Eli stared, eyes wide. “I… I heard a song coming from the windows. It sounded… like a lullaby.”
Inside, however, the world was very different. Fiona Frost was not a name the townsfolk used lightly. She was a woman of indeterminate age—her silver hair always seemed to shimmer like newly fallen snow, and her eyes were the deep, clear blue of a winter lake. She wore a long, charcoal coat that brushed the floor, its cuffs embroidered with tiny, twinkling crystals that caught the light whenever she moved. shoplyfter fiona frost
Years later, when the children of Grayhaven grew old and the cobblestones were replaced with smooth stone, the sign of Shoplyfter still hung at the corner of Bramble and Willow. New generations would press their palms against the frosted glass, feeling the faint hum of the heart inside, and whisper: “Fiona Frost, keeper of stories, may we always find a light in the frost.” And somewhere beyond the veil of time, Fiona smiled, her laughter echoing like a gentle snowfall, knowing that the shop—and the magic it held—would never truly close its doors. Eli stared, eyes wide