Alaric didn’t shout again.
He didn’t rush her.
Didn’t throw up a barrier or activate a skill.
He just stepped forward, slow and steady, watching Seraphine’s eyes the whole ti.
"Say it again," he said carefully.
Seraphine blinked once, slow and glassy. Her pupils shimred like mirrors. She wasn’t breathing heavy. Wasn’t tense. Just calm. Too calm.
Her voice ca soft, low, like soone reading from a script.
> "Crown Protocol accepted. Designation: Secondary Anchor. Pattern alignnt complete. Standby mode... unlocked."
Alaric stopped three feet away.
He kept his hands relaxed, his voice even.
"Seraphine," he said. "You’re not a machine. Whatever it’s doing, you can push back."
She didn’t blink.
Didn’t move.
But the book on the table did.
Its pages flipped again, faster this ti, then stopped.
A new line appeared—fresh ink forming on the parchnt.
> Phase II confird.
Two anchors located.
One Crown potential identified.
Initiating link sequence... now.
Alaric’s heart thudded once—hard.
"Seraphine," he said louder, "this isn’t a test. That book’s alive. It’s trying to—"
She spoke again. This ti the voice wasn’t hers. Not fully.
> "mory tether initiated. Accessing primary Crown candidate."
Alaric’s vision blurred.
His balance tipped for half a second like gravity changed directions.
Then—
He saw her mories.
Not just flashes.
Monts.
Her reading in the garden when she was twelve. The way she always stayed quiet in crowded rooms. Her fingers tracing letters on the window during rainstorms. Her breath catching when he stood up for her during the family trials. Every mont he had missed—or forgotten—rushed through him like a flood.
Then it stopped.
---
He staggered back, one hand gripping the table.
"What the hell was that?"
Seraphine blinked rapidly.
Her voice returned to normal. Confused. Breathless.
"What just happened? What did I—why were you—"
Alaric reached out and grabbed her wrist gently. "You’re back. It stopped."
"I saw you," she whispered. "I was looking at you, but I was... inside sothing."
He nodded once.
"It pulled us together."
"That was my mory," she said, eyes wide. "But it wasn’t just mine."
"It was mine too."
---
Kaelion entered the room without knocking.
He took one look at the open book, the thin mist now curling up from the pages, and stopped mid-step.
"You opened it again?"
"She didn’t," Alaric said. "It opened her."
Kaelion raised both eyebrows. "Well. That’s worse."
Seraphine shook her head like trying to clear fog from her thoughts. "It used like a key."
Alaric looked at Kaelion. "Have you seen anything like this in the royal records?"
Kaelion frowned. "There’s a theory... very old. From a ti when ’magic’ wasn’t the only way to control power. A theory that thought itself could leave echoes. Form patterns. Rebuild across generations."
"Psychic inheritance?"
"No. Worse."
Kaelion stepped closer, keeping his eyes on the book.
"They called it House mory. Not a bloodline. A mindline. Thought patterns that anchor themselves to individuals across ti. Like blueprints being rebuilt again and again."
Seraphine crossed her arms. "So I’m what—so kind of mory clone?"
"No," Alaric said. "You’re the bridge. The book didn’t open until you stood near it. You’re not the clone. You’re the link."
Kaelion added, "And the link works both ways."
---
Seraphine sat slowly in the chair, still staring at the book.
"I don’t want this," she said softly.
"I didn’t ask for mine either," Alaric said.
"Do I get a choice?"
Alaric paused. "I think that’s what makes us different from them."
"From who?"
"The ones who built this. The ones who think in chains."
---
A knock hit the door. Fast. Urgent.
Alaric turned.
One of the house guards stood there, pale-faced and breathless.
"Sir," he said quickly. "There’s a visitor. Says it’s urgent."
"Who?"
The guard swallowed. "They didn’t give a na. But they say... they’re one of you."
Alaric frowned. "One of—?"
"And they said," the guard added, "to show you this."
He held up a piece of tal.
Flat.
Circular.
The sa upside-down crown etched in the center.
Alaric stared at it.
Hard.
---
Seraphine stood.
Kaelion swore under his breath. "You have got to be kidding ."
Alaric turned to the guard.
"Where is he?"
The guard hesitated. "He’s not a he."
Alaric froze.
Kaelion raised an eyebrow.
Seraphine stepped closer.
The guard said:
> "She said her na is Eryn."
> "And she said the Mindborn were never alone."
The inner courtyard was quiet when they arrived.
