Tian did not move for three days.
He sat at the base of the Gate, where the stone t the sky, watching the peaks in silence. The Gate was shut. The light around it had faded. The field was quiet. Too quiet. The kind that ca after sothing had ended.
No one ca to retrieve a body.
There was none to find.
The stone where she had last stood had gone warm. Then cold. Then still. His hand had touched it once. That was all. Even the fire inside him, the one that used to answer when he rembered her, no longer stirred. Not even when he called.
She was not lost.
She was gone.
Gone like stars that fade from the sky. Not with a sound. With stillness. With finality.
On the second night, he tried to draw her na. He lit his palm, shaped the first curve. His hand trembled before it finished. The light flickered and died.
Not because he forgot.
Because he rembered too clearly.
And no line he traced could ever carry that weight.
He didn't cry.
There was no point.
Crying belonged to things that could be undone.
He stayed still.
Until the third sunrise finally broke over the field. Light stretched across the glyph circle. The sa one where he had once fought Thalos. The sa place where she had once watched him, arms folded, eyes amused.
Tian rose.
The fla followed.
But it burned lower now. As if it grieved too.
★★★
By the ti he reached the lower mountains, Tian no longer carried his journal. He had left it behind with the ashes of the archive. The envoys had torn its pages trying to erase him.
What he kept now were mories.
Glyphs etched into thought.
And silence where words had once been.
On the seventh day, he walked through a dead path. The trees were burned. Ash drifted with the wind. At the center, he found a shrine. Small. Broken. A na carved into the stone.
Elara.
He stared at it for a long ti.
He did not kneel.
He did not speak.
He touched it once.
Then lit it on fire.
The fla swallowed it whole.
Not from rage.
From refusal.
This was not her. Not the girl who had stood with him, fought beside him, laughed when he lost practice duels. Not the one who held open the Gate with her soul.
She was not a statue.
Not a na in stone.
And the world had no right to make her into sothing lesser.
When the fire died, he walked on.
Ahead, the road bent down into a valley. Lanterns flickered in the dusk. A village waited in the mist.
Tian kept moving.
He did not know what he was looking for.
Only that he could not stop.
Because if he did, her voice might fade.
And that was sothing he would not allow.
★★★
The village in the valley looked older than its stone. Its gates sagged inward. Lamps hung from crooked wood beams, flickering even though there was no wind. The people moved slowly. Tired, but not broken.
Tian passed through the outer gate unnoticed.
A woman swept ash off her doorstep. Two boys ran past him chasing a glyph-lit toy. An old man knelt in the dust, drawing sothing that no longer had a na.
He didn't ask for a place to sleep.
He found an abandoned forge on the far edge of the village. The coals were cold. The walls cracked. But it felt like soone had been here once who knew what fire ant.
He sat on the floor.
Closed his eyes.
And let the quiet wrap around him.
Grief ca again. Slower this ti. Heavy. Not sharp like it had been. Like walking through a river with weights around his chest.
He did not cry.
He rembered.
Her voice when she laughed without aning to.
Her hand, steadying his after a long night.
The way she entered a fight like it was a challenge she had already accepted.
Now there was only silence. And a fire that would not rest.
He opened his palm.
No glyph ford.
Only light.
The forge answered. Not with fla. With nas.
He stood.
One wall of the forge held ink carvings. Nas. So old. So newer. None in perfect script.
He stepped closer.
Near the top, one na shimred.
Elira.
Close. But not her.
Still, sothing clenched in his chest.
He lifted his hand.
Paused.
He could not erase what soone else had written. That was not the way.
So he drew beside it.
One curve.
A single glyph.
Not to replace.
To guide.
She was more.
That was enough.
He stepped out.
The forge stayed behind him. The village stayed quiet. No one stopped him. No one asked his na.
By midday, he reached the southern road.
It led toward a place where even the sky trembled.
Where mory did not keep its shape.
Where nas were rewritten.
Tian kept walking.
Not to find sothing new.
But to make sure hers would never be twisted again.
★★★
The city was called Mirath.
Once a fortress.
Then a shrine.
Then a ruin.
Now rebuilt from pieces. Fragnts of stories. Glyphs. Nas.
And one na above all others.
Elara.
He saw it everywhere.
Carved into the towers.
Painted on banners.
Etched onto doors and windows.
The people whispered it like it brought them peace.
He entered quietly. Hood drawn low.
He knew right away that sothing was wrong.
Not with the city.
With the way it rembered her.
Too much certainty. Too much polish.
They had made her into an icon.
Not a truth.
He passed a mural. Eastern wall. She stood there, arms wide, light rising from her shoulders like wings. A thousand figures knelt below her in reverence.
He looked away.
Elara had never asked to be worshipped.
She had asked for truth.
And truth was never that neat.
★★★
At the city center, a temple stood open.
Inside, bells rang.
Incense curled in the air like smoke from mory.
A woman in bright robes approached.
"You have co to see her fla," she said.
Tian said nothing.
"We guard her na here," the priestess continued. "She is our saint. Our protector. She stood against the heavens and beca light."
He spoke quietly.
"She didn't do it to be rembered."
"Pardon?"
He walked past her, toward the altar.
Polished black stone. A relic sat on top. A cloth, sealed in crystal.
Etched beneath it: Fragnt of the Fla-Bearer.
He stared at it.
It was not hers.
He could feel it.
Just another story soone had shaped from ash.
He touched the crystal.
The fla in his palm flickered.
The relic turned to dust.
Gasps rose around him.
"You desecrated a sacred object," the priestess snapped.
"I cleared a lie," Tian said.
"You have no right—"
"I walked beside her. I know what she gave up. You build temples. She gave herself. You recite prayers. She chose silence."
He stepped back into the altar light.
"Truth doesn't need worship. It needs mory."
The temple dimd.
Not from anger.
From understanding.
He left without waiting for forgiveness.
The sky above had begun to darken.
He walked on.
Not to silence those who spoke her na.
Only to find the ones who rembered it right.
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