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She stood in a barren field beneath a darkened sky. The wind howled, carrying dust across cracked earth. The air reeked of smoke and ash.

And there—on her knees in the dirt—was the woman again. Herself, yet not herself. The sa face, the sa hair, but older, worn by grief. Tears streaked her cheeks as she pressed the glowing vial against the ground. Around her lay broken weapons, shattered stone, and shadows that whispered hungrily at the edges of the wasteland.

Lira’s heart raced. She could feel everything—the despair, the exhaustion, the bitter sting of failure.

"I couldn’t protect them," the woman whispered, though this ti Lira heard her voice clearly. "I had the Spirit’s guidance, and I failed. Everything crumbled... because I wasn’t strong enough. Because I hesitated."

Lira’s throat closed. She wanted to reach out, to comfort the woman, but her hands passed through like mist. She could only watch, helpless, as her past self—or whoever she had been—clutched the vial like a lifeline.

The woman’s voice cracked. "If soone finds this... if another finds this... rember. Strength alone is not enough. You must have patience. Humility. Perseverance. Or you will fail again."

The silver vial in the woman’s hands pulsed once, then dimd, its glow fading into the earth. She bowed her head, and the mory began to unravel, scattering into fragnts of silver light.

"No!" Lira cried, reaching out instinctively.

Her hand brushed against the fading shards—and suddenly she was back in the cavern, stumbling onto the bridge with a gasp.

...

The silver crystal hovered inches from her face now, glowing faintly. Then, as though satisfied, it drifted back into the air, resuming its slow orbit.

Lira collapsed to her knees, her chest heaving. Her palms were slick with sweat, and the vial around her neck glowed faintly brighter, resonating with what she had seen.

Serelyth crouched beside her, steadying her shoulders. "You saw."

"Yes," Lira whispered hoarsely. Her eyes burned with unshed tears. "She was ... or soone I was. She failed. She left a warning."

Serelyth’s gaze softened, though her tone remained steady. "Then heed it. Past lives carry weight, but they do not chain you. You are not dood to repeat what was. You are here because you are capable of more. The Spirit chose to guide you still."

Lira swallowed, trembling as the weight of the mory settled into her heart. She glanced once more at the drifting shard. It pulsed faintly, then dimd, as if it had given all it ant to.

She whispered a single word toward it: "Thank you."

And then she rose, clutching her vial, and continued across the bridge with Serelyth at her side.

The next chamber was smaller, almost humble after the vastness of the crystal-filled cavern. The ceiling arched low, the walls close enough that the glow of the silver vial illuminated every curve and ridge of stone. Here, no crystals drifted, no voices whispered—only the faint drip of water from sowhere above, steady as a heartbeat.

Lira sank down against the wall, the stone cool against her back. She unrolled one of her thick blankets from the satchel, spreading it across the uneven floor, then pulled another around her shoulders. Her body trembled with exhaustion, not just from walking but from the weight of what she had seen.

Serelyth, still in her human form, lowered herself beside her. She didn’t speak at first, only settled close enough that the warmth of her body pressed gently against Lira’s side. After a mont’s hesitation, she let Lira draw part of the blanket around her as well, the fabric softening the cavern’s chill.

For a while, they simply sat there—two figures wrapped in shared warmth, the silence broken only by the drip of water and the slow rhythm of their breaths. Lira tilted her head until it rested lightly against Serelyth’s shoulder, letting the comfort of contact soothe the tight ache in her chest.

Finally, Lira whispered, her voice hoarse:

"Serelyth... all those souls. The sparks in the stream, the crystals... even the chamber of the lost. They’re all fragnts of people who were once alive, once dreaming. It feels... overwhelming. Like every corner of this place rembers pain, longing, unfinished stories."

Serelyth exhaled softly, a sound almost like a sigh. "The labyrinth is not rely stone. It is a vessel of mory. Every soul that lingered here, every echo of a wish unfulfilled, every failure and triumph—they sink into the stone. And when the conditions are right, they manifest. So as voices. So as sparks. So as crystals."

