A few minutes before Rudra and the Ōtsutsuki vanished, deep within the forest bordering Magnolia, a lone hooded figure moved silently between the trees.
Zeref Dragneel.
He walked without sound, his presence unnaturally calm, as if the forest itself dared not disturb him. Dark robes clung loosely to his slender fra, untouched by dirt or branch, despite the uneven ground beneath his feet. His pale face was youthful—almost fragile—but his eyes told a far older story. Ancient. Weary. Burdened by centuries of regret and power that should never have existed.
The black book he carried rested against his side, chains faintly glowing beneath the fabric.
Suddenly, Zeref stopped.
The wind stilled.
He turned his head slowly.
To the north, through the layered canopy and the pale afternoon haze, the distant outline of Magnolia sat quiet against the horizon. From here it looked undisturbed. But Zeref was not looking with his eyes.
The residual energy was unmistakable. It clung to the air like the aftermath of a storm — foreign, violent, fundantally wrong in the way that things from outside a world always were. It didn’t belong to Fiore. It didn’t belong to anything he recognised. And yet there it was, already fading, already retreating.
"Hm." Soft. Almost amused.
"Seems the intruders from another world have already left on their own."
He said it the way one might note unexpected weather. But his expression shifted as the words left him, sothing darker moving beneath the surface. The shadows beneath his eyes deepened, and his fingers tightened slightly around the spine of the book.
"First, the last mber of Sparda dies." His voice was barely above the silence of the trees. "And now beings from entirely different worlds are appearing here."
He exhaled slowly.
"How troubleso."
The wind moved through the canopy. Sowhere distant, a bird called once and went quiet.
"So tell , Mundus." His gaze drifted past the tree line, past Magnolia, past the horizon itself. "What now? Your pawn is dead. And with him, the last of Sparda’s bloodline."
He didn’t expect an answer. Mundus was beyond answering. But the question was never really for Mundus.
"To think," he continued, his tone shifting into sothing almost like wonder. "The last of Sparda’s line — gone. I had lived long enough to consider that an impossibility." A faint pause. "And yet."
He turned the book over slowly in his hand.
"Who was strong enough?" he murmured. "Sparda’s blood wasn’t ordinary power. Whatever ended that lineage —" He stopped. Considered. "It wasn’t sothing small."
It didn’t frighten him. Very little did anymore. But it interested him — the way a new piece appearing on a board he thought he understood always did. He had been playing this ga longer than most kingdoms had existed. He knew how quickly a settled board could beco unreadable.
"New variables entering the ga," he said quietly. "Worlds bleeding into each other. Ancient bloodlines ending." A beat. "And sothing strong enough to end them."
The corner of his mouth moved — not quite a smile. Not quite anything with a na.
He turned and stepped back into the shadow of the trees.
The air changed. A quiet pressure settled over the forest — sourceless, total. The temperature dropped. Around his feet, the undergrowth curled inward as dark magic rose from him slowly, thick and lightless, swallowing sound and shadow alike. The trees bent faintly away from him, as though thinking better of standing too close.
Then the darkness folded inward.
And Zeref was gone — not with a flash or a sound, but with a simple, clean absence. Like he had never been there at all.
The forest was still.
But it was a different stillness than before.
Monts later, another presence appeared.
Mavis arrived, drawn by the fading echo of his magic. She hadn’t consciously chosen to co; sothing deep within her had guided her here. Yet now, as she stood in that empty space, there was nothing left of him—no trace, no warmth, no voice.
Only stillness.
She lowered her head, her expression touched by a quiet, lingering sorrow.
"He’s gone..." she whispered softly.
A faint crease ford on her brow as doubt stirred within her. Why had she co? Was it to see him... just one last ti? Or had her heart been searching for sothing she couldn’t yet understand?
The questions echoed in the silence, unanswered.
After a long pause, she turned away. Her steps were slow, almost reluctant, as she made her way back toward the guild—carrying with her the hollow silence he had left behind.
