The walls of the Hollow Spire vibrated—not from force, but from unmaking.
Outside, the Ember Ward moved in silent formation. Their leader, the ash-skinned woman, raised her palm again. The stone responded, cracking inward—not breaking apart, but forgetting how to stay whole.
Inside, the marrow book jolted. The throne groaned as if choking on its own mory.
Cai collapsed to his knees.
"They’re stripping nas," he gasped. "Even the trees... can’t hold the stories anymore."
Lira drew her blade, but the edge flickered. Even tal seed to dull in the presence of the Ember Ward.
Sylas cursed. "We can’t fight them. They don’t destroy with fire—they destroy with absence."
---
In the Core Chamber
Elric gritted his teeth, pressing both hands to the throne.
"Then we give them sothing they can’t erase."
The book pulsed again—but this ti it didn’t show writing.
It opened a path.
The floor beneath the throne split—not violently, but carefully—revealing a spiral staircase of bone-white stone leading into darkness.
Thorne Varnell stared. "That wasn’t in the original design."
Elric t his eyes. "No. But mory evolves. And sothing down there rembers everything."
Without another word, he descended.
Lira and Sylas followed.
---
The Forgotten Depth
They descended far beneath the Spire’s base.
The air grew colder. But the stone was not lifeless. It pulsed faintly—slow and steady, like a heartbeat stretched over centuries.
At the base was a sealed doorway—round, smooth, untouched by tools.
A single handprint shimred on the surface.
It was small. Child-sized.
Cai, still breathing heavily above, whispered across the bond Elric had placed between them.
> "It’s waiting for you."
Elric placed his hand to the stone.
The door dissolved.
---
The First Patient
The chamber was silent.
In the center stood a pillar of glass-like root—thick, semi-transparent. Floating inside: a figure.
Not monstrous.
Not ancient.
A young woman.
Barefoot, dressed in flowing cloth. Her body bore no scars, but thin silver threads wove across her skin like tattooed veins. Her eyes were closed.
Lira whispered, "Is she asleep?"
"No," Sylas said, staring. "She’s preserved mory. Not alive. Not dead. Just... rembering."
A voice echoed—not from her lips, but from the walls.
> "You ca late. But you still ca."
Elric stepped closer. "Who are you?"
> "The first one they tested. Before they built the Pact. Before they understood mory could poison or preserve."
> "They gave all the stories. Every sin. Every mistake. They buried when I started to change."
Sylas stepped forward. "What change?"
> "I began to heal what was never spoken aloud. I made people rember pain they buried. And they feared what they might feel."
The roots inside the glass began to shimr.
> "You are my echo, Elric Taran-Varnell. And now you must choose."
---
Outside: The Siege Deepens
The Ember Ward surrounded the Spire.
Their leader stepped forward, raising both hands.
The crack along the Spire’s outer wall widened—cutting toward the center like a mouth preparing to close forever.
Marin cried out from the outer ridge. "It’s going to fall!"
---
Back Below
The First Patient’s voice hardened.
> "I can rise. And push them back. But if I do, I will rember everything. And I will not be what I was."
Lira stepped closer to Elric. "She’s not a cure. She’s a reckoning."
Sylas said nothing.
Elric stared at the pillar.
Then at his own hands.
He took the marrow book from his coat—and pressed it against the glass.
> "Then rember through ."
The pillar cracked—
Not from damage.
From release.
---
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