They whispered knowing she was coming, before they saw her.
The town would catch the scent first, pink grapefruit and neroli slipping through the air like sunlight breaking over the ridge, cutting clean through dust and iron. All heads would turn toward the road. That was when Elera appeared, riding in slow and steady, the mountains holding the horizon behind her, her piebald mare Ginger sure-footed beneath her.
She was the Scent Bringer.
At her hip hung a weathered natural leather satchel. Inside, wrapped in worn calico, were small glass bottles sealed with cork, each one holding a carefully gathered scent, carried not for trade alone, but for purpose. She had learned which to offer and when. Wisdom like that came from distance.
She set up on the edge of town, where the noise thinned. From the satchel, she uncorked a bottle. Pink grapefruit flashed bright, followed by neroli’s clean bitterness, meant for beginnings, for those standing at a crossroads. Later came jasmine and violet, softened with a quiet hint of coconut, offered to those who spoke softly or not at all.
As evening settled and the mountains darkened into shadow, Elera laid out her tarot cards on a faded cloth. Another cork was eased free. Vetiver rose slow and dry, rooted as the land itself, with tonka bean warming the air like embers under ash. People leaned in closer then. Truth had a way of arriving when the ground felt steady.
She spoke gently, read carefully, and listened hardest of all. The scent shifted with the cards, settling into each person’s space as if it had been waiting for them.
By dawn, she was already gone.
Only the faint memory of warmth lingered, on skin, in thought, in the way the mountains looked a little closer than they had the night before. Far down the road, Elera rode on, corked bottles quiet in her satchel, carrying scent and wisdom from town to town, following the long western light.