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(Lyra’s POV)

There was a ti when the Borderlands were silent.

Not peaceful — silent.

No birds, no chatter, no laughter. Just the sound of wind scraping through dead trees and the echo of hunger in empty houses.

I rember that silence well.

It was the sound of survival — of people too tired to dream.

But now, when I walked through the new streets of our growing town, that silence was gone.

Replaced by sothing fragile and precious.

Laughter.

From the balcony of the new council hall — which used to be Darius’s old barn — I could see everything.

Children darted between the roots of glowing trees, waving small carved animals through the air.

Wooden birds, foxes, and dragons glead with faint threads of mana as they caught sunlight.

So elves watched from nearby, smiling softly. Others joined in, teaching the children how to make the figures float for a few seconds longer.

And in the middle of it all stood Rooga.

Dust on his clothes, hair a ss, surrounded by a storm of small hands and even smaller voices.

He looked… happy.

Tired, but happy.

I’d gone down to the square earlier that morning to deliver mana permits for new market stalls — paperwork I’d dreaded, but it turned into sothing else.

A few parents stopped as I passed.

One woman, her hands still rough from farm work, smiled through tears as she watched her daughter run across the square with a carved bird in hand.

“Three years ago,” she said, “she could barely walk. We had nothing. No food. No safety. I thought she wouldn’t live another winter.”

Her husband nodded, his voice low.

“Now she wakes up early just to play. I don’t even care that she skips breakfast sotis — as long as she’s laughing.”

Another mother nearby added softly,

“We used to tell our children not to wander outside. Now we tell them not to stay inside too long.”

They laughed, and for once, I didn’t have the heart to remind them of curfews or boundaries.

Because they were right.

This place had changed — not just the land, but the people.

And the cause of it all was a boy who’d never realized what he was doing.

Later that afternoon, a few elven artisans ca to visit Rooga’s shack.

They didn’t co to instruct or correct — they ca to learn.

I stood near the edge of the workshop, watching as Rooga explained how to “feel” the grain of wood before using mana to guide its form.

His hands moved slowly, carefully, as though teaching was as natural to him as breathing.

An elven craftsman bowed deeply afterward.

“In Elarindor, we shape wood through mory,” he said. “We recall the life it once held. But this—” he gestured at Rooga’s carvings “—this is different. You imagine new life into it.”

Another elf murmured, almost reverently, “It’s creation without heritage. Pure will.”

Their words made realize what I was seeing.

For the first ti in centuries, humans and elves were creating sothing together.

By evening, I saw elves teaching villagers how to blend song magic into carving, while the humans showed them how to work with sturdier tools.

Mana lights glowed along the roads, shaped into lanterns that looked like tiny wooden spirits.

What started as children’s play had beco a new art form — a new culture born from both worlds.

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A union of rough hands and graceful magic.

And the heart of it all was a boy who once thought he was lazy.

When I passed by Rooga’s shack later that night, I found him asleep at his bench, sawdust still in his hair, half-finished carvings scattered around.

Luna was there too, quietly tucking a blanket over his shoulders.

The glow from the wooden figures lit the walls — hundreds of small shapes, each humming with faint mana, like dreams made solid.

I stood at the doorway for a long while, unable to move.

Because I realized sothing I hadn’t dared admit before:

It wasn’t the goddess or magic that changed this land.

It was him.

A boy who gave the world the one thing it had forgotten — the courage to imagine again.

(Maori’s POV)

The world hums differently now.

It isn’t the pulse of war or survival anymore — it’s lighter, almost playful.

Mana drifts through the air like songbirds, flitting between human laughter and elven song.

And beneath it all, the roots sing.

Even I, who once commanded forests and rivers, have never felt the land this alive.

From the heart of my grove, I could feel every heartbeat within these lands.

The children playing in the fields.

The villagers carving shapes from fallen branches.

The elves weaving magic into their hos.

And sowhere near the center of it all, Rooga’s mana pulsing steady and warm — the rhythm that everything else followed.

When he carved wood, the trees humd approval.

When he laughed, the flowers opened faster.

When he dread, the soil itself seed to listen.

I smiled faintly.

“So this is what it ans to grow with the world, not above it.”

A ripple in mana told soone approached.

Elandra stepped from the grove’s mist — her silver hair catching the glow of the roots, her eyes filled with that sa patient sadness she’d carried since the Age of Corruption.

“You feel it too,” she said softly.

I nodded. “It’s spreading faster than I expected. The balance is… changing.”

Elandra rested a hand on the bark beside her, closing her eyes. “I never thought I’d live to see a civilization grow like this. The mana of humans and elves — it’s no longer clashing. It’s dancing.”

She paused, then looked at with a faint smile. “You always said harmony was born from struggle.”

“I did,” I said, amused. “But I never said it couldn’t co from play.”

The roots beneath us pulsed with faint light — golden and green weaving together, forming patterns I hadn’t seen since before my fall.

“The children,” Elandra whispered. “They’re shaping mana without realizing it.”

“Yes,” I said. “Their joy is pure. Every toy, every laugh, it ripples outward — their emotions feeding the land.”

I extended my senses further, feeling the mana veins stretch toward the horizon.

The old corruption that once scarred the edges of this land had receded — not destroyed, not sealed, but healed.

The earth was no longer resisting the world’s energy.

It was embracing it.

This wasn’t divine intervention.

It was evolution.

And it all started because a boy decided to carve wood.

Elandra smiled faintly, kneeling to trace one of the glowing roots.

“The elves think this land is sacred now,” she said. “They’ve started calling it Aerasyl — the Living Root. They believe the goddess herself sleeps beneath it.”

I chuckled softly. “They’re not wrong.”

Her eyes flicked up to , curious. “Does that please you?”

“Please?” I tilted my head. “No. But it does amuse . The world thinks I move it, when in truth, he does.”

“Rooga?”

“Yes,” I murmured. “That boy’s imagination is reshaping mana itself. His creations carry intent so genuine that the land obeys it. Even the elves are beginning to unconsciously mimic his flow — their magic is shifting, bending toward humanity.”

She frowned slightly. “That kind of influence shouldn’t be possible without divine interference.”

“It isn’t interference,” I said. “It’s inheritance.”

Elandra looked up sharply. “You an—”

“Yes.” I placed my hand on the nearest root. “The spark I gave him — the elven core. It didn’t just purify his mana. It anchored him to . To the world. He’s not my priest or my vessel. He’s sothing far rarer.”

“What is he, then?”

I smiled, though it was tinged with lancholy.

“The true Caretaker. A mortal whose soul grows with the world instead of standing apart from it. The balance I once embodied, now reborn in a human body with a child’s heart.”

Elandra’s voice softened. “You sound proud.”

“Of course,” I said quietly. “But I’m also afraid.”

“Afraid?”

“Because the stronger the world grows with him,” I murmured, “the heavier its weight will rest on his shoulders.”

We stood in silence for a long while, listening to the roots hum.

Above us, the night sky shimred faintly with mana, constellations bending slightly toward the grove as if drawn by its pulse.

Elandra’s voice finally broke the quiet. “Do you think he’ll handle it?”

I looked out toward the distant city lights — where laughter still rang and music carried through the air.

“He doesn’t know what he’s doing,” I said softly. “That’s what makes him perfect for it.”

Elandra smiled faintly. “You always did favor the reckless ones.”

I returned the smile, my tone wistful. “Because only the reckless ever dare to dream.”

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