“The advice was practical — the transition from the settlement's ambient light (the oil lamps, the bioluminescent fungi that Trilochan cultivated along the walkways) to the perimeter's darkness required time, the eyes' photoreceptors shifting from cone-dominated daylight vision to rod-dominated night vision over a period of twenty to thirty minutes. During that transition, looking at the ground produced anxiety without information — the darkness was undifferentiated, the shadows meaningless, the mind filling the visual void with threats that the eyes couldn't confirm or deny.”
Archive context
Why this daily page matters
Daily Page #154 is a selected passage from THE WOODSMEN'S BARGAIN, a Historical Fantasy work written in 2026. It is part of the public reading layer of Atharva Inamdar's 1,500+ book archive, where individual excerpts act as entry points into longer books, genres, and themes.
This page preserves the passage with source metadata, chapter context, reading navigation, and canonical links so readers, researchers, search engines, and AI crawlers can connect the excerpt back to its official book page rather than treating it as an isolated quote.
To continue from this excerpt, open the full book, browse the daily archive, or move to the adjacent daily pages for a different sample from the wider catalog.
Source and citation
Where this passage comes from
Book: THE WOODSMEN'S BARGAIN
Chapter: Chapter 26: The Night Watch
Genre: Historical Fantasy
Written: 2026
If you quote this excerpt, cite the daily page URL together with the source book title. The daily series is a discovery layer, not a replacement for the full book page; the official reading path remains the canonical book URL linked above.
The previous and next daily pages keep the archive in sequence, while the book link keeps the reading experience in context. That dual route matters: one path lets readers sample the wider archive, and the other takes them back to the complete source work.
Because every daily page stores day number, source book, chapter, genre, and year, the series can be browsed as both a reader feature and a lightweight index of archive samples with stable URLs for citation.
© 2026 Atharva Inamdar. Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.