Before the Felling of Worldspine, there were only the Tree Elves. A unified people, neither wood nor shimmer, but something in between — their society built around the rhythms of the great Archtree and the jungle that grew in its shadow. They migrated up and down the living trunk with the seasons, their lives inseparable from its cycles. They were one people, and the distinction between canopy and root had no meaning beyond direction.
They are gone now, as a unified people, in the way that things go when the single thing that held them together is destroyed. What remains are their descendants: the Syralic above, shaped by sky and sun and exposure; the Shimmer below, shaped by something stranger than simple darkness. The Sylvaniar themselves persist only in the genealogies, in certain shared gestures and naming traditions that neither descendent culture fully understands, and in the silence that surrounds the question of what happened to Worldspine.
Worldspine did not fall quietly, alone in the forest. It was felled. No one speaks of how it happened. No bards sing songs to tell the tale. No myths dare to name the hand that wielded the axe, or whatever force brought the great tree low. The Wood and Shimmer Elves know only this: one day, the tree stood. The next, it was a stump.
There are whispers. Some say a giant came in the night, its axe gleaming with unnatural light, and struck the tree with a single impossible blow. Others claim it was no giant at all, but something far worse — something that left no footprints, no trace, only the stump's silence. Some even dare to suggest it was no outsider, but a betrayal from within: a secret so terrible it was buried within the roots and has not been spoken of since.
But no one knows for certain. And no one speaks of it. The silence is not ignorance — it is a choice, maintained generation after generation, by a people who understand instinctively that whatever answer exists is one they may not be equipped to survive.
When Worldspine fell, the Tree Elves were suddenly, violently separated. Those in the canopy found themselves stranded above a severed world — and they adapted outward, toward the sky. Their colors grew bolder, their bodies hardening to sun and wind, their patterns sharpening into the vivid symmetries of the modern Wood Elves. Cut off from below, they grieved as people grieve when something is lost too suddenly to be processed: by moving forward, by not looking down.
Those trapped in the roots underwent a transformation far stranger than mere adaptation. The roots of Worldspine did not fossilize like the rest of the stump — they opalized. Perhaps it was residual magic seeping into the wood; perhaps the echo of a god's will, or an unattended ritual at the moment of disaster; perhaps something older sleeping in the veins of the world, dreaming of a wound to fill. Whatever the cause, those Tree Elves did not merely grow pale from lack of light. They absorbed something.
Their skin became translucent, their veins glowing with the same iridescence as the opalized roots. Their eyes took on the luminous quality of moonstones. Their hair grew fine and brittle, like spun glass. Some began growing wings — delicate, iridescent, resembling the wings of luna moths or dragonflies. They became the Shimmer, not just through time and trauma, but through whatever was sleeping in the dark and found, in their transformation, something it recognized.
When the Wood Elves finally reestablished contact with their kin below, they found the Shimmer changed — beautiful, fragile, and glowing like living jewels. They did not ask what had happened. They did not need to. The truth was in the way the Shimmer moved; in the way their eyes caught the light; in the way their voices carried the piercing quality of singing crystal. The secret remained buried in the roots. The Wood Elves above chose not to dig for it.
The protection the Syralic now offer the Shimmer is not purely duty. It is atonement. It is fear. It is the unspoken knowledge that whatever felled Worldspine may still exist somewhere, and that the Shimmer — transformed, iridescent, vulnerable — are the most visible reminder of what happened when the Tree Elves were left unguarded for even a moment.
And so they keep their secret, and in doing so, keep each other safe. The Sylvaniar are gone. But the bond they carried — between those who climbed toward the light and those who descended into the dark — has not broken. It has simply changed form, the way all things change when the structure holding them upright is suddenly, inexplicably, no longer there.