The forest did not thin quickly, as if reluctant to relinquish him, each gnarled root and moss-drenched trunk conspiring to slow his stride just long enough for the weight of what he carried to settle properly into his bones. The new blade—still unnad, still singing in a tongue older than speech—hung across his back like a second spine, and with every step, Caliste could feel it drawing from sothing deep within him, not as a parasite but as a partner long overdue for reunion.
The air was different now.
Thicker.
Suffused with a tension that didn’t yet have a shape.
The sort of quiet you only found in the breath before sothing broke.
He moved without haste but with precision, not because he doubted the direction—he didn’t—but because haste would dishonor the pull of the blade and the fire it had reawakened. Each crunch of underbrush beneath his boots was a small proclamation: I am coming. I rember now. I do not need to run.
Hours passed uncounted.
The sky above grew pale with the onset of morning, though the clouds hung low and heavy, like bruises across the heavens. Occasionally, Caliste would catch glimpses of far-off ruins veiled by mist—old watchtowers cracked and broken, half-consud by ti and vine, their shattered windows staring out like the hollow eyes of a corpse that still sohow watched.
He stopped only once, at a still pool hidden beneath a canopy of drooping branches.
Its surface was perfectly smooth.
Too smooth.
When he looked into it, his reflection stared back not as he was, but as he had been—clad in obsidian armor, his eyes bright with celestial fire, his mouth set not in resolve but in a warning.
The blade at his back ward.
He blinked, and the image was gone.
No ripple.
Just empty water.
He stood again, straightened his shoulders, and continued toward the east.
It wasn’t until the sun broke through—just a sliver of molten gold slicing the horizon—that the landscape began to change in earnest. Trees gave way to a scarred plain, its soil darker than it should’ve been, rich with ash and the mory of fire. Caliste paused at the edge of it, scanning the vast openness for any sign of movent.
He found it.
Smoke.
Thin.
Black.
Rising from a single point, distant but deliberate.
A ssage, maybe.
Or a lure.
Either way, it was where he needed to go.
The wind pressed against him now as he moved, not gently, but with resistance, as though testing him, pushing back just enough to demand effort from each step. The blade thrumd at intervals—soft pulses, not dangerous, not aggressive, but asured. As if it, too, rembered this place.
There were bones beneath this soil.
He could feel them.
Old bones.
Not just human.
Not just mortal.
And not all of them had stayed buried.
The smoke thickened the closer he drew to its origin. It was not the grey-white of cooking fires or the billowing black of burning cities. It was thinner, tinged with blue, and it slled faintly of myrrh and sothing sweeter—almost floral, but not anything he could na. It reminded him of offerings made at the base of temples that had long since crumbled into legend.
At the center of the smoke stood a spire of stone—unnaturally shaped, its sides carved in lines too sharp to be natural, too chaotic to be crafted by any sane hand. Glyphs circled its base, glowing faintly, the sa ash-colored hue as the sigil on the scroll.
And next to it—
A figure.
Seated.
Waiting.
They didn’t rise as he approached.
Didn’t even turn their head.
But Caliste could feel them watching him, eyes unseen but unmistakably present, pressing against his thoughts like fingers brushing the surface of his skull.
The figure wore no armor.
Only a simple robe of faded crimson and ivory, marked by old bloodstains and soot.
Their face was obscured by a hood, but the voice that greeted him was familiar.
Too familiar.
"That blade doesn’t belong to this world anymore," the figure said.
Caliste stopped a few paces away. "Neither do I."
Silence followed.
The wind fell still.
The smoke hovered in place, as if the world held its breath.
"You rember," the figure said. Not a question.
"I do," Caliste answered.
"And yet you still ca."
"I always would have. mory or no."
The hooded figure laughed—a low, brittle sound, as if their lungs were made of ash. They stood slowly, and the motion revealed hands weathered by age and magic, fingers cracked with lines of runic scarring that glowed faintly.
"I suppose that’s true," they said. "You never did understand retreat."
"Who are you?" Caliste asked, though part of him already knew.
"I was once your teacher," they said, stepping closer. "Before the world forgot your na. Before you wore that body. Before Alek betrayed what we built."
At that na—Alek—the wind shifted.
The blade at Caliste’s back sang softly.
"I’ve co for him," Caliste said. "But not in anger. Not anymore."
"Then why?"
"Injustice isn’t always personal. Sotis it’s just... necessary."
The figure tilted their head.
"And you think yourself the one to judge?"
Caliste looked toward the horizon, where the distant outline of black towers marked the edge of Alek’s territory.
"No," he said. "I think I’m the one who rembers."
And then, without ceremony, the figure pulled back their hood.
And Caliste froze.
The face beneath it was his own.
Older.
Scarred differently.
But undoubtedly him.
"What...?" Caliste breathed.
The doppelgänger stepped back, gesturing to the runes at their feet.
"This is what happens when you leave fragnts of yourself behind," the echo said. "The fire doesn’t forget. It shapes what you abandon. And sotis, it grows teeth."
The blade on Caliste’s back grew hotter.
More alert.
The trial wasn’t over.
Not yet.
The wind rose once more.
And this ti, it carried with it the unmistakable scent of coming war.
***
The wind had shifted again.
It ca from the east now—slower, colder, dragging along the edge of sothing unspoken, like the aftertaste of prophecy that refused to settle. Caliste stood motionless at the edge of the glade, the ash-sealed map tucked within the folds of his cloak, pressed against his chest as if proximity might allow him to divine more than lines and glyphs.
