The procession continued, the dynamic subtly shifted. The journey was still a tornt. The final leg felt endless, a slow march through a tunnel that seed to have no end. The air grew colder still, and the nature of the light began to change. The clean, if feeble, silver of Statera’s glow was tinged with a sickly, jaundiced yellow that leaked from sowhere ahead, polluting the darkness.
The path sloped upwards, culminating in a natural archway shrouded in a thick, cloying mist that slled of ozone and cold decay. Statera paused at the threshold, her face grim in the foul light.
“We are here,” she said, her voice barely a whisper, heavy with dread. “The border is just beyond.”
She stepped through the arch, and the others followed her into the mist.
It was like stepping into a different, cancerous world. The stale but neutral air of the tunnels was gone, replaced by a heavy, oppressive atmosphere that felt thick in the lungs. The mist clung to them, damp and cold and unwelcoming.
They erged onto a wide, overlook of jagged rock, hidden behind a screen of petrified, skeletal trees. And below them, stretching into the misty, jaundiced distance, lay the Plaza of Screams.
It was a vast, circular concourse carved into the base of two converging mountains. But it was not made of stone. The floor was a strange, fleshy, mbranous material, dull grey and veined with pulsing, jaundiced runes that glowed with a faint, malevolent light. The runes were the source of the sickly glow, a dormant wound in the fabric of the world. Towering twisted spires of black obsidian rose at irregular intervals like broken teeth. The air itself seed thick with a psychic residue of agony and dread, a silence that was not an absence of sound, but a presence of countless, rembered screams. It was a place of profound and terrible power, a nightmare given form.
And they had to cross it.
The sight of the Plaza of Screams laid out before them was a physical blow. The sheer, oppressive malevolence of the place was a weight that pressed down on their already battered spirits. The jaundiced runes pulsed with a slow, sick rhythm, like a diseased heart beating beneath the fleshy floor. The silence was a living thing, a vacuum that threatened to suck the hope from their very souls.
“God,” Nyxara breathed, her voice hushed with a horror that went beyond the physical. “It is worse than the stories. It feels… hungry.”
“It is a wound,” Statera corrected, her own voice thin with strain. “A wound that never healed and has instead festered. It feeds on anguish. We must not feed it. Keep your minds guarded. Do not listen to the whispers.”
Shiro shuddered, leaning more heavily on Statera. “It’s already… whispering,” he mumbled, his good eye wide with a fear that had nothing to do with their physical pursuers. “It sounds like… like the crowd from my…”
He didn’t finish. He didn’t need to. Statera’s arm around him tightened. “Ignore it. It is a phantom. It has no power over you that you do not give it.”
From Lucifera’s back, Kuro was rigid. The psychic pressure of the plaza was a unique tornt, scraping against the raw nerves of his new injuries. “It feels like… his laughter,” he whispered, the words ant only for the woman carrying him. “His. It’s echoing in here.” He pressed his forehead harder against her back, as if trying to hide from the sensation.
Lucifera’s steps, as she began the descent onto the fleshy concourse, did not falter. But her voice, when she spoke, was lower, ant only for his ears. “It is an echo. Nothing more. A recording on stone and spirit. It is powerful, but it is not sentient. It cannot harm you unless you mistake the recording for the poet.” It was the most philosophical thing any of them had ever heard her say.
The act of walking on the plaza’s surface was profoundly unsettling. The mbranous floor was slightly soft, giving under their weight with a faint, resilient spring that felt horribly organic. It did not feel like walking on ground; it felt like walking on the skin of so vast, slumbering leviathan. The jaundiced light from the runes cast their faces in a sickly, pallid glow, making them look like corpses walking.
The journey across was a silent, internal battle for each of them. Every step was a fight against the psychic residue that sought to amplify their pain, their fear, their regrets. They were a chain of four, linked by trauma and a desperate, fledgling love, dragging themselves through a sea of solidified despair.
It was in the very centre of the plaza, where the psychic weight was heaviest, that Lucifera did sothing extraordinary.
Shiro stumbled, his leg giving way as a particularly violent wave of phantom screams seed to crash over him. He cried out, a short, sharp sound of pain and terror.
Without breaking stride, without even looking back, Lucifera’s voice cut through the miasma, clear and oddly steady.
“Steady, Rain Baby. Your footing is unsure. Do not let the phantoms steal your balance. It is all they are capable of.”
The use of the nickna was so casual, so utterly matter of fact, that it was more shocking than any curse. It wasn’t laced with Statera’s teasing affection or Nyxara’s playful mockery. It was delivered as a simple, clinical identifier, and yet it carried an undeniable, startling warmth.
Shiro, shocked out of his panic, blinked. “I… I’m not a…” he began to protest on instinct, but the words died in his throat. The nickna, from her, had been an anchor, not a barb. He focused on the sound of her voice, on the absurdity of it, and not on the whispers. “Right,” he mumbled instead. “Sorry, Aunty.”
