A gentle wind whispered through the cetery, its soothing caress an embodint of serenity, as if the very air respected the somber stillness that enveloped the place.
Tucked away at the periphery of the Wind Clan's sacred inner sanctum, this secluded graveyard was cloaked in layers of enchantnts, flanked by living stone walls that seed to pulse with a quiet, watchful energy.
It was not a resting place for valiant warriors or celebrated heroes, but a sanctuary dedicated to one singular soul, revered, untouchable.
In stark contrast to the usual grandeur of monunts, there was no elaborate statue or ostentatious adornnts here.
Instead, a polished slab of sky-blue stone lay at the heart of this hallowed ground, its surface exquisitely carved to resemble a gust of wind captured in frozen motion—a breathtaking tribute to the epheral nature of life.
The engraved words upon it shimred softly with a faint glimr of embedded mana, their luminescence undiminished with ti.
Surrounding the grave, fresh white lilies and delicate wind roses were arranged with ticulous care, each bloom a testant to love and rembrance, seemingly placed by an unseen hand.
The grass in the vicinity was impeccably trimd, the stone immaculately clean, and the earth swept as if by gentle whispers of respect—the result of an unwavering devotion that hung like a tender mist in the air
And there, kneeling before this poignant morial, was a figure few would ever dream to find in such a sacred space.
Clad in a sleeveless tunic of deep steel-green and shimring silver-gray, his wind-forged armor plates lay abandoned beside him, discarded as if they were burdens far too heavy to bear in this mont of reverent solitude.
Cassius Aoelus, the Wind Knight.
The Patriarch of the Wind Clan.
His na echoed through the hearts of many, spoken in tones of both fear and reverence, yet here he was, stripped of his warrior's identity, embracing the quietude of loss.
But now, he knelt. A slim, weary figure, his broad shoulders hunched, his black hair unbound and wild, swaying softly in the high-altitude breeze.
His sword—Tempest Fang, the very symbol of his title—was stabbed into the ground beside the grave, its tip buried deep in the mountain soil.
His forehead leaned against its hilt, eyes shut tight, though tears stread freely down his weathered face.
"Seems like what you didn't want to happen… is about to," he whispered, voice strained, cracking under grief that had long been locked behind steel composure.
"I know you wanted to settle it… to be honest with him. To tell him who I am to him."
He exhaled sharply, knuckles white where they clutched the blade.
"But I just… I can't. Every day it feels like torture. Because I failed you. I failed him. And maybe… maybe that's sothing I can't face."
The breeze swirled, wrapping around him like a mournful song.
"You always said I should move forward, even if the world didn't. But the truth is, it hasn't. Not since you left."
His fingers trembled as he reached forward and touched the stone.
"It's never been the sa. I've never been the sa."
For a long mont, there was nothing but silence—the wind moving the grass in waves around him, the sun beginning to dip beneath the distant clouds.
If anyone had wandered into this sacred space now, they would've stood frozen in shock.
To see the most powerful man in the Wind Clan—Cassius Aoelus, the eternal general, the storm incarnate, the runes master—weeping at a grave, speaking not as a leader but as a man haunted by choices left unspoken.
A gust passed, shaking the flowers, and yet the grave remained untouched—as if the very wind itself honored the na buried beneath.
Cassius closed his eyes again and whispered, "I know you don't want this, but this is the only way for to redeem myself."
Then, slowly, he pulled the blade from the earth.
And the wind—gentle and patient—carried his final words to the one beneath the stone:
"Forgive ."
As he moved away, the na on the grave revealed itself
Here lies Mona Perl.
----
Morning light filtered gently through the sheer curtains of the Alex suite, casting soft golden patterns across the marbled floor.
Alex stirred from his deep sleep, the scent of windblown cedarwood and enchanted oils lingering faintly in the air—a feature of the hotel's mana-infused ventilation system.
His eyes opened slowly, adjusting to the ambient glow of the room, and for a mont… there was peace.
No blades. No blood. No mories of battle or fire or the weight of vengeance pressing against his chest.
Just calm.
