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(Lyra Asterion’s POV)

The frontier wind always carried a strange weight.

Even when the air was still, you could feel the corruption — that faint pressure under the skin, that whisper just beyond hearing.

Three years of cleansing, and we’d co so far.

The borderlands now shimred with life again — trees reborn under Maori’s blessing, soil alive with gentle mana.

And yet, beyond the faint shimr of the barrier, the black mist still waited.

Silent. Patient. Watching.

We had reached the edge.

Beyond this point, the land changed — twisting, pulsing, a living wound.

Acker’s arrows no longer pierced through the air there; even light bent strangely inside the corrupted fog.

Noile’s fists cracked bones of beasts that wouldn’t stay dead.

Even lissa’s radiant shield — once untouchable — was stained black at the edges.

We had spent weeks testing, scouting, burning, and blessing.

And still, nothing.

The corruption did not advance… but neither did it retreat.

It was a stalemate.

And worse, we knew it couldn’t last.

That evening, the forest stirred.

The roots glowed faintly, the ground vibrating with a pulse like a slow heartbeat.

Maori’s voice ca through the air — soft yet heavy with age.

“You have done well,” she said. “But this barrier will not hold forever.”

lissa stood at the front of the group, helm tucked under one arm, her blue eyes sharp.

“Then we keep pushing. We’ve fought worse.”

Maori’s tone deepened. “No. What lies beyond cannot be felled by mortal hands.”

The light of her tree dimd slightly, as if straining. “I need my caretaker. Only his mana can weave through the heart of the corruption.”

Her words hung in the air like thunder.

All eyes turned to .

I didn’t need to ask who she ant.

“Rooga,” I whispered.

The next eting was held in Darius’s study — quiet, candlelit, heavy with tension.

Selene said nothing at first. She just stared at the map spread across the table, her fingers tapping against the wood in a slow, anxious rhythm.

When Maori’s request was repeated, she stood so quickly that her chair fell over.

“No.”

Her voice wasn’t loud, but it cracked through the air like lightning.

“No, he’s still a child. He’s my child. I will not send him into that place again.”

Darius said nothing. He simply looked at the table, jaw tight, the veins on his hands showing.

I could tell — he agreed with her, even if he didn’t say it aloud.

“Maori believes only he can reach the core,” I said carefully. “His mana isn’t bound by the sa rules. If he doesn’t go—”

Darius’s eyes lifted, calm but final. “Then we hold the line here.”

lissa’s gauntlet clenched. “And if holding the line makes the rest of the continent burn?”

He didn’t answer.

Selene did. “Then let the continent burn. I will not lose him.”

The silence after that felt endless.

So we stayed.

No advancent. No retreat.

The corrupted beasts still prowled the mist, but they did not cross the barrier.

Every few months, Maori’s voice returned, weaker each ti.

Each ti, she repeated the sa plea — the caretaker must co.

And each ti, the Valemonts refused.

I didn’t bla them.

They’d almost lost their child once. They couldn’t risk his life — not even for the world.

So we held.

And the world grew quiet.

Too quiet.

Then, one cold morning, a courier arrived.

lissa opened the seal and read the letter aloud.

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Her face drained of color halfway through.

By the ti she reached the end, her gauntleted hand trembled.

“It’s spreading,” she whispered. “The corruption. It’s—” she stopped, voice tightening, “—appearing in Solmaria.”

Acker swore under his breath.

Noile’s tail lashed. “Impossible. It can’t move that far.”

I took the letter and read the rest.

‘The Holy Lands report black mist near the southern marshes. Villages lost. The Holy Church claims divine interference. A new Saintess has arisen, claiming she can summon heroes from another world to end the corruption once and for all.’

I stared at the last line until the ink blurred.

lissa’s gauntlet scraped against the table.

“The Saintess wants to summon heroes?” she said bitterly. “Last ti we did that, we got wars, not salvation.”

Noile grunted. “Then maybe history’s repeating itself.”

Acker looked toward . “What now, Lyra?”

I folded the letter, the paper soft against my gloves.

“What else?” I said quietly. “We watch. We wait.”

Because sowhere deep down, I already knew —

when the river changes its course, it only does so to find a weaker wall.

(Rooga Valemont’s POV)

The forest was quiet that day.

No wind. No birds. Not even the soft hum that usually ca from the roots underfoot.

Just silence.

I followed the familiar path to the grove, the one lined with glowing vines and ancient stones, but even they seed dimr now.

And when I reached the clearing, I understood why.

Maori stood before her great tree — or rather, leaned against it.

Her light was faint, her skin dull like the last flicker of dusk.

