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Chapter 9 – The Sky Declares

They saw it before they understood it. A pulse of fire — hanging, trembling, alive.

It hovered above the village like a second sun, not warm, but watching. A presence of fla, as if the sky itself had opened one eye to witness what lived below.

It did not fall.

It did not speak.

It simply burned — with intent.

Then, the silence cracked.

The wind withdrew. The music died mid-note.

And laughter collapsed into held breath.

All eyes turned upward. No one spoke.

Even the birds seed to vanish.

He did not need to ask what it was. But still — he did.

"Is that... magic? Or rely fire?"

His voice was calm, as always. But beneath that calm, sothing stirred. Not fear.

Sothing older. Instinct, perhaps. Or mory.

Lilith stepped to his side, her eyes fixed on the burning sphere. Her posture straight, composed — but her breath stilled before she answered.

"Magic," she said.

"And not the kind woven from ritual or study. This is sothing different.

A spell cast to be seen — not for destruction, but for declaration."

His gaze turned from the sky to the square below.

Children stood mid-dance, arms suspended like puppets without strings.

A woman dropped a loaf of bread without noticing.

A man clutched his son's hand too tightly.

He inhaled, slow and full, not to steady himself — but to anchor the mont.

Then, with a voice that carried not like sound, but like command:

"To your hos.

The celebration is over.

There is danger in the air."

Angela ran toward him, Paulina close behind. The girl's voice trembled as she reached him.

"Sir... what was that? That light... it looked like the sky was angry."

Paulina placed a hand on her daughter's shoulder, gently pulling her back.

Her voice was quieter, but no less shaken.

"Should we flee?"

He looked down — not with the eyes of a ruler or a warrior,

but with the weight of one who had been trusted without asking.

"No," he said.

"Go inside. Stay close.

You'll be safe."

Angela didn't move at first.

"You'll stop it, won't you?"

Her voice was soft — not a question, but a hope.

"You're... you're my hero."

Sothing moved in his chest. Not power. Not certainty. Sothing... human. Forgotten.

But there was no ti for it.

He only nodded once, and Paulina bowed her head.

"We believe in you."

Then she took Angela's hand, and the two disappeared between doorways.

The fire still lood, unmoving above the village — not casting light, but pressing its weight down upon rooftops and stone as if it sought to test what dared stand beneath it.

They walked in silence.

The air around them had thickened, not with smoke, but with tension — the kind that clings to skin, that hums against bone. The stone beneath their feet no longer felt firm, as if the earth itself held its breath.

No footsteps followed.

Yet every shuttered window, every half-opened door, seed to lean toward their passage — drawn not by curiosity, but by instinct. The village was no longer watching from safety. It was waiting.

And then, from beyond the far edge of town, the ground spoke back.

Not with quake — but with rhythm.

A sound built from tal and montum. asured, purposeful. The sound of mass approaching with intent.

And then it broke — the tree line split, and from the wildness erged sothing worse than a storm.

Valtor.

He ca not as a soldier, not as a beast, but as a force —

his steps wide and absolute, his presence carved from fla and breath and war long rembered.

Each motion carried weight — not because of armor, but because he had long since beco the weapon he once wielded. His claws twitched with anticipation. His grin stretched not in cruelty, but in joy.

"Master!"

The sound struck the air like a signal flare — a banner, raised without needing cloth.

"I felt it," he continued, his voice reverberating like fire echoing through canyon walls.

"A surge — raw and real. From the river, I knew. Sothing worthy. Sothing true. Shall we break it?"

The elf turned his head — slow, composed, sovereign.

"Not yet," he answered.

"We speak first."

There was no softness in the words, but no edge either — only clarity, and the authority that cos not from demand, but from being obeyed before words are ever spoken.

Valtor bowed.

No mockery in it. No wildness. Only control — the kind earned by fighting back the fire rather than unleashing it.

"Your will," he said. "My joy."

And with that, they walked. Not as three. But as montum.

Beyond the last row of houses, where the village gave way to field and the field to rising slope, the land revealed its answer.

An army.

Two hundred strong — n armored not for show, but for function. Shields lined, spears planted, helms polished until they caught the dying light and reflected it like the last flicker of pride.

And at their center — still, imposing, wrapped in velvet the color of old blood — stood a single figure. Gold trimd his cloak, but it was not wealth he wore. It was declaration.

Lilith did not stop.

But her voice erged, soft and sharpened.

"The army is an echo," she said. "But that one — he is the source."

Valtor's laugh was low, but it rolled like thunder.

"Then he can die first."

The elf did not reply.

But he stepped forward — slow, certain, and without pause.

And behind him, the others followed.

They did not glow.

They did not cast light.

But the ground responded — not breaking, but bending.

Not in surrender, but in acknowledgnt.

Three figures. No banners. No raised blades. No roar.

But what ca toward that army was not a formation.

It was presence.

The soldiers stood still. But their breath betrayed them.

So tightened their grip.

Others shifted their stance.

All of them watched — not with discipline, but with doubt.

Because what approached them now could not be counted.

Not in n. Not in steps. Only in weight.

The elf broke from formation, one pace ahead, though the space felt larger than a battlefield.

Lilith slowed at his flank, her breath steady, her eyes already dissecting each face before her.

Valtor strode just behind — a shadow of fire and fury, pacing like a war god whose patience frayed with every heartbeat.

Before them, the soldiers parted — a corridor of steel, and at its end: red velvet and gold.

He stood tall.

Not a ssenger — ssengers don't walk like that.Not afraid — fear doesn't hold its chin so high.Too young... yet sothing in him felt older than stone.

"I am Luceris," he said, his voice firm, clear — but not calm.

"Son of Duke Ferdinand.

This land lies under his protection. You have no right to claim it."

He stared directly at the elf.

But his eyes flickered.

Once to Lilith. Once to Valtor.

And then back to the one who had yet to raise his voice.

The elf did not blink.

"You bring an army," he said — low, but resonant.

"To the foot of a village I now shelter."

His words were not defiant. They were final.

"You speak of protection.

I speak of presence.

And now that I stand here — this land rembers what silence forgot."

Luceris faltered — not in posture, but in breath.

A single bead of sweat crawled down his temple.

"You stand in my father's domain," he replied, louder now,

"And I will take it back."

Valtor's claws pressed into the soil with a soft crack.

"Then co claim it."

His voice was like flint dragged across stone — hard, dry, ready to strike.

"We stand here not because we must...

But because we were dared."

Lilith's smile was faint. Not amused. Not kind.

"They brought numbers," she said.

"But no certainty."

The elf lifted a hand — once — and the two behind him fell still.

"If you draw," he said, "you die."

Luceris raised his arm. His soldiers responded — shields lifted, blades angled forward.

"Ready!" he shouted.

"They are few — hold your ground!"

But his voice cracked — not from fear, but from weight.

Because what he faced did not feel like defiance. It felt like inevitability.

The elf stepped forward again — not fast, but enough.

Lilith's shadows rose around her feet, curling with elegance and restraint.

Valtor tilted his head, fire dancing at his fingertips, joy just behind his eyes.

And Luceris — son of Ferdinand, cloaked in legacy and arrogance — said nothing.

Because the next breath would decide everything.

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