Lira closed her eyes. "They seed so real. The lost ones, when they asked for food, for clothing... When I gave it to them, I saw joy. As if that was enough to let them move on. But it makes wonder..." She paused, frowning. "Does every soul carry a wish? Sothing left undone? Sothing so strong it clings even after death?"

Serelyth was quiet for a long while, her hand absently resting atop Lira’s blanket-wrapped knee. Then she said, slowly:

"Most souls... yes. Few leave the world without sothing unspoken. A word not said. A love not fulfilled. A dream cut short. These fragnts beco burdens, threads of longing that linger. In ti, so fade, but others remain for centuries, until they are t with understanding—or at least acknowledgnt."

Lira’s brow furrowed. "That feels... so heavy. To think that people live, die, and still carry such longing. Is that all life is? Struggling, wishing, and then leaving unfinished pieces behind?"

Serelyth turned her head slightly, enough to et Lira’s gaze. Her eyes glowed faintly in the dim light, steady and grounding. "Life is not asured only by what is left undone. It is asured by the sparks of what was done. The laughter shared. The monts of kindness. Even if a wish remains, it does not erase what was fulfilled."

Lira thought of the souls who had asked for food, for warmth, for sothing simple. Their joy had been pure, shining like sparks in the dark. "So even granting them sothing small... matters."

"Yes," Serelyth murmured. "Because the Spirit does not weigh deeds in terms of greatness or grandeur. It weighs intention, compassion, connection. Sotis a small kindness given at the right mont carries more weight than the grandest of victories."

Lira’s throat tightened, her voice a whisper. "Like... the crystal I saw. The silver one. It was . Or part of . She failed. She left behind a warning. Was that her unfinished wish? To be better in the next life?"

Serelyth was silent for a ti, her gaze distant, thoughtful. Then she answered softly, "Perhaps. Or perhaps her wish was simply to be rembered—not forgotten by the flow of ti. You honored her by seeing her, by listening. That may be enough."

Lira drew her knees closer to her chest under the blanket. "It feels strange... to think I’ve lived before. That pieces of are scattered in places like this, waiting. And I wonder—when I die, will I leave behind wishes too? Or will I be free?"

Serelyth shifted, wrapping an arm gently around her shoulders, pulling her closer in a half-embrace. Her voice was low, almost a murmur against Lira’s hair. "Little fla, you will leave behind sothing. Everyone does. But freedom does not an leaving nothing unfinished. Freedom is knowing that what you do leave... carries no regret. That is why you walk this path now. To learn, to understand, to choose with clarity. So that when your ti cos, you will leave sparks, not chains."

Lira swallowed, tears pricking her eyes. She leaned into the warmth of the dragon’s form, the solidity of her presence. For a while, she simply let herself be held, breathing in the still air of the chamber.

Finally, she whispered, "Serelyth... do you think souls ever find each other again? Across lives, across all this... do they ever et?"

Serelyth smiled faintly, her lips curving with a softness Lira rarely saw. "Yes. The Spirit weaves threads in ways we cannot always see. Souls touch, separate, and return. So ties are so deep they echo across centuries. You and I..." Her hand tightened gently on Lira’s shoulder. "We are proof of that."

Lira let out a shaky breath, half a laugh, half a sob. "Then maybe... maybe all those sparks, all those wishes—they’re not just burdens. Maybe they’re reminders. Little markers left behind to guide us back to each other."

For the first ti since entering the labyrinth, she felt warmth not just from Serelyth’s presence, but from within herself. A small, flickering ember of hope.

Wrapped together in blankets, pressed against the cool stone wall, they drifted into silence again. The drip of water above kept ti, steady as a lullaby. And though the chamber was dark and small, Lira felt safer here than she had in any place for a long ti.

When sleep finally ca, it carried not fear, but a quiet sense of belonging.

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