—slow, distributed, and rarely acknowledged as it occurred.

Erdia is not presented as redemption. It is described as echo.

Shaped by Terra’s memory. Sharpened by its failures. Carried into the long night with the hope—not the certainty—of doing better. The rituals that awakened the Shrouded One, the labours that formed the new land, and the passage that cost so many lives are all recorded as acts of restraint rather than ambition.

The final lines of the record are unadorned. They do not instruct. They remind.

“Terra’s fall was not a single mistake, but a slow forgetting of balance, each small turning setting the next.”

“Harmony is a practice, not a guarantee.”

This is the last sanctioned entry concerning Terra itself. What follows, in later volumes, concerns Erdia—and whether memory proves sufficient.

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Mar 12, 2026 22:03

This was genuinely beautiful to read, the way Terra’s fall and Erdia’s beginning echo each other feels almost poetic. The line about harmony being a practice, not a guarantee really stayed with me. I’m curious though: when you created Terra’s history, did you already know how it would fall, or did that reveal itself as you wrote?

Mar 15, 2026 18:32 by Thomas B. Daubney

Thanks so much for your comment! this is much appreciated and im glad you've found some resonance in what you've read. I had an idea of how i wanted it to go, involving the introduction of an ancient sibling race, and the corruption of spirit, resulting in materialism, and a long decline into disharmony from Terra and what i would consider to be the natural state of sentient life, that is, coherent and in balance (the good and the bad). Certain things would reveal themselves as i wrote it though in fairness, and there is a lot that i would like to expand upon in future, perhaps in a Silmarillion style text! Thanks again for your message and i hope you enjoy more as it comes.

Curator under Vault Authority. Preserved beyond the Fall.
Mar 16, 2026 18:30

Sounds fascinating, especially the idea of harmony and decline shaping Terra’s history, if you ever chat about your ideas elsewhere (Discord or Insta maybe), I’d honestly love to follow along and hear more sometime.

Mar 24, 2026 15:22

The prose is haunting and elegiac, especially the way Terra’s slow decline and Erdia’s fragile hope are framed as a warning rather than a victory; I’m curious, do you plan for future stories to show whether Erdia truly learns from Terra’s mistakes or begins to repeat them in new ways?

Mar 24, 2026 20:58 by Thomas B. Daubney

Your curiosity is not misplaced. Watch this space!

Curator under Vault Authority. Preserved beyond the Fall.
Mar 25, 2026 13:50

That’s such an intriguing way to frame it it really reinforces the sense of Erdia standing on the edge of repeating Terra’s fate, and it makes me even more curious to see how that tension unfolds; I also wanted to ask if you’d be open to connecting with readers on another platform to discuss the story more in depth?

Mar 25, 2026 14:11 by Thomas B. Daubney

If you would like to discuss the story in more depth, or would like to recommend it to your readers for further discussion, please refer to the Discussion boards found on Erdia's homepage regarding The Cataclysm of Terra. Alternatively, please follow homepage links to our discord server for more exciting discussion with fellow readers and creators. Thankyou.

Curator under Vault Authority. Preserved beyond the Fall.
Mar 25, 2026 14:25

Your Discord View World isn’t opening at all.

Mar 28, 2026 15:33

The atmosphere you’ve built feels intense and cinematic, like every moment carries weight and consequence, and it really keeps me hooked, I was wondering, how did you come up with the central catastrophe, and did it evolve a lot from your original idea?

Mar 28, 2026 15:48 by Thomas B. Daubney

It grew out of a combination of ideas rather than a single moment of inspiration. At the core was the concept of an ancient brother-sister civilisation whose influence lingered long after their fall. A lot of that was shaped by myths i've always been drawn to - Atlantis, mars, and the idea of lost worlds whose mistakes echo forward in time.   From there, the catastrophe became less about a sudden apocalypse and more about a slow corruption of what Terra once was. I wanted the worlds "natural state" to feel fundamentally different before the fall - more harmonious, more whole - and for its unravelling to feel inevitable rather than abrupt.   That ties into a broader theme i wanted to explore: the sense that, in our own world, we've drifted away from certain natural potentials for balance and connection. Terra's cataclysm evolved as a way to externalise that idea, letting the world itself bear the consequences of that loss.

Curator under Vault Authority. Preserved beyond the Fall.
Mar 28, 2026 17:08

i really loved the way you explained it, especially how the slow corruption instead of a sudden destruction makes everything feel so much more haunting and real, it genuinely lingered with me after reading and the whole idea of Terra’s natural state being more whole and harmonious is so interesting, i was wondering, did you always plan for it to lean into that theme or did it develop more as you built the world? also, if i ever have more thoughts or questions, would you be comfortable talking on discord or instagram? it might be a bit easier to chat there ^^

Mar 28, 2026 17:17 by Thomas B. Daubney

Thankyou for your comment. I appreciate how this has made you feel. If you would like further discussion via discord, please feel free to follow the Invite Link's to the Vault Repository Discord which can be found on Erdia's homepage. Kindest Regards.

Curator under Vault Authority. Preserved beyond the Fall.
Mar 30, 2026 15:36

can you add me on discord florabell90 cant find your discord pls dont mind