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Morning bled slow across the treetops, layering the grove in translucent gold. Dew clung to every hanging vine; when a breeze teased the leaves, droplets fell like strings of tiny beads, pattering softly on the moss-planked platform where Sylara lay. She drifted in that fragile space between sleep and waking, cataloguing small sensations as they slid back into focus: the earthy perfu of damp bark, the distant click of wooden wind-chis, the whisper of her own pulse running one shade faster than usual.

Pain didn't greet her exactly—more a deep, ember-warm ache that radiated from collarbone to fingertips, as though lightning runes had been etched across her bones with a too-hot stylus and left to cool overnight. She flexed her fingers. Blue-white sparks did not crackle this ti—only a faint shimr beneath the skin, the colour of distant storm clouds. The mana lines along her forearms pulsed once, answering so silent rollcall, then subsided to a gentle throb. Familiar now. Almost reassuring.

Below, the massive form of the Guardian sprawled across a nest of coaxed roots. Its breathing rose and fell like bellows stoking a forge. Every exhale carried an ozone tang, cool and invigorating; every inhale sounded like water rushing through a midnight gorge. Lightning slept under that pelt—Sylara could see it swim in lazy filants between deep-blue hairs, glimring each ti the creature's flank twitched. One silver eye remained half-open, a moon caught in fur: watching her, trusting her, but never truly off-duty.

She let a smile turn up one corner of her mouth. Yesterday the sa gaze had been a warning. Today it felt like a wordless greeting. She pressed her palm lightly to her sternum and murmured a thought toward the bond. I'm still here.

A low, contented rumble answered, travelling through wood and muscle straight into her bones. Tiny arcs danced for a heartbeat, then settled again. The beast's tail thumped once—quiet thunder—before sleep reclaid it.

Across the platform's open span, Draven sat at a narrow writing bench he had coaxed out of the living wall the night before. His posture was faultless—back arrow-straight, elbows lightly anchored, chin angled to catch the faint luminescence of the vine-lantern overhead. Every so often he dipped a stylus into a thimble of glimr-ink and drew rapid slashes on bark-paper. Numbers, sigils, branching decision trees—Sylara recognised the cadence if not the aning. His concentration radiated an almost physical chill, the kind that kept predators at bay without a word.

She rose onto her elbows, movents slow to avoid waking a dozen protesting muscles. A hiss slipped past her teeth anyway. Draven's pen paused mid-stroke, but his eyes stayed on the page.

"You burned more mana than projections allowed," he said, voice pitched low so it wouldn't echo off the railing vines. "Seventy-one percent of primary channels and notable overdraw on secondary lattices. Recovery window: eight hours minimum."

Sylara pushed an unruly lock of copper hair out of her eyes and sat up fully. "Good morning to you too."

"Observational data," he replied, resuming his calculations. "Nothing personal."

She snorted, rolling her shoulders until joints popped. "Doesn't feel personal. Feels like a post-experint lecture."

A pause; the stylus stilled again. "If it were a lecture, I'd assign diagrams." A dry edge—almost humour—but he didn't turn to show it.

Sylara chuckled under her breath, slid to the edge of the pallet, and swung her bare feet onto the cool planks. Pins and needles flared where skin t living wood, mana-static greeting mana-static. Not painful, just strange—like stepping into river current instead of air. She steadied herself, then stood.

Instantly, a fresh pulse rippled through the bond: the Guardian registering her vertical. Not possessive—simply aware. She sent back a ntal pat, a soft pulse of contentnt, and the great beast's breathing returned to its sleepy rhythm. The exchange left her warm and curiously empty of fear. Yesterday she would have called that impossible.

She tested a stretch—hands to sky, spine arching—then grimaced. "Note for your data: muscles feel like boiled leather."

"Predictable," Draven said. He capped his ink and finally looked over, expression as unreadable as runes cut in slate. "Spend the next hour pacing the platform instead of attempting lunges, and intake electrolytic broth before noon."

She gave him a mock salute. "Captain."

Down below, a shifting of leaves betrayed movent. An elf no older than thirty winters stepped onto the ramp—slender, light-footed, dark hair bound in three elegant loops that marked him as runner-class. His eyes were wide, fixed on the Guardian first, then flicking nervously to Sylara, then to Draven. Cradled in both hands was a scroll as long as his forearm, polished smooth and banded with silver leaf.

