The grove wall folded apart like a curtain stitched from breath and leaves. One cautious step carried Draven Arcanum—wearing the na Dravis—into the hush beyond, and the opening sealed behind him with a moist sigh, dimming the light as living bark knit whole again. His boots sank a finger-breadth into loam. Ahead, roots had braided themselves into uneven stairs, their curves soft with centuries of moss. Strands of lichen dangled like forgotten thoughts, brushing Sylvanna's hood as she slipped through after him. She exhaled a tight breath, fogging the chill air that seeped from every trunk.
Neither had ti to study the lattice of interlocking branches overhead—a vaulted green ceiling shaped by patient centuries—because the forest itself inhaled. No birdcall, no rustle, yet sothing changed. A hush sharpened into tension. Wood creaked. Bowstrings whispered.
Draven's eyes flicked upward. Silhouettes materialised on elevated root-paths: tall figures cloaked in dusk-coloured weave, longbows drawn to full crescent. Moon-pale eyes glimred between leaf-frad masks. Broad-leaf camphor hid their scent, but not their intent. He counted eight on the left arch, nine on the right, three more crouched behind the twisted bole ahead—likely a full squad, enough to fell a cave lion in a volley.
They spoke first in the sharp dialect of Elharn, consonants crisp as breaking glass. Draven understood perhaps half; context gave him the rest. Intruders. Hold. A single order.
Sylvanna's breath snagged in her throat. Instinct tugged her fingers toward the bow slung at her back, fingertips brushing fletching. Draven's left hand drifted outward—not toward his own blades, but toward her wrist, a silent demand: still.
He raised his right palm, showing it empty, though his thumb hovered near the cross-guard of the nearer sword. A posture that promised discipline more than threat.
His voice carried just enough to reach every perch. "I am Dravis, an adventurer," he declared, each word asured, his Trade-tongue laced with enough Elharn cadence to show effort at courtesy. "She is Sylara. We helped silence your Grove's pain."
The canopy shivered with a single indrawn breath. Leaves rattled. Then a reply ca—low, cold, the accent clipped: "Pain speaks. Swords answer. Both cut."
Draven parsed the sentint: Your words may stop nothing. Yet arrows remained notched, not loosed. Negotiation space—thin as paper, but present.
He eased one boot forward. The archers shadowed the motion, adjusting aim. At that micro-movent Sylvanna's weight shifted behind him; he felt, rather than saw, her desire to coil and leap. He gave a fractional tilt of his head. Obedient, she stilled—her bowstring still half-tensioned, ready if things shattered.
The ring of archers held position. Silence thickened until footsteps rustled on bark overhead. From behind a trunk braided with glowing vine, a single elf descended. She walked a narrow ramp grown straight from the living wood, each footfall noiseless despite the height. Authority shaped the air around her; even the leaves seed to lean away.
Velthiri.
Her skin bore the color of winter bark, pale and smooth, while hair as silver as frozen rain spilled down a simple knot. Across her chest lay a ceremonial sash—green so dark it drank the lamplight—embroidered with sigils Draven recognised from treatises on elven jurisprudence. Speaker. Warden. Adjudicator. Layers of responsibility older than so kingdoms.
She regarded Draven first, studying the set of his shoulders, the asured grip on his sword hilts. Candle-bright frost eyes narrowed in calculation before sliding to Sylvanna. The beast-tar t that gaze with chin raised, but her knuckles whitened on the bow where Velthiri could see.
Velthiri's verdict ca as a single command: "Walk."
Draven inclined his head—small, precise—and obeyed. Sylvanna followed half a pace back, tension in every line. The watcher-archers lted into the canopy, escorting from above like silent ravens.
The path curved and rose, revealing Verenthal in slow, layered glimpses. First ca dwellings carved inside sycamore trunks wide enough to house keeps. Balconies unfurled like petals, connected by bridges of woven root and thread-vine that rippled yet never swayed. Lantern spores drifted in glass orbs, casting violet halos. The scent of cedar resin and cooled sap perated everything.
Draven's gaze catalogued details—defensive choke-points at branch junctures, hidden arrow-slits along knotty bulwarks, lack of open plazas. Architecture for ambush, not comrce. Every adult they passed paused to watch, eyes luminous, expressions shuttered. No small voices, no scampering feet—children, he deduced, were sheltered deeper than outsiders would ever tread.
