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She explained then: the forest beyond the town was old—older than maps, older than kingdoms. Those who walked its deeper paths without invitation were turned back, lost, or unmade in quieter ways. But so were noticed. Touched. Marked to walk where others could not.

"And those like him?" Rose asked softly.

"Wardens of balance," Il said. "Hunters when balance is threatened. They are not evil, but they are relentless. If a marked one lingers too long in places of color and noise"—her gaze flicked briefly toward the market outside—"they draw attention."

Lira swallowed. "So you’ll... hand over?"

"No," Il said firmly. "You were attacked within our walls. That makes you our responsibility."

Relief loosened sothing in Lira’s chest so suddenly she nearly swayed. Renkai steadied her without thinking, his grip warm and solid.

"We will offer protection," Il continued. "Rooms within the Flower Ward. Wards placed discreetly. Escorts if you must move through town. But there is a price."

Renkai t her gaze. "Na it."

"You cannot stay long," Il said. "Three nights, no more. The mark grows louder the longer you remain. And when you leave, you must take the old road. Not the rchant’s path."

Lira frowned. "The old road goes straight through the forest heart."

"Yes," Il said. "Which is where you are ant to walk."

Silence settled, heavy but not hostile.

Outside, the town resud its rhythm—music, bargaining, laughter—but it felt distant now, like a mory already slipping away.

That evening, as wards were drawn and lamps lit with soft blue flas, Renkai stood at the window, watching shadows retreat from the walls. Rose unpacked quietly, glancing at Lira with concern she did not voice.

Lira sat on the edge of the bed, fingers resting over the place where warmth pulsed beneath her skin. Fear stirred there, yes—but beneath it, sothing steadier.

Purpose.

The forest was calling her forward, not back.

And this ti, she would not pretend she could ignore it.

That night, rest ca slowly, like a cautious animal testing the ground before stepping closer.

The rooms given to them were simple but warm, tucked deep within the Flower Ward. Pale wards glimred faintly along the doorfras, pulsing like sleeping fireflies. Outside, the town’s colors dimd to muted pastels, and the noise softened into a distant hum.

Rose fell asleep first, exhaustion claiming her despite her efforts to stay alert. She curled beneath the blankets with her boots neatly aligned at the foot of the bed, as if order might keep fear at bay. Her dreams, when they ca, were shallow and restless.

Renkai did not sleep at all—not at first.

He sat by the window, sharpening a blade that did not truly need it, listening to the night breathe. Shadows slid across the street below, thinner now, respectful of the wards. Still, his shoulders remained tense, every sense stretched outward. The words of the hunter echoed in his mind. The marked. Not a title one survived for long.

Lira lay awake, staring at the ceiling where flower-shaped carvings caught the lamp’s glow. Her thoughts moved in slow, careful circles. The warmth beneath her skin was quieter here, contained, but not gone. It felt... patient. As if whatever had touched her understood rest as well as movent.

When sleep finally found her, it was not heavy. She dread of roots traveling underground, passing beneath roads and walls, threading through places no one saw. She dread of doors that did not look like doors at all.

Morning arrived with a soft knock.

Warden Il herself stood outside, flanked by two guards and a young clerk carrying scrolls bound with green ribbon. Sunlight stread through the corridor windows, turning dust into gold.

"You are rested enough," Il said, not quite a question. "Co. There is sothing you should see."

They walked through parts of the town Lira had not noticed before—quiet streets where color gave way to stone and ivy, where buildings leaned together as if sharing secrets. At the edge of the old quarter stood a structure so vast it stilled even Renkai’s constant scanning.

The library rose like a mountain shaped by human hands.

Its walls were pale listone veined with darker stone, etched with symbols of leaves, moons, and branching paths. Tall arched windows reflected the sky. Vines climbed its sides but were carefully trained, never allowed to obscure the carvings beneath.

Rose stopped short. "I’ve... I’ve never seen anything like this."

"Few have," Il replied. "Fewer are invited inside."

The doors opened without a sound.

Within, the air was cool and dry, layered with the scent of old paper, pressed flowers, and ink long settled. Light filtered down from high above, caught in glass panels painted with scenes of travelers, forests, and figures walking between worlds.

They were led past endless shelves until they reached a circular chamber at the library’s heart. A single table waited there, stone-smooth, with a book already laid open upon it.

It was old. Older than the town, older than the idea of the town. Its pages were thick, edges darkened, the ink uneven as if written by many hands across centuries.

Il gestured. "This is considered myth," she said. "Or was."

Lira stepped closer.

The title was simple, written in a careful, almost reluctant hand:

On the Marked and the Paths They Walk

The text told of a being—never nad, never described fully—who appeared suddenly in the world, bearing a mark that drew pursuit. Hunters followed. Wardens watched. Doors opened where none had existed before. Along the way, the being gathered strange things: seeds that grew only once, stones warm to the touch, fragnts of places that no longer existed.

"It says they traveled constantly," Rose murmured, reading over Lira’s shoulder. "Never staying long."

"Because stillness made them easier to find," Il said.

Renkai’s gaze sharpened. "And the end?"