Alaric stepped into the open with Kaelion just behind him and Seraphine keeping pace to his left. Three house guards waited by the gate, tense and uncertain, each one casting glances at the figure standing calmly in the center of the gravel.
She didn’t wear armor.
She didn’t carry a staff.
Just a long gray coat, boots dusty from travel, and a scarf wrapped loose around her neck.
But sothing about her felt heavy. Not physically. ntally. Like the air thickened around wherever she stood.
She turned when they approached.
Her face was sharp but not severe. Her eyes were a soft silver—not glowing, but too bright to be normal. Her presence didn’t scream power.
It whispered it.
---
"You’re Alaric," she said.
"You’re not answering questions yet," Alaric replied.
She nodded once, as if that was fair.
Kaelion crossed his arms. "You’re not from this region."
"Not recently."
"You’re not in any registry."
"No one is," she said, "until they’re useful."
Seraphine stepped forward slightly. "You said you’re one of him. What does that an?"
The woman—Eryn—smiled faintly.
"It ans I’ve seen what you saw. Felt what you felt. Heard the voice behind the Crown."
Alaric narrowed his eyes. "Prove it."
She raised one hand slowly.
Didn’t speak.
Didn’t move her fingers.
But every guard in the yard suddenly staggered back—not pushed—just montarily forgot where they were. One tripped and caught himself against the wall.
Seraphine looked around. "What did you do?"
"Nothing painful," Eryn said. "Just brushed their short-term mory. Light touch."
Alaric didn’t move.
But the way his eyes changed—focused, sharp—made it clear he was studying her now, not just watching.
"What’s your angle?" he asked.
"Survival," she said. "Yours. And mine."
Kaelion stepped between them slightly. "So you’re saying there are more of you?"
"There were," Eryn said. "There still might be."
"Might be?"
"Most didn’t survive the first purge," she added. "When the old Church found out what we were. When they realized thought didn’t need mana to burn cities."
---
Alaric’s voice dropped.
"You’re from the ti before magic."
She nodded. "Born in this one. But my mind... isn’t."
Seraphine looked between them. "So what are you? A reincarnation?"
Eryn’s eyes t hers. "No. A mory made whole."
---
Silence followed that.
Kaelion finally broke it. "You said you ca here for a reason."
"I did," Eryn said. She looked back to Alaric. "You’re waking up too fast. The Crown protocol doesn’t understand restraint. It pushes. Forces progress. If you don’t pace it—"
"It breaks things," Alaric finished.
She smiled. "Exactly."
"Why warn ?"
"Because the last one didn’t listen," Eryn said. "And he brought down a continent."
Kaelion muttered, "I think we’d rember that."
Eryn shook her head. "No. You wouldn’t."
She reached into her coat and pulled out a folded piece of parchnt. Not paper—fiberweave. Old. Treated with sothing unnatural. She handed it to Alaric.
He opened it.
Inside: a map.
No cities. No nas.
Just three concentric circles drawn around a point marked X.
> Crown Origin Point. mory Vault 0.
Alaric stared at it.
"Where is this?"
"Buried under sea and ice. But reachable," she said. "If you want answers—not just fragnts—that’s where you go."
"And what’s waiting there?"
Eryn’s face changed for the first ti.
Not afraid.
But... respectful.
"Whatever they left behind," she said. "Whatever you used to be."
Seraphine stepped up beside him. "So it’s a trip into the past."
"No," Eryn said, turning to her. "It’s a trip into his."
---
Alaric folded the map and tucked it away.
"Why now?"
"Because the Church has started activating its Saints again," Eryn said quietly. "And they’re trained to kill us on instinct."
Kaelion’s head tilted. "They know about Alaric?"
"They suspect. But more than that—they know a link ford."
Seraphine’s breath hitched slightly. "."
Eryn nodded. "You’re not a danger. But to them, you’re the rope connecting the bomb to the detonator."
Alaric looked her square in the eyes. "And what do you want from ?"
"I want you to live long enough to choose what you beco."
---
She stepped back toward the gate.
Paused.
And added, "You’ll start hearing them soon."
Alaric frowned. "Hearing what?"
Eryn’s silver eyes flicked back to him.
"The others."
Then she vanished.
Not teleported.
Not blinked.
She just turned the corner—and her ntal presence vanished with her, like soone had flipped off her existence.
---
Kaelion rubbed the side of his face. "I don’t know if I want to drink or nap."
"I’d choose neither," Alaric said.
Seraphine stared at the gate. "If there are others like you..."