---------------
anwhile, at Fairy Tail, several hours had passed since Rudra’s sudden disappearance.
The guild hall was nearly restored. Most of the damage had been cleared away, though a few sections of the roof still gaped open to the sky. mbers moved about tirelessly — hamring, hauling, patching — worn out but determined to rebuild what had been lost. The air slled of sawdust and sweat, and conversation had long since given way to the quiet focus of hard work.
Then the guild doors burst open.
The bang ricocheted off the stone walls. Every mber spun toward the entrance, hands raised, magic already crackling at fingertips — only to find Erza and Mira standing in the doorway, chests heaving, eyes wide as they took in the wreckage around them.
The hall went still.
"What the—" soone started.
"Can you two not do that?!" another voice called out, strained and frayed. "We’ve already nearly died once today!"
Neither woman heard it. Their eyes moved slowly across the hall — the boarded windows, the missing roof sections, the scorch marks still blackening the walls, the bandages wrapped around arms and shoulders and hands. Mira’s fingers ca up to cover her mouth. Erza’s jaw tightened so hard a muscle flickered in her cheek.
They were already moving.
"Master." Erza’s voice ca out lower than she intended as they reached Makarov, who sat on the counter, mug in hand, looking older than usual. "What happened? Who did this?"
"Is everyone okay?" Mira added, her gaze still sweeping the room, cataloguing every bandage, every bruise. "How badly was anyone hurt? Where’s —"
"Enough." Makarov’s voice was quiet, but it landed like a hand on a shoulder. Both won stopped. He took a long sip from his mug, set it down, and looked at them steadily. "You’re asking four questions at once. Breathe first."
Mira exhaled shakily. "Sorry, Master. It’s just — when we arrived at Magnolia Station, everyone was talking about it. That Fairy Tail had been attacked. That there was so massive black sphere hovering over the guild." Her voice caught slightly. "We ran the whole way."
Makarov’s expression softened. "Don’t apologize for that." He glanced around the hall — at the mbers still working, still standing. "We were hit a few hours ago. It was bad. But everyone’s still breathing, and that’s what matters."
"Who were they?" Erza asked. Quiet. Controlled. The kind of calm that ant the opposite.
Makarov opened his mouth.
"We don’t know."
Cana’s voice drifted over from the bar. She sat slouched on a stool with a barrel in her lap, bandaging wrapped around her collarbone and forearm, dried blood still faint at her temple. She looked like she hadn’t moved since the attack ended — like moving had seed pointless.
Erza turned to her slowly. "What do you an you don’t know?"
"I an we don’t know." Cana took a long pull from the barrel. "They didn’t exactly hand out introduction cards."
"Cana." Erza’s voice sharpened.
Cana lowered the barrel and looked at her properly for the first ti. Sothing in her expression shifted — the dry deflection dropping away, just briefly. "They ca out of nowhere. A group, well-organised, powerful. They wanted information about Rudra." She paused. "We said no. So they decided to make an example of the place."
The hall had gone quiet around them. Tools set down. Work paused.
"Did anyone—" Mira started, then stopped. Tried again, softer. "Did we lose anyone?"
"No." It was Makarov who answered. Firm. Like he was nailing the word into the floor. "No. We did not."
Mira closed her eyes for a mont. When she opened them, they were glassy but steady.
A beat passed. Then Mira looked around the hall again, more carefully this ti — reading the room the way she always did, quietly, without making a show of it. Counting faces. Noticing absences.
"Where are Natsu and Gray?" she asked. "And Laxus?"
The question landed strangely. A few mbers exchanged glances. Soone looked at the floor.
Makarov set his mug down. "Recovering," he said. "They took serious injuries. A few days, the healers say, before any of them are back on their feet."
Mira’s breath left her slowly. Erza’s hand tightened at her side.
"Laxus too?" Mira asked quietly. There was sothing particular in the way she said his na.
"Laxus too."
Mira stared at the counter for a mont. Then she nodded, once, pressing the worry down into sowhere she could deal with later.
