Elie walks through a lavender field.
What begins as a simple crossing gradually becomes a deep relationship with the living world. Wind, light, ground, stone, and time itself cease to be mere scenery and become active presences. Nothing rushes. Everything finds its measure.
As the chapters unfold, the field undulates, remembers, and responds. Light learns how to enter without forcing. The wind finds its right intensity. Subtle amethyst shimmers appear - not as spectacular miracles, but as quiet confirmations. Each movement leaves an invisible trace. Each shiver transforms the relationship.
Elie does not seek to conquer or possess. He learns to walk without taking, to look without grasping, to inhabit the moment without freezing it. Step by step, presence deepens. Slowness becomes a form of clarity.
As time expands, as joy arises and settles, as calm grows vibrant, a simple truth emerges: beauty does not need to be possessed in order to be real.
This is a sensory and contemplative narrative, outside classical plot structures.
A slow crossing of the living world.
An invitation to be present - simply.