The silence in the library shifted the mont Ilaria’s sleeve slid back just enough for moon-pale skin to reveal the faintest impression of a mark. At first, it looked like nothing more than a bruise shaped by accident... but under the soft lantern glow, the lines sharpened.
And Lysander stilled.
His breath did not catch, he was too controlled for that, but sothing in his posture tightened, like a scholar confronted with a forbidden page he had only ever theorized about.
Ilaria’s heart hamred painfully upon his reaction, wondering why he looked that way. Her fingers trembled as she pushed the fabric a little further, exposing the sigil fully.
It lay just above her wrist, etched delicately as if pressed beneath the skin by so invisible hand, a pattern both beautiful and profoundly wrong. Two intersecting crescents ford the outer ring, their tips nearly touching. Inside them spiraled thin branching lines, like veins of frost across glass, converging toward a single small diamond-shaped core.
The core shimred faintly, and sotis it pulsed with the faintest echo of heat.
Lysander leaned forward, eyes narrowing in a way that was not unkind, but intensely, frighteningly focused.
"How long has this been there?"
Ilaria swallowed. "I think... during the expedition, when I—" She hesitated. "When I got attacked by a beast..."
"Attacked?" he repeated, his tone sharpening. "Explain exactly what happened."
Ilaria hurried to clarify, her words tumbling out in a rush. "It wasn’t deliberate, and no one ant for it to happen. We were ambushed while my husband was clearing the periter. I— well, I got grazed by one of the creatures, and my arm scraped against the ground. Then... the beast... it licked the wound."
Lysander’s gaze flicked upward, studying her expression, reading what she did not say. "You felt sothing afterward. Didn’t you."
She nodded, her fingers curling reflexively. "My chest... it felt so tight like sothing was pulling inside. And then that night—"
"You dream."
Her pulse skipped. "Yes," she whispered, leaning forward and nodding in urgency. "It was so scary. I got flashbacks about my life and suddenly the sea turned red, and I saw my sister in the middle of it all."
Lysander inhaled deeply, slow and deliberate, as if bracing himself against the weight of his own conclusions. He lifted a hand to touch the mark and test it himself, hesitated, then spoke instead.
"This sigil is not a re mark," he explained. "It is a binder. I have only seen fragnts of its depictions in restricted records."
Ilaria’s stomach dropped. "What does it an?"
"That depends on what answered you," he murmured, mulling over it critically, his eyes flicking back to her curiously. "Does the mark ever burn?"
Ilaria looked down at her wrist. The sigil pulsed once, and then she breathed shakily. "Yes."
Lysander’s composure slipped just enough for concern to show. Turned out this was more fatal than it should be. He wondered if the prince knew of this, but judging from the princess’ deanour, it seed like the husband was kept in the dark for now.
"...I admit," he said quietly, "I am not entirely at ease with what I’m seeing."
That made her worry.
"Is it bad?" The question tumbled out of her before she could weigh it. It sounded small and childish. Because she had expected alarm and a swift verdict. Instead he closed his eyes, asuring his words as if selecting the right instrunt for a delicate operation.
"It is not trivial," Lysander said at last, in that steady, professional tone he adopted when he wanted to soften the impact without sugarcoating.
"But ’bad’ is not always the right word. The sigil tells soone or sothing reached far enough to leave a trace. That can an many things. So are benign; others require attention."
He reached for one of the book stacked on the table and laid it between them, opening it to reveal hand-drawn comparisons: older sigils recorded in margins of travelogues, faded sketches from a dozen dusty sources.
None matched perfectly, but the spiral-with-spokes motif had relatives, echoes found in accounts of border hauntings, in margins of sailors’ journals, in a sealed ledger of a temple that had once chanted to keep a shoreline from bleeding out.
"Tell everything," he urged then. "When did you first feel it? Was there anything, a scent, a sound, or a pressure when you noticed it?"
She poured everything into her recounting about the ambush, the scrape on her arm, the beast’s strange touch, the pulsing mark, and the haunting dreams that followed layer by layer, mory by mory, until the story of her ordeal hung in the air between them, fully laid bare without a single word of judgnt from The Archivist.
