Font Size
15px

The grove held its breath.

Around them the companions murmured—small noises: a rustle of cloak, the soft scrape of a boot—but for Lira the world had grown narrow and sharp. The giant tree’s voice folded into her mind like warm, deep soil being turned.

"You ca," the tree rumbled, its voice older than the mountain, older than the storms. "Little fla, of the many hands. You have fed this root, and the root rembers. Sit close."

Lira’s heart thudded. She took three steps forward until the tree’s shadow pooled around her like a cloak. The lanterns along the grove flickered, blown by a wind she did not feel. Only she heard the tree’s next words, clear as a stone bell.

"Once, another like you stood beneath ," the tree said. "She could not hide forever. She rose to et the night, and she burned a path of both salvation and sorrow. You are not bound to repeat that path. Will you stand and fight as she did?"

Silence, thick and reverent, settled on Lira’s shoulders. She felt Serelyth’s warm breath near her shoulder, Renkai’s presence like steady coals, Thalanir’s quiet backbone at her side. But the question — the tree’s question — was a private thing pressed into her bones.

She rembered the faces from her dreams: the older self by the lake, the line of those who were lost because they chose to stand. She tasted the ash and rain of battles she had never fought, heard the echo of promises made and broken.

"Yes," she said, barely audible. The word was small and fierce at once. "If I have to. But not recklessly. Not alone."

A deep creak of approval moved through the leaves. "Good," the tree murmured. "Then listen, child. Strength is more than fla. You are many elents; your enemies fear that. They have claws that seek to cut the roots and hands that would tear out seedlings. To stand and not lose yourself, you must prepare in ways the old warrior did not."

Lira’s pulse quickened. "Tell . What do I need?"

The tree’s branches stirred as if arranging its thoughts. The air filled with the scent of sap and loam.

"I will teach you the making of potions that bind and protect, that clear and steady, that sharpen the mind and nd the soul. Not potions of brute force, but of harmony. You will need these:"

The voice listed them slowly, each like a small commandnt, and though only Lira heard the words, she felt each as if the tree pressed a fingertip of aning into her hand.

"—A draught of Lucidity. It clears illusion and strengthens the mind’s eye. For use when the Covenant breeds lies and mirrors."

"—A salve of Grounding. It knots the body to earth and resists spells that would pull a spirit apart."

"—A tincture of Quiet Ember. Small burst of fire that will not burn the world, but will unbind enchanted bindings and flare true light inside false hearts."

"—A weave of nding Tides. For healing the torn weave where Spirit and Flesh cross; this will not simply close wounds, but harmonize their elental threads."

"—A ward of Root-Ward. A composted, living ward grown in your grove: place it, and corruption will crawl through it and beco gentle. This needs spores you do not yet have."

"—And, child, a final rare draught: the Concordant Bloom. It makes the drinker perceptive to multielental frequency, allowing them to recognize blended users in the field, friend or foe."

Lira pictured the line of potions on her bench, the labels in her hand. Her mind ticked through ingredients she and the others had gathered—axolotl glows, rmaid-lake kelp, the silvered vial from the fae, the crystal pollen of the island—pieces of the world she had already touched. "I can make them," she said. "Most of them. The Root-Ward needs spores—where do I find those?"

The tree spoke a secret now, low and wry. "Beneath the drowned oak, in the basin where the mirror-water gathers in the canyon. There, fungi drink sky-born light. The spores are patient. But do not take them raw. Let them be taught by your grove’s root-songs first."

Lira swallowed. The knowledge ca with a map of tasks: a pilgrimage to the canyon, tending the spores under the tree’s breath, crafting draughts by moon rhythm. The list unrolled in her head and settled into a plan.

"And the Concordant Bloom?" she asked. "That one sounds... dangerous."

"It is not for forcing perception," the tree warned. "It is for rembering. It reveals, not changes. Use it to know whom to trust; use it not to judge. You will need it to find others like you before the Covenant finds them."

Images flashed—faces beneath moonlight, children hiding in rafters, a teacher in a hermit’s cave. Lira’s resolve sharpened like a blade under a whetstone.

