Patience, Rhys knew, was not stillness.
It was motion slowed to the speed of listening.
Days passed. Then more. The plateau did not summon anyone—but it did not hide, either. Travelers began to skirt closer than before. Pilgrims without a word for what they sought paused at the valley’s edge and left offerings they could not explain: a broken compass, a sealed letter never sent, a blade dulled on purpose.
None were turned away.
None were invited in.
The land allowed proximity, nothing more. That, too, was a lesson.
Caria noticed the pattern first. "They’re not coming for power," she said one evening as the sky bruised purple and gold. "They’re coming to be... unburdened."
"Yes," Rhys said. "And so will mistake that for absolution."
"What happens then?"
He considered. "They’ll learn the difference."
Below the plateau, the world adjusted in small, stubborn ways. Treaties began including exit clauses that could actually be invoked. Command structures added pauses—literal pauses—into escalation protocols, monts where soone had to say yes again before violence continued.
Not everyone survived those pauses.
So leaders collapsed under the weight of choice once inevitability could no longer carry them. So factions splintered when unanimity stopped being assud. A few wars accelerated, burning hotter and shorter, as if trying to outrun the question now chasing them.
But others... slowed.
Enough to matter.
Far east, the Rotten-Heart learned the geography of quiet.
They crossed plains where no one recognized them and forests where animals watched without fear. Their strength returned unevenly—not as the overwhelming presence it had once been, but as endurance with limits. When pain ca, they rested. When hunger ca, they asked.
The first ti they were refused shelter, they accepted it.
The second ti, they offered help instead—and were allowed to stay.
They did not preach. They did not explain. When asked who they were, they answered simply, "Soone between wars."
That was often enough.
Once, in a border town still scorched from a recent campaign, a forr officer recognized the sigils on the orc’s skin and went pale.
"You’re dead," he whispered.
"Yes," the Rotten-Heart replied. "That part’s finished."
The officer laughed—too loud, too fast. "You can’t just stop being what you are."
The orc looked at him for a long mont. Then said, gently, "Neither can you."
They left before dawn.
On the plateau, Rhys rose from ditation with a frown.
"The questions are changing," he said.
Caria looked up. "How so?"
"They’re no longer asking what happens if we choose differently." He glanced toward the valley. "They’re asking who pays for it."
Caria sighed. "That sounds more familiar."
"Yes," Rhys said. "And more dangerous."
Puddle pulsed once, a low resonance through the bond. Concern—not fear.
"They’ll try to make examples," Caria said. "Find soone to bla for the uncertainty."
"They already are," Rhys replied. "But examples only work when people agree they’re necessary."
He stood and brushed stone dust from his hands. "The reckoning will see more visitors soon."
"Will it answer them?"
"It never answers," he said. "It only refuses to lie."
The empire’s next move ca not with an army, but with a proclamation.
A new title was announced. A redefinition of authority. Language tightened again, sharpened to close the gaps hesitation had opened. The docunt spoke of stability and collective safety and regulated discretion.
Choice, refrad as a privilege.
The proclamation circulated widely.
And for the first ti, it was argued with.
Not openly. Not yet. But in margins. In taverns. In the pauses between commands.
Soone asked, quietly, "If choice must be regulated, who chose the regulators?"
No one had a clean answer.
At sunset one evening, a traveler reached the edge of the plateau.
They did not step forward.
They waited.
Rhys opened his eyes.
The land leaned—not welcoming, not resisting.
Listening.
Whatever ca next would not be an ending.
But it would not be a pause, either.
History, having learned how to breathe, was about to speak.
And this ti, it would not speak alone.
The traveler waited long enough that waiting itself beca the act.
They did not kneel. They did not call out. They did not even look directly toward the circle of stone. They stood with their hands visible, posture loose, as if prepared to leave the mont the land suggested it.
Rhys studied them without rising.
This was not reverence.
This was restraint.
Caria felt it too. "They’re holding themselves back," she murmured. "On purpose."
"Yes," Rhys said. "That’s new."
The air around the plateau shifted—not tightening, not opening. Aligning. The kind of adjustnt that happened when two truths acknowledged each other without agreent.
After a long while, the traveler spoke.
"I was told this place answers questions," they said. Their voice carried well, but not forcefully. "I was also told it ruins people who expect answers."
Rhys smiled faintly. "That’s accurate."
The traveler exhaled. "Then I won’t ask."
That, more than anything, drew the land’s attention.
They took a single step forward—then stopped again, as if checking themselves mid-thought.
"I carry authority I didn’t ask for," they continued. "It ca with a seal and a vote and a list of acceptable outcos. I was sent to determine whether this... disruption could be contained."
Caria crossed her arms. "And?"
"And containnt assus an edge," the traveler said. "This doesn’t have one."
Rhys rose at last, not stepping into the circle, but to its threshold. He did not invite the traveler closer.
He did not send them away.
"What do you intend to do now?" he asked.
The traveler was quiet for a long mont. When they spoke again, the words had been chosen carefully—and not all of them were comfortable.
"I intend to report honestly," they said. "Which ans my report will be buried. Or weaponized. Or both."
"That’s likely," Rhys agreed.
"Yes." A pause. "But it will exist."
The land leaned a fraction closer.
Not approval.
Recognition.
"I don’t need to enter," the traveler said. "I just needed to know whether refusing to simplify this would cost everything."
Rhys t their eyes. "It may."
The traveler nodded. "Then at least it will cost sothing I chose."
They stepped back.
The land did not follow.
When the traveler turned away, the plateau did not close. It simply remained—unmoved by departure, unchanged by presence.
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