Nobody in the village could agree on when the eggs first appeared.
One spring morning, the branches by the old footpath were bare, twisted, ordinary. By evening, they were full of colour. Fragile eggs hung from the thin limbs as though the tree had been quietly collecting secrets in the night. Some were patched with pieces of old maps. Others wore soft feathers in white and rust, like little hats placed there by invisible hands.
The children found them first.
Of course they did.
They came running with muddy shoes and loud questions, pointing at the eggs and daring one another to touch them. Their mothers called after them from the road, warning them not to break what they did not understand. The older people stood back and watched in silence, the way older people do when something strange arrives and feels too familiar at the same time.
By the third day, stories had already begun.
One man said the eggs belonged to travelling birds no one had seen in years.
Another said they were a prank made by artists from the city.
An old woman, who spoke only when she had something worth saying, looked at the branches for a long time and said, “No. Those are not eggs. Those are places.”
Everyone laughed a little, but not enough to be cruel.
“What kind of places?” one of the children asked.
“The ones people lose,” she said.
That was how the story took hold.
After that, people came quietly.
Not as crowds. One by one.
A teacher came at dusk and stood beneath the branches with her hands folded, staring at a pale egg wrapped in faded feathers. Inside its cracked pattern was the shape of a coastline she had not seen since girlhood. She had left that town years ago, promising herself she would return when life became less busy, less complicated, less expensive. Life, as it often does, had kept moving. She looked at the egg until her eyes filled, then went home without saying a word.
A boy came the next morning before school. He was small for his age and serious in the face, with the kind of quiet that makes adults think a child is shy when really he is carrying too much. He reached up to touch an egg lined with red feathers and music paper, and suddenly remembered his father singing in the kitchen before he got sick. The memory came back whole. The tune, the laughter, the tapping of a spoon against a mug. For the first time in months, the boy smiled without trying.
Then came Jenny.
She did not come because she believed the stories. Jen did not believe in magical trees, or signs, or strange gifts left by the night. She believed in work. In carrying on. In making peace with what was gone.
But she had seen the tree from a distance for days now, on her walk back from the market, and something about it unsettled her. Perhaps it was the eggs themselves, so delicate and certain among the crooked branches. Perhaps it was the way everyone who returned from the path wore the same expression. Not happy. Not sad. Just altered, somehow.
So she went.
The afternoon was warm. The branches moved in the wind with a quiet clicking sound, and the eggs turned softly on their ribbons. There were more than she expected. Dozens of them. Each one different. Each one holding fragments of somewhere else.
She stood beneath them, feeling foolish.
“I have not lost a place,” she said aloud, almost annoyed.
The wind answered by shifting one egg lower than the others.
It was small and uneven, covered in scraps of yellowed map and a few white feathers that looked as though they had been caught there by accident. Nothing about it seemed important. And yet Jenny could not stop looking at it.
She reached for it slowly.
The moment her fingers brushed its surface, she was no longer on the footpath.
She was eight years old again, standing in her mother’s garden just after rain. The ground was dark and fragrant. Her mother was kneeling in the soil, laughing because Jenny had planted the seedlings upside down. There was sun on the washing line, a cracked blue bucket by the wall, and the smell of mint crushed between small fingers. It was an ordinary afternoon. The kind no one writes down because it seems too small to matter.
But standing there beneath the strange tree, Jenny felt the force of it.
Not the garden itself.
Not even Mother.
But the version of herself who had once believed life would always have room for slow afternoons, for laughter without cause, for love that did not need to announce itself to be known.
When the memory loosened its hold, she was back beneath the branches with tears on her cheeks.
At last she understood.
The tree did not keep lost places.
It kept the parts of people that had been left behind inside them.
The places were only the doorway.
After that, Jenny returned often. Not every day. Only when the world became too sharp around the edges. She would stand beneath the branches and let the eggs sway above her like unanswered questions. Sometimes she touched one. Sometimes she did not need to.
And over time, the village changed.
Not in grand ways. There were no miracles. No sudden fortunes. No healings that made the newspapers.
But people became gentler with one another.
They paused more. They listened longer. They spoke of old homes, old songs, old selves, without embarrassment. It was as though the tree had reminded them that a person is not made only of what they are doing now, but also of what they have loved, lost, carried, and survived.
Years later, when the eggs finally began to disappear, no one panicked.
By then, the village understood.
The tree had not come to give them something new.
It had come to return what they had forgotten was theirs.