Bedtime Stories

Willow’s Tower

Willow lived in a tall stone tower at the edge of a deep valley. The tower was covered in thorny vines that wrapped around the walls and windows, making it impossible for anyone to climb in or out. Willow had lived there for many years. She was kind, clever and full of dreams. Her hair was very long, falling all the way down the tower like a golden rope. She used her hair to pull up baskets of food and buckets of water from the ground below. But she wanted to see more than the tower. She longed to explore rivers, markets, mountains and fields of flowers.

One morning, Willow heard music floating through the valley. It was soft and sweet, like a bird singing in the rain. She leaned out the window and saw a young musician named Milo playing a wooden flute at the base of the tower. “Hello up there!” he called. Willow told him the vines kept her trapped. Milo examined the thick vines. They were too thorny to cut. He began to play a gentle tune. The vines seemed to hear the music and shifted slightly. Each day, Milo returned and played more songs about rivers, birds and open roads. Willow listened and sang along from her window. When she sang about freedom, the vines loosened even more.

One afternoon, Willow noticed the thorns folding down like sleeping claws. She tied her long hair around a hook inside the tower and carefully climbed down while Milo guided her. Her feet touched the grass for the first time in years. “The ground feels wonderful,” she said. Milo bowed. “Welcome to the world.” Willow touched the vines gently. “They weren’t evil,” she said. “They were lonely and scared.” She sang a soft song for them. Tiny white flowers bloomed along the tower walls and the thorns did not grow back.

Willow and Milo travelled together through the valley. They walked beside rivers and slept under stars. They visited villages where children danced to their songs. Willow learned to bake bread, ride a pony and read maps. Milo learned how clever Willow was from her years in the tower. She could fix a broken basket, predict the weather from the wind and comfort a crying child with a melody. One day, they discovered another tower with a boy trapped inside. The boy sat in his room looking sad. Willow and Milo knew what to do. Milo played his flute and Willow sang. The vines around the boy’s tower softened until he could climb out. He laughed and joined them.

Wherever Willow and Milo travelled, they helped people who felt trapped. Some were trapped by walls. Some were trapped by fear. Sometimes all they needed was a friend and a song. Eventually, Willow returned to her old tower. It was no longer a prison, but a garden covered in flowers with birds nesting in the vines. She turned it into a music school. Children came from many villages to learn songs about courage, kindness and open doors. Willow taught them that music can soften hard things—fear, sadness and even thorny vines.

From then on, Willow was not known as the girl in the tower. She was known as Willow of the Open Road. And wherever she went, she carried a song in her heart.

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