A few steps later, Kuro, jostled by a slight adjustnt in Lucifera’s grip, couldn’t suppress a groan as a throb of pain lanced through his eye.
“Cease your fidgeting, Storm Baby,” Lucifera said, her tone one of mild, pragmatic admonishnt. “You are compromising my centre of gravity. Your tempestuousness is best saved for the battlefield, not my spine.”
Kuro’s head shot up, his single eye wide with a mixture of outrage and utter disbelief. “Don’t Call that…,” he hissed, his humiliation montarily overpowering his pain.
“I did now what?” she replied, her voice perfectly even. “The title is accurate. You are a vortex of brooding intensity and, currently, disruptive movent. Now, be still. We are almost across.”
Nyxara and Statera, walking ahead, exchanged a look of pure, unadulterated wonder. They dared not speak, dared not break the spell. This was new. This was Lucifera not just protecting them but joining them. Weaving herself into the fabric of their strange, wounded family with her own unique, brutally honest thread.
The rest of the crossing was endured in a state of shocked bemusent. Lucifera’s use of the nicknas, delivered with her signature deadpan precision, beca a bizarre lifeline. Each ti the oppressive dread threatened to overwhelm one of the twins, her voice would slice through it.
“The Rain Baby is slowing. Increase your pace.”
“The Storm Baby is gripping too tightly. My circulation is being impeded.”
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They were complaints. They were observations. But they were also a constant, reassuring reminder that she was there. That they were one.
Finally, after what felt like an eternity in that psychic hell, they reached the far side. They stumbled off the fleshy mbrane and onto cold, blessedly normal stone. The oppressive weight lifted, the whispers fading back into a mory. They collapsed against the tunnel wall, gasping not from exertion, but from the release of spiritual pressure.
For a long mont, no one spoke. They simply breathed in the clean, cold, silent air of the tunnel.
It was Statera who broke the silence, pushing herself upright with a wince. “We need to put distance between us and that place. We need to get to the high paths. No one will be able to follow us there.”
She turned to face the solid rock wall of the tunnel. She placed her good hand against the cold stone, her fingers splayed. Her Polaris light, which had been guttering weakly, began to brighten, coalescing around her hand. She closed her eyes, her face a mask of concentration and pain. The wound on her shoulder wept silently, ignored.
A soft hum began to emanate from the rock, a vibration that was felt more than heard. Where her hand rested, the stone began to change. It didn’t move, but its essence seed to soften, to beco less substantial. An intricate pattern of faint, silver lines began to etch itself into the surface, spreading out from her fingertips like frost on a windowpane, forming a complex, circular sigil.
Shiro and Kuro watched, their pain and embarrassnt forgotten, replaced by pure, unadulterated awe. Kuro had heard of the secret paths of the Polaris, but to see one being woven from sheer will and stone was sothing from a legend.
The silver lines glowed brighter, pulsing in ti with Statera’s heartbeat. The centre of the sigil began to dissolve, not crumbling, but unravelling into a shimring, liquid silver vortex. Beyond was not more tunnel, but a breathtaking, impossible pathway of crystalline light that arced away into a void filled with soft, swirling nebulae and distant, gentle stars.
The Polaris Path was open.
Statera sagged, her energy spent, but a triumphant smile touched her bloodless lips. “The way is open,” she whispered. “We are going ho.”
The transition from the malignant, fleshy reality of the Plaza to the Polaris Path was not a step, but a translocation of the soul. One mont they were battered creatures of flesh and pain, breathing air thick with rembered screams. The next, they were suspended in a silent, stellar womb.
The world dissolved into a symphony of light and silence. The path beneath their feet was not stone, but a ribbon of condensed moonlight, firm yet sohow insubstantial. It arced through a void that was not empty, but filled with the slow, majestic swirl of nebulae in hues of violet and silver. Distant stars, cold and pure, watched their passage with ancient, indifferent eyes. The air was gone, replaced by a profound, breathing silence that humd in their bones, a frequency that resonated with the very core of their being. It was the antithesis of the Plaza; where that place consud, this one nourished. The oppressive weight on their spirits lifted, replaced by a cool, ethereal lightness.
For a long mont, they simply stood, absorbing the impossible peace of it. Their wounds did not vanish, but the pain seed to leach away into the vast, gentle silence, becoming a distant echo rather than a screaming present. The path’s energy was a balm, a cool cloth on a fevered brow. Shiro felt the burning brand on his face settle into a dull, bearable throb. Nyxara’s leg ached with less ferocity. Even the dagger wound in Statera’s shoulder seed to hum in harmony with the path’s song, the pain receding from a shriek to a murmur.
It was Lucifera who broke the stellar silence, her voice a soft intrusion into the sacred quiet, yet sohow not disrespectful. “Fascinating, every ti I see it I can’t get away from the sense of awe.” Her brilliant white eyes were wide, taking in the swirling galaxies with the analytical wonder of a scientist discovering a new fundantal force. Her Sirius energy, usually a contained, sharp pulse, seed to soften, its edges blurring to harmonize with the path’s gentle resonance. The tension in her own fra, the constant readiness for violence, began to unwrap, layer by layer.
