🔊 Tap to feel the storm

“There are some who follow stars. But the true seekers? They chase the scent.”

Chapter I : The Sea That Calls

Top Notes: 

Log Date: Unknown. Ship caught in a storm. Compass gone silent.

It began with fire on the horizon. A sky cracked open by lightning, and incense rising like smoke from a forgotten prayer. The sea churned with unrest. You stood at the prow, wind ripping past your skin, salt biting at your lips. The scent was not a comfort. It was a challenge.

Not a calm sea, but a wild invitation.

This was no longer a voyage. It was a summoning.

Chapter II : The Sacred Hold

Log Date: Below Deck. Lanterns lit. Air thick.

Beneath the waves, where the storm cannot reach, lies the sacred hold. It is not a room, but a sanctum of rope, shadow, and scent. Oud rests here, sealed in brass, steeped in time. The scent rises gently warm, resinous, ancient as if remembering its own past.

No voices echo in this place, only the hum of wood and water. The air is thick with silence and devotion. This is where the journey was meant to deepen, not end.

Above deck, the wind shifts. The lanterns flicker. Footsteps scatter above.

And then the warning bells ring….

Chapter III : The Fracture

Log Date: Above Deck. Storm rising. No land in sight.

The sails tensed. The wind shifted. Then came a distant boom another ship, emerging from the mist, closing in fast.Voices shouted. Ropes snapped. The vessel shuddered as the hull splintered below. Barrels of oud, once sealed and sacred, cracked loose and rolled across the trembling deck.

The casks split open. The oud slipped into the sea wood soaked in memory, surrendering to the tide. Waves closed around it. Currents pulled it down.

No one remembers who struck the last match. Only that, as the ship was torn apart and swallowed whole, the oud began to sink slowly, silently into the deep. And there, beneath the surface, it started to circle.

Chapter IV : The Return

Log Date: Shoreline. Early dawn.

Ten years passed. The sea kept its silence. Then one morning, on a beach where no name remains, something drifted ashore.

A mysterious man found it first: a shard of wood, dark with salt and time. He picked it up. Sniffed. Then froze.

It didn’t smell like sea. It smelled like story. Now, it had returned.

He said nothing. Just closed his eyes, pressed the scent to his skin and let the waves tell it all.