But as he sat up, bare-chested and relaxed in silk sleepwear, a faint ache rippled through his left side—a quiet reminder of his last battle.
Months had slipped by since the fateful confrontation with Khepri, and despite his formidable healing abilities and the gentle pulses of lightning bestowed by Nyxara that crackled in the air around him, his body remained a patchwork of scars and lingering fatigue.
Though he moved without a limp and no fresh wounds were bleeding upon his skin, an unsettling awareness resonated deep within his bones.
It was that elusive 5%, that final fraction of restoration, standing between him and the vibrant readiness required for combat.
That 5% could very well tip the scales between survival and demise when confronted by a foe as deadly as Cassius Aoelus.
So, he waited with asured patience, nurturing the remnants of his strength. He healed with deliberate care, each day a step closer to wholeness.
The past week had dawned with a surreal sense of tranquility enveloping him. Early each morning, as the first light painted the sky in hues of gold and crimson, Alex would rise, embracing the stillness of dawn.
He took to ditation, grounding himself and channeling the ethereal mana that swirled around him, allowing the warmth to seep into his very essence.
Each breath drew in vitality, coaxing his body to nd, to stitch together the fractures that had yet to completely heal.
Ravenous hunger coursed through him as he approached alti. His appetite seed insatiable, a cavernous void demanding to be filled, leading him to devour ten trays of lavishly prepared food at each sitting.
The culinary spread was nothing short of a feast—a lange of flavors and textures laid before him in abundance.
The bewildered hotel staff exchanged whispers, casting sidelong glances at this "eccentric foreign businessman" whose appetite rivaled that of a wyvern, their murmurs filled with a mix of admiration and incredulity at the sight of him consuming plate after plate with gusto that could only be described as voracious.
Of course, most of that food was for Nyxara.
Who, oddly, had grown quieter. She hadn't said much since their brief exchange after his nightmare.
She ate, she lounged, she accompanied him into the pocket dinsion when needed, but there was a subtle shift in her deanor—a deeper watchfulness, as though waiting for him to fully return. He noticed. But he didn't speak about it.
By midweek, the rhythm had shifted.
Alex began to leave the hotel occasionally, not for scouting or spying, but for breathing.
He visited an open-air park nestled between the hills and spires of Wind City's outer district, where mana-threaded kites floated effortlessly in the skies, children laughed as their pets chased each other, and older folks played strategic board gas beneath whispering trees shaped to mimic the wind's flow.
Alex sat on a smooth white bench under the shadow of a sculpted willow, watching the clouds drift, listening. Allowing his heart to rest for once.
He even wandered into one of the district's cinemas—a luxury, wind-run theatre where projectors cast hyper-real films into the air, complete with atmospheric effects.
During a romantic cody, he sat alone, the plush reclining seat far too large for one person.
The soft laughter of couples, the sll of buttery pastries, and the occasional bursts of enchanted rainfall within the scene made the whole thing feel… alien.
But not unpleasant.
For a brief hour, he allowed himself to forget who he was.
At night, the hotel shimred with ambient lighting as glowing stones lined the hallways and gentle music played from the ceiling.
Alex returned, often to a warm bath and a silent Nyxara already curled up on the bed like a guardian sphinx. Her eyes sotis followed him longer than they needed to.
He'd eat. Sit. Read the updates on NOVA's internal feed. Track movents. Stay inford. Then sleep again.
To the outside world, he looked like a foreign businessman on a voyage.
But beneath that illusion lay a fractured weapon being carefully reforged.
Alex's ti spent in this place was not solely dedicated to healing; it was also a period of profound preparation.
He imrsed himself in the tranquil surroundings, seeking to ground himself amidst the chaos of his thoughts.
Each day was an opportunity to confront and quiet the haunting echoes of his past, if only for a brief mont, allowing clarity to take root in his mind.
As he engaged in rituals of reflection and self-discovery, he could feel the weight of his burdens gradually lifting, creating a space for focus and resolve to flourish.
He was determined that, when the mont of action finally arrived, he would stand ready, fortified by the strength he cultivated during these days of introspection.
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