•adowlark Village•
[Gale’s POV]
I landed in the mouth of another darkened alley, the impact on the cobblestones a soft, barely audible thud. I could feel Ovelia now—a sharp, specific point of distress, closer than she’d been. Yet the cold, hollow ache in my own chest, the echo of her loneliness, hadn’t faded; it was a constant, gnawing pressure. I let the invisibility cloak around my body dissipate to conserve mana, but kept my wings concealed. For safekeeping, I carefully tucked the sealed elental mana stone deep inside the soft stuffing of the fairy plush toy I still carried. The mundane act of securing it felt absurdly important, a tiny anchor of normalcy.
I took a step forward, intending to run the remaining distance. But as my foot landed, a violent, full-body tremor wracked . My legs turned to water. I stumbled, my grip on the stuffed toy faltering, and I almost dropped it. A profound, bone-deep weakness flooded my limbs, making them feel heavy as stone. My vision swam, the edges of the dark alley blurring and doubling. Then, a sharp, splitting pain erupted behind my eyes, driving into my skull like a hot spike. I gasped, staggering sideways. My free hand flew to my temple as I slumped back against the cold, rough stone of the alley wall, using it to hold myself upright.
The world didn’t just go dark; it dissolved into a chaotic storm of images.
Visions.
They slamd into my mind’s eye, jagged and without context. The flash of different masks. The glint of specialized blades, guns—flesh-hunter weapons. A cacophony of overlapping, desperate voices shouting orders, chanting spells, howling in rage. My own breath grew ragged and thin, as if the air itself had turned to syrup. The visions intensified: humans in robes forming ritual circles, witches channeling corrupt energy, werewolves fighting with feral desperation, elves with bows of light, and ancient, majestic fairies with wings of woven storms... all converging. And at the center of it all, a being of terrifying, devouring silence—a Thaumamorph—being bound, sealed away by their combined might. The images were like pages ripped from the oldest, most forbidden tos I’d ever glimpsed in my long exile.
I tried to suck in a breath, but my lungs refused to cooperate. The pressure in my head intensified. Another vision: a spear of pure, void-like darkness piercing a crimson sky. A waking. A roar that was the sound of the world breaking. Cities crumbling to dust, forests withering to ash, silence swallowing everything.
A pained groan escaped my lips. It felt like my mind was being split in two. Through the agony, a clear, authoritative female voice spoke, not in the alley, but directly into the heart of the vision. "You are still not ready."
As suddenly as it ca, the pressure vanished. The visions receded, leaving behind only a bone-deep exhaustion and a throbbing headache. My sight cleared, snapping back to the grimy alley, the distant festival lights, but my body felt like it had been drained of all mana. I pushed off the wall, my legs unsteady, and had to keep one hand braced against the cold wall to stay upright as I began to walk again, each step a monuntal effort.
What... what was all that? The question echoed in the hollow space the visions had left.
I didn’t understand the visions. I didn’t know who the woman’s voice belonged to. The implications were too vast, too horrifying to process. But one truth cut through the confusion, sharp and clear: none of it mattered right now. My only priority, the only thing that could anchor , was finding Ovelia. I forced my trembling legs to move, following the golden thread.
[Ovelia’s POV]
I hugged my own arms tightly, my fingernails digging into my sleeves. The festival’s joy was a taunting cacophony. I couldn’t think, couldn’t plan; the old, familiar terror of abandonnt was a fog smothering my mind. The panic was a living thing, whispering that I would never see Ace’s steady gaze, Ann’s protective presence, Ray’s easy smile, or Gale’s grumpy scowl again.
"Lady Firera," I called out ntally, my inner voice small and pleading in the vast silence of my own mind. "Please answer ."
There was no answer. Only the empty echo of my own terror.
Has she left too?