The tree added one more thing, very quietly: "You will be tested. The Covenant will send seekers, spy-scholars, n and won who wear righteousness as armor. They may call themselves cleansers. They will try to turn your allies against you. They will mimic voices of those you love. Train your senses. Bind your friends not with chains but choice. That is the stronger binding."

Lira turned her head and looked at her friends one by one. Renkai’s jaw was set. Thalanir’s hand brushed the haft of his bow. Serelyth’s eyes were fierce and steady. Even Fluffy, curled on her boots, lifted its head as if it understood.

"What do you want to do first?" Lira asked. The tree’s answer was imdiate, practical as the strike of a shovel.

"First: catalog. Gather all recipes and scrolls you have—Hermit’s notes, the island’s glyphs, the mural book. You will build a multielent recipe ledger. Second: make the Lucidity draught; it needs only three things you already have—air-vial, silvered leaf, and axolotl pulse. Third: find the canyon spores. Fourth: teach. You will not go alone."

Lira felt a lightness that was also a burden settle over her. "I will do it," she said. "I will begin tonight."

The tree’s laughter was the rustle of thousands of leaves. "Begin, then. Rember—growth is slow. You cannot force a seed to grow faster than its root. Tend it. Teach others to tend. When the world trembles, your steadiness will be the foundation."

Lira bowed, and the action felt less like obedience than like a promise. She turned to her circle, raising her voice so it touched them as well as the tree had.

"We prepare," she said. "Elion will be told. The academy will stand as shelter. Serelyth, Renkai, Thalanir—will you teach how to move without burning the world? Maelin and Patricia—help with controlled heating and mixtures? I need a lab in the grove and a ledger. I need all of you."

Thalanir’s answer was a quiet breath. "We are with you."

Renkai’s grin was crooked and fierce. "I’ll dig and guard and be your charming footman."

Serelyth dropped her human voice into Lira’s mind, steady and warm. "And I will fly the fragile bits far from harm."

The tree humd, satisfied. "Then go, little fla. Begin the small work. When the Covenant cos, they will not expect the steady hand that grows a garden while they sharpen swords."

Lira looked down at her palms. They were scorched and callused, capable of both damage and care. She felt the shard in her pocket throb, as if answering the tree’s cadence.

Tonight: catalog, the Lucidity draught, a letter to Elion with plans. Dawn would take her to the canyon.

She breathed in the grove’s cool, loamy air and let herself feel the quiet surge of purpose move through her: a plan laid like seeds, friends gathered like water and sun, a root-system forming beneath the surface.

"Thank you," she whispered to the old tree.

"You have the soil," it replied. "Now see what you plant."

As the voice of the ancient tree faded into the rustling of its leaves, Lira lifted her hand and pressed her palm against its massive trunk. A warm pulse ran through her veins—an agreent. She turned to her friends, her eyes determined.

"We need to start searching for everything we can," she said. "Herbs, stones, magical roots... anything that can be brewed or forged into a defense. If the last one couldn’t hide, neither will I."

Renkai gave a sharp nod, his amber eyes fierce. "Then we’ll do this together. We’ll make sure they don’t take another life like they took yours before."

Maelin clapped her hands once, already thinking ahead. "I’ll go through the herbal gardens. I know which plants can amplify elental power."

Serelyth brushed the moss off her shoulder with a faint smile. "I’ll awaken the sleeping stones around the academy. So still hold old magic."

Thalanir added, "I’ll check the old village tunnels. If there are any rare roots, they’ll be there. And... so of the elders might know things they never told us."

Patricia stepped closer to Lira, squeezing her arm gently. "And I’ll stay by you. If the hunters co, you won’t face them alone."

The night stretched over the academy as they split into smaller groups. The grove beca alive with quiet movent — soft glows from runes, whispering winds, the shimring of Serelyth’s stone wings as she lifted into the air.

Lira knelt in the soil beneath the giant tree, planting glowing seed crystals it had given her. Each one pulsed with a different hue — fire red, water blue, storm silver, earth green, spirit gold.

"These will grow," the tree’s voice whispered only to her. "They will protect, if your heart remains steady."

A storm was gathering on the horizon — not just in the sky, but in the world itself. And Lira knew: this was only the beginning of the war against the hunters.

You are reading Born as a Witch Chapter 287: Giant tree helps on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.