Brisa is a Pixie with silver-gray hair gathered in two soft pigtails, with two tiny flowers peeking out like little secrets. Her green eyes — large, deep — are the kind that, on such a small face, surprise you with everything they convey. Her violet little outfit wraps her completely while her small hands meet near her face, as if she were whispering something to herself.
She isn't like the others. Gray hair on someone so small isn't old age — it's wisdom that arrived ahead of time. Like those little girls who say things that leave you speechless because you can't understand how someone so small can know that.
Brisa is the Pixie of innocent wisdom.
The kind that doesn't come from books or hard experiences. It comes from a cleaner place: the pure intuition of someone who hasn't yet learned to distrust what they feel. The thing children have and adults lose — the ability to see things as they are, without filters, without excuses, without complicating them.
Who is Brisa looking for?
For the one who thinks too much and feels too little. For the one who got so tangled in logic that she lost her instinct. For the one who needs to return to what is simple: listen to what the body says, trust the first impression, stop searching for explanations for everything.
Brisa doesn't wait around. When she leaves, she's gone forever.
Are you going to let go of the answer you already had?
"The ones who know the most are the ones who say the least."