He saw each of his wives - what they had beco, what they could beco. Their strength, their stories, their shadows. Their love.
He saw himself.
And in that mont, he understood.
They were no longer surviving the island.
They were the island.
The stone dimd slowly, the light returning to the glyphs, leaving only silence.
Then, from the edge of the clearing, sothing moved.
Not a monster.
Not a creature.
But a shape.
Tall. Humanoid. Shimring, made entirely of spiraling glyphs, shifting like windblown smoke.
It stepped forward.
They didn’t flinch.
The figure bowed its head, once.
We have watched.
The voice spoke without sound, directly into their minds.
We have feared. We have punished. We have abandoned. You burned what we made. You sang new nas.
Jude stepped forward. "We survived."
The being nodded. And now, you lead.
Rose tilted her head. "What are you?"
The being rippled. What was. What remains. What must now sleep.
Susan stepped closer. "Are you the last?"
No. But we are the last who rember. And mory must rest. We give this place to you.
The being turned to Jude.
The Thirteen Fla becos the First Fla. Guard it. Love it. Let it change you. Let it change us.
It stepped backward.
Folded in on itself.
Vanished.
The clearing went still.
Then, the pillars pulsed once more.
A new glyph appeared on each one.
Not watcherscript.
But their own.
Sophie whispered, "We’ve been given the island."
Emma breathed out slowly. "What do we do with it?"
Natalie smiled. "We live."
That night, they didn’t return to the shelters.
They built a new one - right there, among the stones, weaving vines and silk-grass, laying furs and blankets. A place to start again.
They lay together in the center, the sky above them wide and endless.
Jude lay with Lucy curled against one side, Sophie on the other. Rose lay atop him briefly, her lips trailing over his chest, her breath a whisper. Susan traced symbols into his arm with her fingers. Grace kissed Layla deeply under the canopy of leaves. Zoey rested between Emma and Stella, their bodies tangled, glowing.
There was no rush.
They had ti now.
Jude closed his eyes.
The Heart beat beneath them.
And the island listened.
The rhythm of the island had changed, and everyone could feel it - not in grand gestures or overt magic, but in the way the breeze curled through the trees like a satisfied exhale, or how the sunlight filtered through the leaves with gentle intent. It was as if the island itself had shifted into harmony with them, no longer indifferent, no longer testing, but accepting.
The sanctuary they’d built beside the pillars of the Heart beca more than shelter. It beca ho. The thirteenth stone still pulsed faintly, and the newly etched glyphs glowed softly each night, their patterns unique and alive. The wives had begun tracing them into their skin with river clay, as though marking themselves with what they now were: the First Fla.
That morning, Jude woke before the others. Lucy lay sprawled across his chest, her breathing even, one leg tangled with his. Sophie had her arm over his shoulder, her fingers curled lightly into his hair. Beyond them, Rose and Emma slept side by side, their bodies so close they seed woven together. Susan had draped her body over Grace, and the two of them lay in a soft nest of vines. Natalie and Stella were curled like kittens under the canopy, and Zoey and Layla were wrapped in a slow kiss even in their dreams.
He didn’t want to move.
But sothing whispered beneath the earth again.
He sat up carefully, shifting Lucy without waking her, and tiptoed outside the woven hut into the still air of early morning. The trees shimred faintly, as if the dew itself carried light. Jude didn’t know where he was going, but his feet did. He followed instinct deeper into the grove, past the thirteen pillars, through a small opening in the vine-covered rocks.
The path there was narrow, sloping downward, illuminated only by tiny glowing insects that hovered near his skin without touching. They didn’t fear him. They recognized him.
The path opened into a small cavern, mossy and dark except for a single glowing pool in the center. It was small - no more than a few feet across - but its surface rippled like glass, and the light from it pulsed faintly in rhythm with his heartbeat.
He stepped closer.
When he knelt at the edge, he saw no reflection.
Only fire.
Not fla, but what fire ant. mory. Change. Power.
He leaned in.
The pool shifted.
Images flickered across its surface. The first night on the beach. The laughter. The rituals. The monster that had once stalked the trees. Rose in the river. Layla’s smile as it changed. Zoey watching and following. One by one, their awakenings. Their transformations. Their union.
Then a new image: the island - not as terrain, but as a being, breathing, shifting, watching through a thousand unseen eyes.
It had chosen them. Not to trap. Not to test.
To rge.
Jude understood then.
The Heart had not simply accepted them. It had opened to them. And in doing so, it had beco a conduit - not only for magic or mory, but for evolution.
They were no longer rely thirteen individuals.
They were a collective.
A fla with many voices, many desires.
He sat back, exhaling. The understanding felt like both burden and gift. They had beco sothing new. But new things needed guidance. Intention.
The First Fla couldn’t just be. It had to burn right.
When Jude returned to the clearing, the others were waking. Susan t his eyes first and tilted her head slightly. "You saw sothing."
"I did," he said quietly. "I think the island showed what we’ve beco."
Zoey sat up, her hair a wild halo around her face. "Are we in danger?"
"No," he said. "But we are different now. We’re part of it, and it’s part of us. And that ans we need to be careful how we move, what we feed into it."
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