The usual spark in her eyes — that teasing, motherly mischief — was gone.

“Maori…” I said softly.

She smiled, but even that looked heavy. “You shouldn’t have co alone, my caretaker.”

“You sound tired.”

“I am tired.” She exhaled slowly, her form flickering. “Holding the corruption at bay… it drains more than even the roots can give.”

I stepped closer, my heart tightening.

The roots beneath us pulsed weakly, like a slowing heartbeat.

Without thinking, I raised my hand and summoned a bloom.

But not like before — not the cold, efficient casting I used to show off as a trick.

This one was slow, careful, deliberate.

Mana flowed from my hand like a steady stream of warmth.

The petals opened with gentle light, glowing softly in the twilight grove.

When it blood fully, I held it out to her.

“For you,” I said.

Maori’s eyes widened slightly. “You’ve never given one quite like this before.”

“Yeah,” I said with a small smile. “Guess I finally learned how to make one properly.”

She took it with trembling fingers. The mont it touched her palm, the entire grove seed to breathe.

The leaves rustled faintly, color returning to the grass beneath her feet.

“Your mana feels… different,” she murmured. “Gentler. It’s no longer just power — it’s intent.”

“I figured it out,” I said quietly. “Bloom isn’t just about life. It’s about connection.”

Her lips curved faintly. “You’ve grown.”

Before I could answer, the edges of my vision dimd.

The world tilted.

“Rooga?” Her voice sounded distant now. “Rooga, what are you—”

The light from the bloom flared too bright.

And then everything went dark.

When I opened my eyes again, I wasn’t in the grove.

I stood in a void — endless, quiet, faintly rippling like the surface of water.

In front of floated a sphere of light — cracked, glowing with hues of green and blue. My mana core.

And beside it, leaning casually as if resting against an invisible wall, was a figure that looked… too familiar.

Short black hair. Tired eyes. The sa crooked smile I used to see in mirrors for thirty years.

“Well, look who’s burning the candle again,” he said, voice dripping with sarcasm. “I thought we agreed not to overdo it.”

He crossed his arms. “So tell , genius, what’s the point this ti? You’ve already got enough on your plate. You barely sleep, barely train, spend your days fixing carts and making toys for villagers who won’t rember your na.”

“That’s not—”

“It is.” His tone hardened. “You think being kind changes anything? You’re spreading yourself thin for people who’ll move on the second you’re gone. Just stop.”

I looked at him — really looked at him.

The lines around his eyes, the dullness in his expression — that was the version of who gave up before he ever tried.

“I can’t stop,” I said simply.

He snorted. “Why not?”

“Because maybe,” I said quietly, “there’s sothing in life worth fighting for. Even if it hurts. Even if I fail.”

He looked unimpressed. “Big words. Sounds like one of those motivational quotes you used to scroll past at 2 AM.”

“Maybe,” I said. “But you’re wrong about one thing — people don’t have to rember . That’s not why I help them.”

He raised an eyebrow.

“I help them,” I continued, “because it feels right. Because soone has to make the world lighter, even if it’s just for a mont. Because every little thing we fix, every life we touch — it adds up. Maybe not for us. But for soone.”

He fell quiet.

The sarcasm in his face faltered just slightly.

After a long pause, he sighed. “You really haven’t changed, have you?”

“Maybe I did,” I said. “I learned that running from life doesn’t make it easier. It just makes the world colder.”

He smirked faintly. “And here I thought dying once would knock so optimism out of us.”

I chuckled. “Guess not.”

He went silent for a while, his gaze drifting toward the mana core.

Then, softly, he said, “You know… we never did get that RV, huh?”

I blinked, then laughed quietly. “Yeah. We kept saying we’d travel the country. Never even left the city.”

He smiled — genuinely this ti. “So you know who I am, then.”

“How could I forget?” I said. “You’re . Thirty years of giving up, sitting still, and waiting for aning to show up. And I’m what happens when we stop waiting.”

He let out a breath that almost sounded like relief. “Fair enough.”

He looked at — the sa eyes, the sa soul — and for the first ti, he didn’t look tired.

“Alright, kid,” he said finally. “If you really want to fight for it… then fight. I’ll stop getting in your way.”

He reached out, and as our hands t, the world of light cracked open.

I gasped awake beneath Maori’s tree.

Her hand was on my shoulder, her glow restored — faint, but brighter than before.

“You vanished,” she said softly. “For a mont, I thought I’d lost you.”

I smiled weakly. “You won’t get rid of that easily.”

Her eyes softened. “You’ve changed again, haven’t you?”

“Maybe,” I whispered. “Or maybe I just stopped being afraid of what I used to be.”

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