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The passage forked ahead of them, splitting into two narrow corridors carved by ti itself. One ran smooth and straight, lined with faint veins of crystal that shimred with a pale light. The other seed darker, winding away like a secret whispered into the stone, almost daring them to follow.

Serelyth paused at the fork, her human form clothed in faint, silver radiance that always clung to her whenever she lingered too long away from her draconic self. "Two paths," she murmured softly, tilting her head. "Both lead deeper, but one hides more than it shows."

Lira felt the tug imdiately. Sothing unseen drew at her spirit, a sound just beneath the edges of hearing. It wasn’t the hum of stone or the faint drip of water echoing in the caverns—it was weeping. Soft, broken sobs tangled together, rising and falling like waves of grief echoing from centuries past.

Her chest tightened. "Do you hear that?"

Serelyth stilled. Her eyes glowed faintly as she focused. After a long pause, she nodded once. "Yes. Sorrow. Many voices, not one. Old... older than either of us can easily asure. The dark path holds them."

"Should we... go there?" Lira asked, her voice lower now, as though afraid to disturb the invisible lant. She swallowed against the dryness in her throat. "What if it’s a trap?"

Serelyth looked at her with a steadiness that never failed to ground her. "It may be. But it also may be truth. And sotis, truth wears the mask of danger. What do you wish to do?"

The sound of those voices pulled at Lira’s heart until it hurt. They weren’t hostile; they weren’t demanding. They sounded lost—like children in a storm, like mothers searching for their families, like n calling for warmth after a long march into death. Lira clenched her fists. "I... I think I have to see."

"Then we go." Serelyth offered no judgnt, only quiet resolve, stepping slightly behind her, allowing Lira to lead.

---

The path narrowed as they walked, the air growing colder with each step. Shadows pooled in the stone’s grooves, and the faint gleam of crystals faded until only the dim glow of Serelyth’s aura gave them guidance. The sobbing grew louder. At tis it sounded so near Lira thought she could reach out and brush the shoulder of soone unseen, yet when she stretched her hand, there was only air.

The tunnel widened abruptly into a vast hollow chamber. The ceiling arched high above, so high it vanished into darkness. The walls stretched outward, carved by centuries of dripping water into jagged, reaching shapes. And in that cavernous space... the souls drifted.

They appeared as pale silhouettes, their edges blurred, wavering like smoke in a breeze. So floated, others walked in slow, uneven circles. Their faces—if they could be called faces—shifted between clarity and obscurity: sotis sharp with human detail, other tis vague outlines of sorrow. Their eyes glimred faintly, pools of grief lit from within.

As the two living figures entered, the wailing shifted. Heads turned. Movents slowed. And then, as one, the souls began to draw nearer.

Lira froze, heart pounding in her chest. They weren’t attacking, but their weight pressed against her mind all the sa. It was like standing in the middle of a flood, trying to keep her feet while the water rushed around, tugging at every inch of her being.

They gathered close, their voices overlapping, rging into a sea of desperate pleas:

"Help us..."

"Guide us... please..."

"Cold... it’s so cold..."

"Food... I was hungry..."

"I never found my child..."

"Clothes... the wind cut through ..."

"Tell my mother... tell her I tried..."

Lira’s eyes stung as their cries pierced through her chest. She hugged her arms tightly against herself, trying to anchor against the swell of sorrow. She had faced illusions before, she had withstood whispers ant to break her resolve, but this—this wasn’t an illusion. These souls were real, broken remnants left behind.

She whispered, more to herself than anyone, "Should I... do sothing? Do I even have the right?"

Serelyth placed a hand gently on her shoulder. "That is for you to decide. Not every wound is yours to heal. But sotis... kindness can guide what lingers in darkness."

Lira breathed in slowly, steadying herself. Then she raised her voice, speaking directly to the gathering crowd. "What do you wish? What is it that holds you here?"

The souls surged forward, voices layering with yearning. They wanted warmth. They wanted food. They wanted to be rembered. So asked for trivial things—a cloak, a drink of water. Others begged for impossible reunions with loved ones long since gone.

Lira bit her lip. She couldn’t bring back the dead. She couldn’t rewrite history. But perhaps... she could do sothing.

