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Seris approached carefully. "My prince... what happened below?"

Lindarion stepped fully into the sunlight, the last echoes of the trials humming faintly in his veins.

"We found the truth the ancients hid," he said. "And the path to Luneth is clearer now."

Nysha nodded once. "We’re going to need every ounce of preparation. The labyrinth was only the beginning."

Ashwing climbed onto Lindarion’s shoulder again, exhausted but still trying to look brave. "Yeah. And next ti, if a cosmic entity asks you to ’face your truth,’ just say no. Or at least eat sothing first."

Despite everything, Lindarion laughed quietly.

A rare sound.

A grounding one.

Then he looked toward the distant southern horizon—toward Tirnaeth, toward the warlines, toward the looming shadow of Dythrael’s return.

"Rest tonight," he said. "At dawn, we march."

The desert wind swept past them, carrying with it the faint tremor of sothing vast shifting beneath the world’s surface.

The third trial was over.

The world had begun to respond.

And the journey south continued.

The desert night had settled deep when the camp finally quieted. Tents were pitched in a circle around the mouth of the ruins, torches flickering in the wind, and the dark elves of Tirnaeth kept silent watch on the dunes like shadows carved from obsidian.

Lindarion didn’t sleep.

Not because he refused.

Because he couldn’t.

The resonance from the third trial still humd beneath his skin—subtle, steady, like an echo pulsing in ti with his heartbeat. Every ti he closed his eyes, he saw the shifting silhouette of the echo-being. Not speaking. Not threatening. Just watching.

Judging.

Nysha sat near the fire, sharpening her daggers with slow, deliberate motions. She kept glancing at him, not suspicious—simply ensuring he was still himself. Ashwing slept curled at Lindarion’s feet, mumbling in tiny dragon snores about cosmic creatures and taxes.

The desert wind gusted, carrying sand across the camp.

Vaelion approached, his long strides soft in the sand. "You should rest, Prince."

"I’m fine."

"That is a word you use when you an the opposite."

Lindarion didn’t deny it.

The older elf studied him for a long mont, then sighed. "The trials changed you. I can see it. Even without mana-sight."

Lindarion looked up. "Does it worry you?"

"It would worry anyone," Vaelion replied, unflinching. Then his tone softened. "But change is not corruption. I stood with your father during his ascension trials. He erged from his own transformation nearly unrecognizable... yet more himself than ever."

Lindarion didn’t answer. The comparison unsettled him—not because he feared the transformation, but because his father’s path had nearly killed him.

The silence broke when Seris, the dark elf emissary, approached with her hood down, revealing eyes like pale lavender fla.

"We should speak," she said quietly. "Away from the others."

Lindarion stood, and Nysha imdiately followed. Seris led them a short distance from the camp to a dune crest overlooking the ruins.

"The sands shifted again," she said. "We felt it even from Tirnaeth. The tremor carried your signature."

Nysha stiffened. "You can feel Lindarion’s mana from another nation?"

Seris nodded. "Not his mana. His resonance."

Lindarion narrowed his eyes. "Explain."

Seris drew a circle in the sand with the tip of her boot—a perfect loop.

"When a resonance reaches high-primordial thresholds, it creates a disturbance in the leylines. Not enough to destabilize, but enough to alert anyone with forbidden sight."

Nysha’s voice sharpened. "Forbidden sight? You people still practice that?"

"Oh, never openly," Seris replied with a half-smile. "But in Tirnaeth, we do what must be done to survive our borders."

Lindarion crossed his arms. "You sensed the trial awakening."

"We sensed a flare. One that matched..." she hesitated, sothing rare for a dark elf, "...the ancient serpent’s cycle."

Ashwing, who had silently crept over, squeaked. "You an Dythrael’s mana? That was what you sensed?"

Seris shook her head. "Not Dythrael. Sothing adjacent. Parallel. Like a sibling fla."

Nysha shot Lindarion a sharp look. "A sibling fla—"

"Not mine," Lindarion said before she could finish. "It’s the trial’s echo. Not my doing."

Seris studied him. "Perhaps. Or perhaps your path is no longer separate from the Devourer’s."

Nysha bristled. "He is not connected to that creature."

Seris t Lindarion’s eyes evenly. "Every resonance has a twin. Light casts a shadow. Power casts a burden. And your resonance shifted the mont you stepped out of that sanctum."

She leaned slightly closer, lowering her voice.

"Sothing in the south stirs when you move."

Lindarion felt his pulse tighten. "What exactly."

Seris’s expression turned grim. "Three nights ago, a fissure of void-light erupted near the Onyx Scar. For a mont—a heartbeat only—the entire wasteland lit like a dying star."

Nysha whispered, "That’s where Dythrael was last seen..."

"And where his influence gathers now," Seris confird.

Ashwing swallowed. "So—so—so the big snake monster is... what... reacting to Lindarion? Not wanting him to co south?"

"No," Seris said. "Not avoiding. Anticipating."

