He rose from the dreams of children—
those who saw dragons in playgrounds,
who spun springs into soaring flight,
chipped paint into shimmering scales.
Tarnok, the emerald guardian,
watched over the Kingdom of Once,
where slides gleamed like moonlit streams,
and swings hummed with the wind’s low hymn.
He thrived on laughter,
on the pulse of racing feet,
on shrieks of joy
that set his metal wings quivering.
But silence crept in.
The kingdom withered, its colors dulled.
Vines coiled tight,
and Tarnok stilled, his smile crumbling to rust.
Years passed.
The bark chips grew cold.
The air forgot its shimmer.
Then—Arthur.
A boy with quiet eyes,
heart humming with wonder’s faint song,
seeking the ghost of forgotten games.
He climbed Tarnok,
blind to the myth,
drawn by a spark in the rusted frame.
His laugh broke the air.
And the world remembered.
Vines bloomed, heavy with color.
The swings stirred, creaking awake.
The slide burned like polished steel.
Tarnok rocked,
not from wind,
but from joy reborn.
And deep beneath the playground,
the Kingdom of Once stirred,
its heartbeat pulsing with Arthur’s laugh,
as Tarnok’s wings dreamed of flight.
Inspired by one of the many dilapidated playgrounds that we think are fit for the next generation.