Her hand reached instinctively to her spatial satchel. The little enchanted pouch had carried her through trials, always ready with what she needed. She hesitated, then began to pull things free.

First, a cloak—warm and thick, woven with protective runes. She unfolded it and held it out. A ghostly figure drifted forward, trembling hands reaching. When they brushed the fabric, the soul brightened, dissolving softly into motes of light that lifted upward and vanished.

The chamber grew a little lighter.

Encouraged, Lira pulled free a loaf of preserved bread. Another soul reached, weeping as they clutched it, and they too faded, leaving only a shimr of peace in the air.

Piece by piece, she gave. Fruits, bits of dried at, small flasks of water, an extra pair of shoes, even old trinkets she had collected along the way. Each offering wasn’t truly for physical need—the spirits could not eat or wear them in truth—but the gesture mattered. The recognition of their suffering, the validation of their forgotten desires.

As she worked, more and more souls brightened and passed on. The wailing lessened, replaced by sighs, murmurs of gratitude, and sotis even laughter, soft and fleeting, like echoes of lives once lived.

Lira’s eyes blurred with tears as she continued. She felt drained, but in a way that lifted her heart rather than hollowed it. Each soul that left felt like a knot untied, a burden set down.

Yet not all departed. So lingered, hesitant. Their desires weren’t for objects. They asked for words.

"Tell I mattered..."

"Tell I wasn’t forgotten..."

"Tell soone rembers my na..."

Lira’s throat tightened. She knelt among them, speaking gently, over and over:

"You mattered."

"You are rembered."

"You are not alone."

Her words were simple, but each soul that heard them brightened, their sorrow easing as they too turned away, dissolving into light.

Hours seed to pass, though ti in the chamber felt strange, as though each heartbeat stretched longer than it should. Finally, the cavern grew quiet. Only a few dim silhouettes remained, watching her silently. They did not ask for food, nor clothing, nor words. They simply looked at her, eyes shining faintly.

Lira t their gaze. "Do you wish sothing too?"

They shook their heads. Then, as though in unison, they bowed—deeply, reverently. Without a sound, they too faded, leaving the chamber empty.

---

Silence reigned. The weight of grief had lifted, replaced by a stillness that felt sacred. Lira’s body trembled with exhaustion, but her spirit glowed with sothing she couldn’t quite na.

Serelyth stepped forward, her presence like steady sunlight after storm. "You chose compassion," she said softly. "You gave them more than trinkets—you gave them peace. Few could have done what you just did."

Lira wiped her eyes with the back of her hand, laughing shakily. "I didn’t know if it was right. I just... I couldn’t turn away."

"And that," Serelyth replied, "is why you were the one to co here."

Lira glanced back at the chamber, at the faint glimrs of light still floating high like distant stars. "Do you think they’re free now?"

"Yes," Serelyth said with certainty. "Free to return to where they belong. And because of you, they left without regret."

Lira exhaled slowly, her shoulders loosening. The passage beyond the chamber now beckoned, an archway of stone leading deeper into the labyrinth.

She squared her stance, tightened the straps of her satchel, and turned to her companion. "Then let’s keep going."

Serelyth smiled, a glimr of pride in her eyes. "Onward, then. The labyrinth waits."

Together, they stepped forward, leaving behind the chamber that no longer wept.

As they crossed the threshold of the chamber and into the quieter stone passage beyond, Lira slowed. The air felt lighter here, no longer weighed down by the chorus of cries, yet her own chest carried a heaviness that did not fade so quickly.

"Let’s rest," she said softly. Her knees ached, and her arms felt drained as if she had been lifting weights all day. She pressed her back to the wall, sliding down until she sat on the cool stone floor. The chill seeped through her clothes, grounding her.

Serelyth knelt beside her, silent, her presence steady and unintrusive. She did not ask questions; she only let the silence exist.

Lira closed her eyes for a long breath. The image of the souls lingered—their pale forms, their trembling hands reaching toward simple comforts. Food. Warmth. Kind words. Recognition. She hugged her knees, resting her chin upon them, her mind restless.

Do all souls carry wishes? she wondered. Was every lingering spirit tethered by an unspoken desire, small or large, waiting to be acknowledged? Or was it only so, while others drifted because they were simply afraid to let go?

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