"Then the enemy must have been extraordinarily powerful," Erza said, her voice asured. "For Laxus to be taken down—"
A laugh cut her off.
It ca from the table near the window — short, hollow, humourless. Lucy sat there with her hands folded on the wood in front of her, knuckles pale, eyes fixed on sothing that wasn’t in the room. The laugh faded as quickly as it had co, leaving sothing rawer in its place.
"Strong?" she said. The word ca out like it didn’t quite fit in her mouth. "No." She shook her head slowly. "They weren’t strong."
She looked up. Her eyes were steady but exhausted in the way that went deeper than sleep could fix.
"They were monsters."
Nobody spoke. Lucy’s hands pressed flat against the table, and she continued, her voice low and even — the voice of soone who had already played the mory back too many tis.
"We couldn’t do anything against them. Nothing worked. Every attack, every spell, every combination we tried —" She stopped. Swallowed. "It was like throwing stones at a wall and watching them crumble. We weren’t a challenge to them. We were just — an obstacle. Sothing to move out of the way."
She looked down at her hands.
"If Rudra hadn’t arrived when he did —" Her voice thinned slightly, then steadied. "All of us would be dead. Every single person in this hall. And Magnolia —" She let out a slow breath. "Magnolia would have been erased from Fiore entirely. Like it had never existed."
The words settled over the guild like ash.
Erza didn’t move. Mira didn’t move. They stood exactly where they were, colour slowly draining from their faces — not from shock at an exaggeration, but from the quiet recognition that Lucy ant every word. No dramatics. No exhaustion distorting the truth. Just a plain, sober accounting of how close it had actually co.
Around them, the guild was silent. Nobody argued. Nobody offered a counter. They looked down, or away, or at nothing — the way people do when they’ve already made their peace with sothing and are simply waiting for others to catch up.
The silence stretched.
Then Mira spoke.
"So where is Rudra?"
The mont the na left her lips, sothing shifted in the room. Not loudly — no sharp intake of breath, no dramatic reaction. Just a quiet, collective stillness. Eyes dropped. Heads turned away. The mbers who had been listening found sowhere else to look.
Mira noticed. Her brow furrowed as she glanced around the hall, then turned to Makarov.
"Master?"
Makarov set his mug down. He was quiet for a mont, the kind of quiet that ant he was choosing his words carefully.
"Let’s just say," he said slowly, "he went with them."
"He what—" Mira’s voice rose before she could stop it. "He left with the enemy? How could you allow that? He was already severely injured from what happened at the capital — he could barely—"
"Mira."
Erza’s hand ca down gently on her shoulder. Mira stopped, chest still tight, and looked at her.
Erza didn’t say much. She simply looked around the hall — at the bandaged hands, the boarded windows, the exhausted faces — then back at Mira, letting her draw her own conclusion.
"Do you think," Erza said quietly, "that Master would have allowed him to leave if there had been any other way?"
The tension in Mira’s shoulders didn’t disappear, but it shifted into sothing heavier and quieter. She looked at Makarov for a long mont, then exhaled.
"I’m sorry, Master. It’s just —" She stopped. Tried again. "He was in no condition. After the capital, he should have been resting, not—"
Makarov waved a hand, his expression softening. "You don’t need to apologise. You’re worried about the boy." He picked his mug back up. "We all are."
A beat passed. Then, with the particular ease of soone who had long ago mastered the art of moving a room forward, Makarov’s expression shifted — lighter, almost cheerful.
"Anyway," he said, "tell about the mission."
Erza and Mira glanced at each other.
"Could we," Erza said carefully, "discuss that privately?"
Makarov raised an eyebrow, then nodded. He hopped down from the counter with surprising ease for a man his size and age, and crossed the hall toward his office without another word. Erza and Mira followed, the door closing quietly behind them.
The guild watched them go. Then, one by one, tools were picked back up. Conversations resud, low and unhurried. The work continued.
Life, as it always did at Fairy Tail, carried on.
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