Nysha stiffened. "You an Dythrael is waiting for him?"

Seris nodded once. "Yes. And whatever awoke in that sanctum... Dythrael felt it."

Lindarion didn’t flinch. "Good."

Nysha looked at him sharply. "Lindarion—"

"If he’s waiting," Lindarion continued, "then he won’t hide. And if he won’t hide, we’ll find Luneth faster."

Seris studied him with an almost unnerving stillness, then murmured, "You speak as if confronting Dythrael is feasible."

"It has to be," Lindarion said.

"Your father could not do it," Seris said quietly. "Not even with the Twelve."

"And I am not my father."

Nysha exhaled sharply, torn between admiration and worry. Ashwing gently tapped his shoulder with a wing, as if saying: don’t be stupid, but also don’t stop.

Seris took a slow breath. "Very well. Then you should know the last piece."

They waited.

She spoke softly, each word like a blade being drawn.

"The Devourer’s influence spreads in waves. The next surge is predicted in eight nights. When it happens... everything tied to its fate will be affected."

Lindarion frowned. "Everything?"

"Everything," Seris repeated. "Including its prisoners."

Nysha’s eyes widened. "Luneth..."

Seris nodded. "If you don’t reach her before the next surge, her soul tether will weaken. Sever enough, and she will fade from the boundary realms entirely."

Lindarion’s mana flared before he could restrain it—silent, invisible, but potent enough that sand shifted at his feet.

Nysha touched his arm. "We’ll make it."

Ashwing whispered, unusually serious, "We always do."

Lindarion’s jaw tightened, gaze hardening toward the southern dark.

"We leave before dawn," he said. "No delays."

The wind answered with a low, rising howl as though the desert itself acknowledged his vow.

Sothing stirred beneath the dunes—distant, patient, ancient.

And in the far southern horizon, though no one saw it—

A faint pulse of void-light answered him.

The sky was still dark when they broke camp.

Not the soft blue before sunrise—no.

This was the black hour when the world stood breathless, caught between night and morning.

Lindarion stood at the edge of the dunes, cloak brushing the sand, eyes fixed southward. His mana was quiet, unnervingly so—like the calm before a storm that already knew its own path.

Nysha tightened the straps on her satchel, muttering, "You know, normal people wait for actual sunlight before going into demon-infested wastelands."

Ashwing perched on Lindarion’s shoulder, wings tucked tight. "Normal people also don’t have cosmic snake-dieties watching them like it’s the hottest drama on the continent."

Lindarion didn’t respond. His attention was on the horizon—the faint shimr of a leyline fracture only he could see. A thread of silver cutting across the dunes.

Vaelion joined them, his expression as composed as ever. "The dark elves will escort us until the basalt ridge. Beyond that, they must turn back."

Seris arrived next, her cloak trailing behind her like living shadow. "We are not welco deeper south. Our presence there would provoke... complications."

Nysha snorted. "Everything provokes complications."

"Not everything," Seris said softly, eyes flicking to Lindarion. "So things rely reveal them."

He t her gaze without flinching. "There’s sothing else you didn’t tell us."

Seris inclined her head. "Yes. But you’ll see it soon enough."

She looked almost apologetic. Almost.

They set off.

Sand compressed under boots and talons. The dunes rolled endlessly, glowing faintly under starlight. The early winds were cold—unnaturally cold, the kind that didn’t belong to a desert morning.

Nysha shivered. "Why does it feel like the sun isn’t coming up?"

"It is," Lindarion said. "But sothing is distorting the upper mana layers."

Ashwing peeked around him nervously. "You an... soone is blocking sunrise?"

"No. Sothing else is happening."

He could feel it—just beyond the edge of perception. A resonance like a tuning fork struck in the bones of the world. Every so often, a pulse traveled through the sand, subtle but unmistakable.

Nysha felt it too. Her hand drifted to her dagger.

"What is that?"

"Not an attack," Lindarion said. "A call."

Vaelion stiffened. "A call from what?"

Lindarion didn’t answer.

They crested a high dune—and then the answer revealed itself.

The desert below them wasn’t empty.

It was forming patterns.

The sand had rippled into concentric rings stretching nearly a kiloter wide. Perfect circles. Too perfect.

As if shaped by sothing enormous beneath the ground.

Nysha whispered, "That wasn’t here when we arrived yesterday."

Seris exhaled slowly. "The desert is rearranging itself in response to him."

Ashwing flailed. "WHY WOULD THE ENTIRE ECOSYSTEM RESPOND TO HIM—?!"

"Because," Seris said, "the resonance he awakened is not a personal transformation. It is a cosmic one."

Vaelion turned sharply. "What are you saying?"

Seris motioned to the rings of sand, each one faintly pulsing with dim luminescence.

"This is a sign of alignnt," she said. "The ancient titans did the sa when Dythrael first erged. The land reacts to forces that can shape eras."

Nysha’s eyes narrowed. "Lindarion is not shaping eras."

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