One level up, two great trees t and fused—twin pillars sharing a single heart of wood. Here the escort stopped. Concentric runnels of water rimd a glade, each channel no wider than a hand yet glowing faint teal, spell-ward ink swirling above its surface. Crossing those rings without leave, Draven guessed, would end poorly.
The space was neither cage nor welco mat—a liminal court of judgnt.
Night gathered. Instead of torches, vines overhead brightened from within, pulsating like slow heartbeats. Shadows danced across Velthiri's cheeks as she faced them, arms folded. Two guards at her flanks lifted their bows to half-draw, notched but disciplined.
Sylvanna shifted weight, a predator's coil. Draven lifted his chin, drawing the attention back where he wanted it—onto him.
Velthiri's voice trickled through the hush, soft as snowlt yet no less cold. "We do not accept 'adventurers.'"
Draven didn't blink. "You accepted pain."
"Intent matters," she replied, every syllable clicking like stone set into mosaic. "So does blood."
The words hung, sharp as icicles waiting to fall.
Draven's eyes, pale as tarnished silver, missed no tremor, no tremble of a bowstring. In the faint bioluminescence, the runes hidden at his wrists briefly caught light before he stilled his pulse. He asured breath, gauging the exact instant tension threatened to snap.
And stopped it one heartbeat short.
Not by kindness. Calculus.
He let silence roll three counts, then offered a single, deliberate nod—neither concession nor challenge, rely acknowledgnt that her terms lay before him like an unsheathed blade.
"I didn't spill yours," Draven said.
Velthiri's reply ca with the softness of falling ash. "No. But others wore your skin and did."
The sentence settled on the glade like fresh frost—soundless, indisputable. One of the guards angled his bow a hair to the left; the tension in the string thrumd loud enough for Sylvanna to hear. Her shoulders stiffened, breath snagging as if a hand had clamped around her ribs. She began to shift her stance—ready to interpose herself, or to draw, he could not tell. Draven flicked two fingers behind his back, a silent order: Hold.
He spoke before the next heartbeat hardened into violence. "We didn't co for conquest," he said, voice so level it almost disguised the edge beneath. "Or pity. We ca seeking knowledge. Balance."
Wind threaded through the upper leaves, carrying the faint scent of crushed pine. Velthiri tilted her head the way an owl might—precise, near-chanical. "Balance?" she echoed, tasting the word as if it were bitter bark. "Is that what you call what sleeps beneath your cloak?"
Draven did not glance at the Seed of Renewal pulsing faintly over his sternum. His pulse tracked steady, as he intended. "mory," he answered. Nothing more.
Velthiri stepped in, close enough that the nightly glow from canopy lanterns painted silver across her cheekbones. Her gaze slid to Sylvanna, lingering on the bowstring still half-taut despite Draven's silent command. "And her?" the priestess said, voice low, "She slls of storms caught in cages."
Sylvanna's jaw tensed. Her amber eyes, bright even in the blue gloom, t Velthiri's without blinking. She let the accusation hang, said nothing. Silence, Draven knew, was sotis the only honest armour.
The priestess's brow rose a fraction; she had expected defiance, perhaps excuses. Receiving neither, she turned back to Draven. He felt the scrutiny like cold needles pricking beneath his collar—asuring height, stance, the fine ornantal etch on his left-hand blade, now visible at his hip.
"Not every monster is made with hate," he said quietly. "So are born of need."
Velthiri's lips pressed thin. A mory flickered in her eyes—so ember of grief she would not share with strangers. "Need carved the Blood Grove into ash," she said.
The na rolled across the glade like a funeral bell. Even the archers above shifted, arrows dipping as if bowed by the echo. Draven t her stare without wavering. "I know," he said.
A pause followed—no one dared breathe too loudly. Leaves overhead whispered of distant tides, a sound both hushed and endless. Then Velthiri's shoulders eased by a sigh's breadth. She took one more asured step, until the tips of her elk-hide boots almost grazed the rune ring scored faintly into the platform floor.
"Do you know," she asked, voice scarcely above a hush, "what it ans to outlive betrayal?"
Draven's reply was a single syllable, blade-sharp. "Yes."
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