Saoirse froze. She crept to the window. Rain lashed the glass. Beyond the field, silhouetted against a crack of lightning, stood a hare—not running, but upright on its hind legs, ears flat against the wind. And it was singing . Not words, but a melody older than music. A melody of hunger and cold and the long dark before fire.
By dawn, the storm had passed. Saoirse sat on a standing stone—the same one the hare had claimed—and listened to the playback on her recorder. There was no voice but hers. No phantom melody. Just the wind and the creak of wet branches.
The hare bolted. But the tune remained—imprinted on the rain, tangled in the thorns of a blackthorn bush. Saoirse played along, her bow dancing across the strings like a possessed thing. For hours she chased the ghost-melody through the Burren, sliding on wet rock, losing her boot in a bog hole, laughing like a madwoman. The tune changed as she ran: now a lament, now a reel, now a single, sustained note that sounded like a dying star. celtic music album
Saoirse never saw the hare again. But every time she plays the album live, she leaves an empty chair on stage. "For the ghost," she tells the crowd.
Fin.
The Hare on the Standing Stone
Not because of marketing. Not because of TikTok. But because a nurse in Glasgow put on track three, "Limestone Lament," and felt the knot in her chest loosen for the first time since her mother died. Because a truck driver on the M6 heard "The Hare's Heartbeat" at 3 a.m. and pulled over to weep. Because a child in Boston, born deaf in one ear, pressed her good ear to the speaker and said, "Mom, it sounds like rain on a roof." Saoirse froze
They released it anyway, on a tiny run of 500 vinyl records.