"There aren’t," Alaric said. "Not anymore."
"But—"
"They’re not like ," he said firmly. "They rember. I don’t. That makes dangerous to everyone. Even them."
---
They returned to the study.
The book was still on the table.
Still closed.
The clasp eye blinked once—and then turned red.
Kaelion took one look and said, "Well, that’s new."
Alaric leaned in.
And saw one new word burned into the corner of the next page:
> UNLOCKED: Phase III – Threshold Drift.
Below it, a second line shimred into view:
> Prepare for mory bleed.
---
Seraphine’s voice was quiet.
"Alaric. What’s mory bleed?"
Before he could answer—
His hand trembled.
Just once.
And in the space behind his eyes—
He heard a voice that wasn’t his.
Not Eryn’s.
Not the book.
But his own.
Older.
Calr.
> "You were built for this."
> "Now rember why."
Alaric didn’t answer right away.
His hands were steady again, but the echo still lingered. That voice—his voice, but deeper, too calm—hadn’t faded. It waited, sitting at the back of his skull like soone leaning in from behind a closed door.
Seraphine leaned across the table. "You heard sothing again, didn’t you?"
"Yes."
"Sa voice as before?"
"No," he said. "This one knew ."
Kaelion tilted his head slightly. "mory bleed, then."
"I don’t rember anything."
"Not yet," Kaelion said. "But if Phase III really is starting, then you will. And not all of it will be... friendly."
Alaric’s jaw tightened. "How does mory beco hostile?"
"It’s not always yours," Kaelion said. "Think of it like this: you’re a house. You’ve just unlocked rooms you didn’t build. Rooms soone else left behind. With their furniture. Their decisions."
"And their ghosts," Seraphine muttered.
Alaric nodded once. "Can it be stopped?"
Kaelion gave a thin smile. "Probably. If you don’t mind brain damage."
"Then we keep going," Alaric said.
Seraphine looked at him. "We?"
"You’re already linked," Alaric said. "I’m not going to pretend you’re just along for the ride."
She was quiet for a mont. Then nodded.
"Alright," she said. "So what do we do first?"
---
The answer ca before he could reply.
The study door opened without knocking.
One of the outer guards stepped in, pale and shaking slightly.
"Sir... you need to see this."
Alaric stood. "What is it?"
"The outer mirror," the guard said. "It just cracked."
"Cracked?" Seraphine echoed. "From what?"
The guard licked his lips. "Not from sothing. From... soone."
Alaric was already moving. "Show ."
---
The outer mirror sat above the front gate—a surveillance glass designed to reflect magical interference. It wasn’t high-grade, not noble tier. Just enough to glow or fracture if sothing unusual crossed the barrier.
Now, it was webbed with red cracks. Not physical damage.
ntal strain.
Alaric stared at it, then reached for the psychic residue still hanging in the air.
Echo Sensory.
He read the emotion burned into the space.
Not anger. Not fear.
Recognition.
Sothing—soone—had looked at the manor.
And known what it was.
Kaelion stood beside him, arms folded. "Soone just tested your defenses without touching the walls."
"Who?" Alaric asked.
"That’s the worst part," Kaelion said. "They didn’t leave a na. But they did leave this."
He handed Alaric a torn piece of fabric.
Deep blue. Embroidered with a gold sun wrapped in barbed vines.
Alaric’s throat tightened.
"The Church?"
"No," Kaelion said. "Worse."
He pulled out a second piece.
This one was folded.
Inside, a simple handwritten note:
> You are not the only one who rembers.
You were not the only Crown.
We are ready to wake the others.
—The Quiet Choir
---
Seraphine read over his shoulder. "The what?"
"An old rumor," Kaelion muttered. "A sect buried so deep even the Cardinals don’t talk about them. Thought to be extinct centuries ago."
"And now they’re back?" Seraphine asked.
"No," Alaric said quietly. "They never left."
He looked up at the cracked mirror again.
"They were just waiting for soone loud enough to bring them ho."
---
A second guard ran up then, breathless.
"Sir—another thing."
Alaric turned. "What?"
The man swallowed hard.
"They’ve taken the tower."
Everyone froze.
Kaelion said, "What tower?"
"The Academy’s east tower. The headmaster’s office. They walked in without resistance."
"Who?" Seraphine demanded.
The guard was shaking now.
"They called themselves... Heralds."
---
Alaric’s blood went cold.
"Of what?"
"They said they were Heralds of the First Crown."
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