He took one tentative step forward—the Guardian's nostrils flared—and froze. Sparks jittered along the beast's whiskers. The elf swallowed, gathered courage, and bowed so low his braids brushed moss.

"Forgiveness," he said in halting Trade-tongue. "I bear summons." The scroll wobbled but never slipped. "Speaker Velthiri bids the Storm-Kin and her—" he fumbled for a word, glanced at Draven's blades, and settled on "—her shadow-scribe to attend council."

Sylara traded a look with Draven. Her shadow-scribe arched one brow, rose, and crossed the distance in four precise strides. He accepted the scroll with a nod more economical than polite, thumb drifting over the wax seal—Velthiri's sigil pressed deep. His eyes flicked down, scanning rune lines at speed. Sylara watched the corners of his mouth—not even a twitch.

"Second chi," he sumd, handing the scroll to Sylara. "Formal witness status. Likely questions about your bond." He turned toward the steps, cloak whispering at his heels. "We leave in ten."

The runner bowed again, then retreated so quickly he nearly stumbled, casting one last awed glance at the slumbering Guardian before disappearing amid vine shadows.

Sylara breathed out hard. "Not even ti for breakfast?"

"You'll eat en route," Draven said, already collecting his notes into a compact roll. "Roots to chew, broth to sip. Movent aids circulation."

She tried not to groan. "You're relentless."

"That's why we're alive." He spared her a fraction of a smile—sharp, fleeting—and gestured toward her boots drying on a hook of living wood. "Dress. This is where the real work begins."

Sylara huffed but obeyed, lacing her boots while murmuring thanks to the Guardian for last night's protection. Its ears flicked once—acknowledged.

Minutes later they descended spiral bridges strung between titanic trunks. The early sun filtered through layers of erald and amber leaves, striping the woven walkways in living stained glass. Elves paused in their errands when the pair passed. So pressed fingertips to lips in blessing, others simply stared. Sylara felt their collective gaze like gentle static dancing along her scalp—curiosity, caution, a hint of respect she dared not claim as hers.

Halfway across a broad limb-road, she glanced back. The Guardian followed at a distance, padding along a lower pathway reserved for beasts and spirit-familiars. Wardancers escorted it, but every few steps they yielded space, eyes wide as if still reconciling the sight.

Draven noticed her hesitation. "It has range," he murmured. "Bond will stretch another eight lengths before strain."

She nodded, comforted, but her heartbeat quickened all the sa. Ahead lood an open arch ford by two roots braided together. Beyond it, the council amphitheater waited—alive, vaulted, ready to judge.

"Forward," he said. "Data first, fears later."

Sylara tried to match the calm in his voice, but her lungs wouldn't obey. Each breath stuck halfway up her throat before scraping out like a saw over knot-wood. "Didn't feel like one after last night," she muttered, rubbing the heel of her palm across her sternum where the rune still tingled.

Draven rolled the scroll shut with surgical neatness—thumb and forefinger turning the cylinder until the silver bands clicked into perfect alignnt. "Not hostility. Not yet," he replied, eyes never leaving the wax seal as though assessing flaws in the impression. "But this will be assessnt. We tread carefully now."

"We?" she asked, raising a brow.

He t her gaze at last. Cold slate eyes softened by a hair—no more than the width of a quill stroke. A sliver of sothing unreadable—regret, resolve, maybe both—flickered there before the shutters dropped. "This is where the real work begins."

She followed him onto the first bridge span.

The route wound through the highest tier of the settlent: latticed walkways of living root suspended between colossal trees, each trunk ridged like the pillars of so primordial cathedral. Lantern-pods hung at regular intervals, their pale luminescence swirling in delicate spirals that made the planks glow as though painted with moonlight. Thin mist threaded the air, catching the lantern light and breaking it into drifting shards. Everything slled of damp lichen and the peppery tang of dawn-sap.

Sylara's boots found the rhythm of the lattice—hollow thunks alternating with the muted give of root underfoot. Every few paces a knot bulged, forcing her to adjust stride, and each adjustnt sent a flash of ache through calves still sore from yesterday's charge. She sucked in air through clenched teeth and pressed forward.

Silence outlined every movent. The grove felt as though it had exhaled during the night and forgotten how to draw breath back in. No birdsong. No chatter of morning markets. Only the sigh of distant leaves and the soft clack of Draven's heel plates. The hush made her hyper-aware of little sounds—fabric whispering against quiver wood, her own pulse drumming behind her ears.

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