Lysander’s hands steepled. He did not flinch at her confession; he treated it as data to be parsed.
"Dreams are not incidental," he agreed. "Particularly with the phenona you describe. Entities like the Blithe do not always speak in words. They use images, mory, and sensation. Dreams are their easiest entry-point into a mind."
"Is it directly tied to the Expanse, then?" Ilaria asked, the question raw at the edges because she could not bear the thought that her wandering might have been the trigger.
Lysander’s smile was patient, slightly sad. "Not necessarily," he said. "People like to bind things to places because it comforts us. The Expanse is a locus of disturbance, rare energies, and uncharted terrain; it makes a useful scapegoat. But entities are not loyal to geography."
"They follow openings, and openings follow people. What matters are the sentients themselves. Their histories, their griefs, their unlocked mories. Places can amplify contact, yes, but they do not create the creature."
He paused, letting that settle against her like a hand on a cloak. "If these images in your dream included other people, if you recognized faces beyond your sister’s, that could indicate a shared thread. Either multiple minds were touched by the sa entity, or there is a linkage among those dread of."
"So the dream... are connected to this?" She nodded toward the sigil.
"Yes," Lysander said simply. "They often manifest in tandem. The mind becos a door before the body ever notices the key."
Her eyes widened. "Do the people I see, the ones in the dream, do they have anything to do with it then?"
Lysander hesitated. Which was terrifying, because he never hesitated.
"It is possible," he admitted. "Entities tied to the Blithe do not always appear in their true forms. They borrow mories, faces, and shapes you trust, or fear. Their purpose is rarely straightforward."
"I— I was affected by the Blithe," Ilaria panicked. "And now that I entered the Expanse, sothing bad m-might happen?"
"It doesn’t work like that."
Ilaria blinked, her panic eased, if only for a mont.
"The Expanse itself is only a treacherous and unpredictable location, but not inherently aligned with the Blithe. You see, Your Highness... the Blithe move where they please. If they settled in that region when you arrived, it is rely coincidence of timing."
She frowned. "...How do you know any of this?"
A slow, unreadable smile crossed his lips, one tinged with mory. "Because I, too, once sought the sa answers."
He shifted, elbows resting lightly on the armrest as he spoke like a man carrying decades of buried research.
"There was a ti when I traveled far beyond Noctharis," he began, gesturing his hand elegantly as if he was telling a fairytale. "To the Kingdom of Eryndralis. The only kingdom that still houses the Chronoseers."
Ilaria’s eyes widened, a flicker of mory crossing her face. She had actually visited that kingdom years ago, back when her father had taken her along on one of his diplomatic journeys. The silver towers, the labyrinthine libraries, the air thick with the weight of ti itself, all of it ca rushing back.
"I went there seeking clarity on disturbances similar to the one affecting you." His gaze slid briefly to her sigil. "But clarity was not sothing they offered freely."
"You... were denied?" Ilaria asked, brow furrowing. In her mory, the Chronoseers had been polite, even welcoming when she had visited. Their silver robes had shimred under the sun, and their eyes seed to hold centuries of patience.
"No," he said, almost amused. "That is what makes the experience so unnerving. They allowed entry. Allowed to ask. Allowed to wander their halls and watch the water clocks breathe."
His expression darkened with reverence.
"But every answer I pried open only revealed more doors I was not ant to touch. The Chronoseers guard the threads of ti, and I..." He exhaled through his nose. "I am many things, Princess, but I am not a fool."
Ilaria tilted her head. "aning?"
"aning," he said gently, "that even I know not to provoke sothing older than kingdoms."
"But you didn’t want to know?"
"Oh, I wanted to," Lysander said with a dry laugh. "Wanting is easy. It is principle that is difficult."
He tapped the to beside him. "Knowledge gained through force is corruption. Knowledge offered through patience is truth. So I abided. I asked only what they allowed to know."
Her brows knit. "Did you find the answer you wanted then?"
"No," he shook his head. "But I found enough to understand where to look next."
His gaze swept to the sigil once more, a mix of worry and intellectual hunger flickering behind his eyes.
"And now," Lysander murmured, "it seems the next piece of that long trail sits right before ."
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