Shiro let out a shaky breath, his grip on Statera loosening slightly as the need to simply endure lessened. “It’s… it’s beautiful,” he whispered, the words seeming to be absorbed by the star dusted void.
“It is a lifeline,” Statera corrected gently, though her face was softened by a profound relief. Her Polaris light, which had been a desperate flicker, now blood around her, intertwining with the path’s own luminescence. She was ho, in a way that transcended geography. “It knows its children. It will guide us to safety.”
The journey began. Walking the path was effortless, as if the ribbon of light itself propelled them forward. The silence was a balm, allowing their ragged nerves to slowly, painfully, begin to knit back together.
And in the safety of that silence, the dynamic between them began to shift once more. The fear receded, and in its place, the fledgling, awkward bonds of their new family began to stretch and grow, often through the sharp, precise needle of teasing.
It was Lucifera who started it. Her gaze, analytical as ever, swept over Kuro, still perched on her back. “The Storm Baby’s breathing has stabilized,” she announced to the group at large. “The rhythmic motion appears to have a sedative effect. Perhaps his tempestuous nature is soothed by predictable, wave like patterns. Like swaddling an infant.”
Kuro, who had been drifting in a painkiller induced haze, stiffened. “I am not… being…” he grumbled, the protest lacking its usual fire.
“Of course not,” Nyxara chid in from behind, her voice laced with warm amusent. “You are being… strategically transported. In a very cuddly fashion. Look at you, nestled right in. It’s where you belong.”
“It is not cuddly,” Lucifera stated, utterly serious. “It is an efficient distribution of weight and the optimal configuration for monitoring vital signs.”
“And it gives you easy access to kiss his boo boos,” Shiro added, his voice weak but a mischievous glint in his single amber eye.
The response was imdiate and glorious. A brilliant, crimson flush exploded across Lucifera’s neck and cheeks. She stumbled on the path, a truly shocking loss of coordination for her. “I…that is…a completely non standard and inefficient thod of treatnt,” she sputtered, her clinical composure utterly shattered.
Statera laughed, a real, free sound that seed to sparkle in the stellar air. “Oh, I don’t know. I’ve found a mother’s kiss to be highly effective on occasion.” She winked at a furiously blushing Kuro. “Perhaps you should try it, Aunty Lucifera. For the sake of intrigue.”
“The suggestion is rejected,” Lucifera said stiffly, her face turned resolutely forward, though the blush remained. “Emphatically. And empirically unsound.”
But the dam had broken. The mothers, sensing a newfound and utterly delightful vulnerability in their icy companion, began a gentle, united campaign.
“Look at her,” Nyxara whispered loudly to Statera, a real smile gracing her features. “She’s holding him so protectively. It’s truly heartwarming. Who knew the deadly Sirius councillor had such a nurturing side? He brings out the softness in her.”
“She’s a natural,” Statera agreed, playing along. “Though she does flush rather magnificently. It’s like a lighthouse beacon. Every ti he shifts his grip, the colour deepens. Crimson for ‘embarrassed but tolerating it’.”
Kuro, mortified, tried to adjust his grip to be less intrusive. His movent, ant to be helpful, made him slide slightly. Instinctively, his arms tightened around Lucifera’s shoulders, his hands locking together over her chest to secure himself.
The effect was electric.
A visible pulse of energy, a ’Sirius Resonance’, flickered around Lucifera, a brief, sharp burst of white light that was usually a sign of intense focus or combat readiness. It was completely at odds with the current situation. Simultaneously, the blush on her cheeks deepened from rose to a spectacular, fiery scarlet.
She froze mid step. “Do not… squeeze… with such force,” she managed to grit out, her voice strained. “You are...”
Kuro, sensing he had sohow made it worse, imdiately loosened his grip, mumbling an apology into her back.
The three won, Nyxara, Statera, and a still furiously blushing Lucifera, continued down the path of light, the two queens smiling fondly at the sight of the fearso councillor being utterly undone by her nephew’s need for a secure hold.
After a ti, the nature of the path began to change. The swirling nebulae ahead began to coalesce, not into the terrifying, jaundiced runes of the Plaza, but into sothing familiar to Nyxara. The colours shifted from cool silvers and violets to warr, deeper hues of athyst and cobalt. The starfields began to form patterns she recognized, the constellations of her holand, the celestial map of Nyxarion.
Statera slowed, her hand once again coming to rest on the living light of the path. “We are approaching the terminus,” she said softly. “The path is reversing its course. It will not take us to the border we left. It is taking us ho. To the heart of Nyxarion.”
She turned to look at them, her face illuminated by the erging constellations of a dead kingdom. “The path rembers its friends. It is taking us directly to the palace. We will erge in the Royal Sanctum.”
The scene ended on that promise, a beacon of hope in the infinite dark. Ahead, the light of the path was rewriting the universe, weaving a new destination from mory and starlight. They were no longer fleeing; they were being guided ho.
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