ÀÊÒÓÀËÜÍÛÅ ÒÅÌÛ:
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 Àâòîð
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 Òåìà: Adobe Audition 1.5  (Ïðîñìîòðåíî 1747 ðàç)
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Ïîêàçàòü ïîñëåäíèõ êîììåíòàðèåâ ê ñîîáùåíèÿì â òåìå 
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Ôîðóì ôàíîâ Prodigy  | Ðàçíîå  | Hard & Soft (Ìîäåðàòîð: ch.a.sh)
A Walk In The Clouds -
He realized Clara was right. The clouds were a reservoir of the lost.
He headed back to the village, no longer walking away from the clouds, but waiting for the next time they decided to descend.
He looked down at his hands. They were still the hands of a stonemason, but tucked into his palm was a small, perfectly round pebble—not made of granite or flint, but of a white, translucent stone that felt as light as air. A Walk In The Clouds
Elias tried to speak, but his throat was full of the heavy, cold mist. He reached out a calloused hand, his fingers trembling. As he touched her shoulder, the cloud beneath them began to thin. The weight of the world—the gravity he had lived by for fifty years—started to pull at his boots. "I can't stay, can I?" he managed to whisper.
Clara turned, her eyes bright with the light of a thousand suns. "You have more stones to lay, Papa. But now you know where the path leads when the work is done." She blew a breath of mist into his face. He realized Clara was right
Finally, he reached a clearing in the vapor. Standing there was a small figure, her back to him, staring out at a horizon where the sun was beginning to burn through the haze, turning the white world into a sea of liquid gold.
As he moved further from the cliff, the world grew impossibly quiet. The sound of his own heartbeat became a rhythmic drum. Then, the clouds began to change. They didn't just swirl; they sculpted. He looked down at his hands
Elias was a man of the earth—a stonemason whose hands were mapped with the scars of granite and flint. He believed in things that had weight. But his daughter, Clara, was different. Before the fever took her, she used to sit on the edge of the precipice, swinging her legs over a drop of four thousand feet, and whisper, "The clouds aren’t just steam, Papa. They’re memories that forgot who they belonged to." | |
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