But he knew better.
Whatever called to him from that old mark on the parchnt wasn’t simply a location. It was a remnant. A buried promise—or a betrayal. Sothing forged long before his birth, but ant for him all the sa. The kind of inheritance that didn’t pass through blood, but through fire.
And fire rembered everything.
His boots crunched softly over dried leaves as he moved forward, each step deliberate, almost reverent. Trees bowed above, their limbs braided into a kind of natural cathedral, quiet in the way that places beco when they wait for sothing ancient to pass again.
He did not rush.
There was no need.
The journey was not one of speed now, but precision.
Each mile east felt like a peeling back of layers—of self, of history, of truths he had tucked too deep for even Fleur to glimpse. She had asked nothing when he’d left. Her silence, more than words, spoke to a kind of unknowing trust that left a burn under his ribs.
And he had kissed her temple like a man who knew he might never return.
Because so paths weren’t ant to be doubled back.
They consud.
They stripped.
They remade.
Caliste moved through the thickets until the sun began to split the horizon into embers, the sky painted in blood-orange hues that shimred across the leaves. When he finally reached the plateau the map had pointed to, he saw nothing. No tower. No altar. No great monunt. Just a clearing with old stone fragnts, moss-covered and half-sunken, like the broken bones of a forgotten creature.
He knelt.
Fingers brushed the stones.
Not natural.
They humd.
Old resonance, hidden under ti’s weight.
Then—there it was. The faintest shimr of magic, delicate and buried so deep it was almost shaful how subtle it was. Not a seal. A request. Caliste pressed both palms to the stone and let his mana flow—not as a challenge, but as an offering.
And sothing answered.
The ground gave the barest shudder, like a sigh released after centuries. A circle revealed itself slowly, etched not in light but in shadow, the stone markings bleeding into view with a softness that belied the power they contained. The glyph at the center pulsed once, then again—like a heartbeat.
The sword of mory.
They had called it that.
But it had never been about the weapon.
It was about what remained once mory was reclaid.
He stepped into the circle.
And the world shifted.
Not in place—but in sensation.
The trees were still there. The sky. The moss. But now it all felt too quiet. Too still. As if ti itself held its breath. And in the middle of the circle, slowly rising from the stone like ink rising through water, stood a figure.
It wore no armor. Carried no blade.
Just a robe of woven night.
No face.
Just presence.
"You followed," it said.
The voice was not male or female.
Not old or young.
It was everything Caliste rembered from lifetis past—and everything he had tried not to.
"I ca to understand."
"You ca to rember."
He said nothing.
Because both were true.
The figure extended a hand—not in greeting, but in demand.
"Give it."
Caliste’s fingers brushed the map. But he knew now—it wasn’t the parchnt being asked for.
It was the mory.
The knowledge of what had been hidden.
What had been burned away.
Slowly, painfully, he let go.
The figure moved forward, closing the distance with steps that made no sound. Its hand pressed against his chest, and then—images.
Flashes.
Fire.
A hall of judgnt, black as void. A man bound in chains made of sigils, screaming not from pain but defiance. And Caliste—no, not him, but soone wearing his face—standing silent as a verdict was passed.
Banishnt.
Erasure.
The cri?
Refusing to kneel.
When the vision broke, Caliste staggered.
Sweat slicked his brow.
His breath ca in ragged gasps.
But he was not afraid.
He was awake.
The figure had vanished, but a mark now burned beneath his collarbone—a glyph matching the one on the map.
Not a curse.
A key.
Behind him, the clearing had changed.
Stone walls—ruined, but still standing—had erged, hidden behind enchantnts that peeled away only in the presence of truth. An entrance lood between two broken pillars, choked in ivy and ti.
He approached.
The door did not resist.
It breathed open.
Inside, a staircase wound downward, spiraling into depths that slled of soot and stone. He descended slowly, letting his eyes adjust. Old torches flared to life as he passed, sensing his mana. No traps. No resistance.
Just a promise.
One level down.
Two.
Then three.
At the base, a chamber—octagonal, vast, and empty but for a single pedestal. Upon it rested a gauntlet. Not ornate. Not jewel-encrusted. Simple. Blackened steel with veins of sothing pulsing faintly beneath the surface.
The mont he stepped inside, the room shifted.
Heat rose.
But not from the torches.
From within.
The pedestal responded to his presence, and the gauntlet lifted into the air, spinning slowly.
It spoke without voice.
Old Siglius.
Ancient tongue, lost in all but ruin and fire.
"You are the echo of defiance. The breath of exile. The sword was not yours. But the truth always was."
Caliste reached forward.
The mont his fingers closed around the gauntlet, it latched onto his arm like a lover refusing to let go. Symbols ignited—rushing up his forearm, across his shoulder, crawling like fla across a forgotten manuscript.
And pain.
Pure.
Uncut.
But familiar.
He scread.
But not in fear.
It was the scream of sothing once broken, reforging.
When the glow faded, the chamber darkened again.
Caliste knelt, one arm blackened, the gauntlet still smoking.
But his eyes...
They had changed.
No longer the storm-grey of the boy who had knelt at Daimon’s feet.
Now, they were molten gold.
The mark of a man who had rembered sothing terrible.
And survived.
He stood.
Above him, the stars waited.
But sowhere beyond them, he knew—
Alek had begun to move.
And ti, for once, would not wait.
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