I looked down at my hands, and for a disorienting second, they seed smaller, childlike. The world around shimred and warped. The colorful festival stalls lted away, replaced by the familiar, grim wooden structures of Timberline Village. The festive air turned cold and heavy with scorn. The villagers were there, materializing from the shadows of my mory—their eyes, flat and hostile, staring at as if I were a stain on their world. So faces were twisted with fear, pointing, whispering the old accusations: Freak. Cursed. Monster.
Then my so-called family materialized from the crowd—"Natasha" with her cold eyes, "Lawrence" with his heavy fists, "Alessia" with her cruel, mocking laugh. Their laughter was not joyful; it was a cruel, sharp weapon. They pointed at , their fingers like daggers, their voices a chorus of contempt that I knew by heart. The years of loneliness and pain pressed in from all sides, suffocating .
But then, cutting through the phantom cacophony, a voice. Familiar. Steady. Faint, but unwavering.
"Be a strong princess who will help people in need, just like you helped us."
Chief Gareth’s words. The exact ones he’d spoken with his hand on my head, his eyes full of a love that understood sacrifice.
And my own voice answered it, filled with a determination I had truly felt: "Chief, I am going to be a princess, and soon a queen who is stronger and better than any other in this world. I will beco soone worthy of your faith."
The mory was a splash of cold water. The phantom village and its torntors wavered.
How can I be strong if I panic? If I let myself be scared just because I am alone in a crowd? The contradiction was stark, shaming. I promised. I vowed to be strong to protect the people who are important to . This... this helplessness is not who I am. This is not right.
Ace, Ann, Ray, and Gale would never just leave . The certainty of it was a warm ember in the cold pit of my stomach. They were my family. They were out there, right now, looking for . I didn’t need to run in a blind panic. I needed to be smart. I needed to wait, and make myself found.
Suddenly, the nightmare vision of Timberline dissolved, washed away in a wave of pure, calming white light. This serene, boundless space... I knew it.
"Finally, you realize that." Lady Firera’s voice washed over , a balm of imnse relief. She was here. She hadn’t abandoned .
I turned within the luminous space and saw her. She stood, regal and eternal, her gaze serious and direct, looking straight into the heart of .
"That’s cheating, Lady Firera," a new, unfamiliar female voice chid in from behind her. I couldn’t see the speaker’s face—she stood with her back to , partially shielded by Lady Firera’s form. But I saw a cascade of long, blonde hair, a shade mirroring my own.
"Lady Firera, I—" I began, wanting to explain, to apologize for my weakness.
But stopped when I saw a faint, genuine smile touch her lips. It was a smile of approval. Then, in a blink that was less a disappearance and more a gentle push, the white dinsion vanished.
The cacophony of the festival slamd back into my ears, and the sll of roasting nuts filled my nose. I was back on the crowded street. But the paralyzing, mind-numbing fear was gone. In its place was a shaky, thrumming, but determined resolve. My breathing evened out. I loosened my death-grip on my own arms.
"Hey, miss, you look awfully pale." The voice was oily, too close. A man with slicked-back black hair and unsettling green eyes was leering at . "Are you all alone here?" His smile didn’t reach his eyes; it was a predator’s grin.
"No," I said, my voice firr than I expected. I took a deliberate step back, creating space. "I’m waiting for soone."
He ignored the boundary. He closed the distance I had made and then so, his hand shooting out to grab my wrist in a tight, unpleasant grip. He yanked closer, his breath hot and sour against my ear as he whispered, "Let’s wait for them together. We can feel real good in a nice, warm bed while we wait."
The words, the violation of the grip, the foul intimacy of his breath—it cut through the last of my lingering hesitation.
My free hand moved on its own. It wasn’t a calculated strike; it was pure, instinctive rejection. My palm connected with his cheek in a sharp, loud crack that echoed surprisingly loudly in our little pocket of the crowd.
He stumbled back, his grip on my wrist breaking. His hand flew to his reddening cheek, his eyes wide with utter shock. The leer was completely wiped away, replaced by dumbfounded outrage.
I stared at my own stinging palm, my heart hamring against my ribs, but not with fear this ti. With a startling, electrifying rush of... agency.
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