Il turned a page.

The final account was unfinished. The writing grew hurried, lines slanting.

The hunt closed in. The paths narrowed. Witnesses swear the marked one stepped into nothing—and was gone. No body. No trace. Only silence.

"They believe the being was destroyed," Il said. "Or erased."

Lira barely heard her.

Her thoughts raced, sharp and inward. Collected items along the path. Disappeared just before capture.

This was not coincidence. This was not rely legend.

Soone had known.

Her fingers hovered over the page but did not touch it. The warmth beneath her skin pulsed once, as if in recognition. A door, unseen. A passage not ant for eyes.

Does anyone else know? she wondered. About traveling like that? About stepping through where there should be nothing?

She glanced at Rose. The girl had gone pale, eyes fixed on the page yet distant, breath shallow. Rose had been there—near the portal—but she had not seen it. Fear had turned her gaze away at the last mont.

Renkai, however, t Lira’s eyes.

Just a flicker. Enough.

They shared the mory without words: the folding of space, the sensation of being pulled sideways rather than forward, the quiet certainty that the world had rules few ever learned.

Lira straightened.

"This book," she said carefully, aloud. "Does it say how the mark is removed?"

Il shook her head. "No. Only that the paths eventually end."

Lira nodded, as if accepting that answer.

Inside, she made a different choice.

She would not speak of portals. Not here. Not now. Knowledge like that drew more than curiosity—it drew hunters, scholars, and those who wished to control what they could not walk themselves.

So truths were safer when carried lightly.

As they left the library, sunlight spilling once more across stone and ivy, Lira felt the forest stir far beyond the town’s edge. The old road waited. The heart-path waited.

And sowhere, between pages and roots, a story very much like hers had already been written—only it had never truly ended.

By the ti they left the library, the town was fully awake.

Music drifted from distant streets, fabrics fluttered above stalls, and laughter rang bright and careless. To anyone watching, it looked like another beautiful morning. Only those who had stood in the circular chamber knew how thin that beauty truly was.

They were led back to the warden’s hall, a cool stone building with open arches and bowls of water set everywhere to keep the air gentle. Warden Il did not waste ti.

"You may stay," she said plainly. "The town will protect you. Escorts, warding marks, sealed quarters. If the hunters co again, they will answer to us."

Rose’s shoulders sagged with relief. "That sounds... safer," she said quietly.

Renkai did not answer. He watched Lira.

Lira stood still for a long mont, hands resting at her sides. The mark beneath her skin pulsed faintly—not in fear, but in awareness. She could feel the town’s wards, layered and strong. She could also feel how visible they made her. Protection was another kind of signal.

She lifted her head.

"No," she said.

The word landed softly, but it carried weight.

Il frowned. "You would refuse protection?"

"Yes." Lira’s voice was calm, steadier than she rembered it ever being. "If we stay, rumors spread. Curiosity grows. Soone will want to see the marked one. Soone will talk too loudly. And danger will co here instead of following us."

Rose opened her mouth, then closed it again.

Renkai nodded once, slow and approving.

"We move," Lira continued. "Quietly. Before anyone else notices."

Il studied her more closely now—not as a warden assessing risk, but as a scholar recognizing a pattern she had only ever read about.

"You are not afraid," Il said.

Lira almost smiled.

"I was," she answered honestly. "Before."

Images flickered through her mind: fire tearing through darkness, frozen air cracking under pressure, lightning answering her call without hesitation. The multielental killer—so feared, so relentless—had fallen by her hand. Not by luck. Not by desperation.

By choice.

"I know what I can do now," Lira said. "And I know what I can survive."

Silence followed. Then Il inclined her head.

"Very well. We will not stop you." She paused. "But understand this—leaving does not erase the mark."

"I know," Lira replied. "It sharpens ."

They returned to their rooms to prepare. Rose moved quickly, efficiently, though her hands trembled when she thought no one was watching. She packed supplies, checked straps, double-checked the chariot fittings.

"You really think this is the right choice?" she asked softly, as she tied a bundle of dried fruit.

Lira helped her, fingers gentle. "Staying would make you a target too. I won’t do that."

Rose swallowed and nodded. "Then... then I go with you. Like always."

Renkai tightened his cloak, weapons hidden but ready. "If the book is right," he said quietly, "they never catch you."

Lira t his gaze. "Not because they fail."

"Because you don’t walk where they expect," he finished.

She smiled then, small but real.

They left the town before noon, slipping through a lesser-used gate where ivy softened the stone and the guards pretended not to see. No announcent. No procession. Just travelers continuing on their way.

As the road opened before them, the forest thickened once more. Sunlight filtered green and gold through the canopy, birds calling freely. The air slled of leaves and earth, alive and unafraid.

Lira breathed deeply.

She was marked.

But she was no longer hunted prey stumbling forward in fear.

She was a traveler between paths. A collector, like the one in the book. A being who had stepped through fire and lived.

And if the old prediction was true—if the marked one vanished not because they were caught, but because they chose another way—then Lira already knew sothing the hunters did not.

This story would not end where others expected.

Not this ti.

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