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Chapter 199: Chapter 194: The Vision of Fire and Shadow

Location: Thornhaven Village

Date/Ti: 24 Voidmarch, 9938 AZI

Realm: Mid Realm

The vision ca without warning.

One mont, Lyria was asleep in her narrow bed, wings folded tight against her back, the silver rune on her forehead dim in the darkness of her family’s cottage. Outside, winter wind rattled the shutters. Sowhere in the village, a night-guard called the hour—third watch, deep in the coldest part of the night.

The next mont, reality shattered like glass struck by a hamr.

She didn’t wake. Didn’t scream. Didn’t have ti to do anything at all.

The prophetic gift simply took her.

***

Silver-white hair caught moonlight through a cave mouth.

Lyria knew this girl. Had seen her a dozen tis in fragnted visions since the rune burned itself into her flesh ten days ago. The girl in the cocoon. The girl with fire in her blood and silver in her bones. The girl who made Sharlin’s hunters sweat with fear and demon kings rise from ancient thrones.

But she’d never seen her like this.

The girl stood at the edge of a forest clearing, body tense, hands curled into fists that glead with sothing crystalline. Diamond? No—talons. Her nails had beco talons, catching starlight like faceted gems. And her eyes...

Gold. Phoenix-amber at the core. Beautiful and terrible and burning with a light that had nothing to do with the pale morning filtering through the trees. Those eyes held sothing ancient. Sothing that rembered dying in fire and rising again. Sothing that had fought wars across stars and watched civilizations crumble to dust.

She wasn’t alone.

A shadowbeast crouched beside her. Massive. Lion-sized. Fur the color of deep night, rippling with power that made Lyria’s prophetic senses ache with sothing close to recognition. This was no ordinary beast—the essence pouring off it spoke of primordial bloodlines, of creatures that had walked Doha before the first cultivator drew breath. A rcury rune glead on its forehead, mark of sothing ancient, sothing significant, sothing Lyria didn’t have ti to understand.

Because the hunters had found them.

White-gold armor glead between the trees. Twelve figures. Fifteen. Twenty. More erging from shadows, surrounding the clearing with the precision of predators who’d done this a thousand tis before. Radiance essence crackled around their hands, their weapons, their perfectly synchronized formation. Each one moved with the controlled grace of warriors who’d trained since childhood for exactly this purpose—hunting those who couldn’t be allowed to live.

Temple hunters. Sharlin’s finest.

"Surrender," one called. Female voice. Cold as winter steel, smooth as silk over a blade. "Co peacefully, and the beast lives."

The girl’s laugh was sharp enough to cut. Sothing in it—bitter knowledge, absolute certainty—made Lyria’s chest tight with dread. "You’re lying."

"Perhaps." The hunter shrugged, armor plates shifting with the movent. Her face was beautiful in the way of all Radiance cultivators—flawless, ageless, empty of anything resembling rcy. "But you’ll die either way. The question is whether you watch it suffer first."

The shadowbeast growled. Low. Dangerous. The sound vibrated through the vision like thunder felt in bones rather than heard. Its eyes never left the hunters, tracking each movent with predatory focus. Muscles bunched beneath midnight fur. Ready to spring. Ready to kill. Ready to die if that’s what protecting its bonded required.

Don’t, Lyria wanted to scream. Don’t fight them. Run. Please run. There are too many. You can’t win this.

But this was prophecy. She couldn’t speak. Couldn’t intervene. Couldn’t do anything except watch as futures unfolded like flowers blooming in blood.

The girl moved first.

Golden fire erupted from her hands—Inferno essence, but wrong. Purer. Hotter. The color of sunrise rather than forge-flas, burning with a light that seed to co from sowhere beyond the mortal realm. It slamd into the nearest hunters, sent them flying backward, armor lting where the fire touched like wax before a furnace.

But there were too many.

The shadowbeast leaped to intercept a flanking strike. Claws tore through a hunter’s throat before the woman could complete her attack. Teeth found another’s arm, crushing through armor and bone alike. It fought like sothing born for war, rcury rune blazing with power that made Lyria’s eyes water even through the filter of prophecy.

The girl and beast moved together. Perfectly synchronized. Reading each other’s intentions without words, covering blind spots, creating openings. They’d fought side by side before—dozens of tis, hundreds maybe. The kind of partnership that ca from shared survival, from trusting soone with your life so completely that their movents beca extensions of your own.

But it wasn’t enough.

It could never be enough. Not against this many. Not against hunters specifically designed to destroy exactly what they were fighting.

The Radiance blast ca from behind. Coordinated. Three hunters pouring their essence into a single attack, brilliant white light that seared shadows and burned through darkness like acid through cloth. The technique had a na—Lyria knew this suddenly, prophecy feeding her information she’d never learned. Shadowbane Protocol. Developed over centuries specifically to destroy creatures of void and darkness. Specifically to kill shadowbeasts.

The beast scread.

Lyria had never heard a sound like it. Agony and rage and desperate love all tangled together in a cry that seed to shake the foundations of the world. The beast twisted, tried to dodge, but the light followed—drawn to it, hungry for it, designed specifically to hunt its essence signature and consu everything it touched.

"REIKO!"

The girl’s voice cracked on the na. She spun, fire dying on her hands, everything forgotten except the massive form crumpling to the forest floor. Hunters were still attacking, still pressing forward, but she didn’t see them anymore. Didn’t care about them. Her whole world had narrowed to the beast struggling to rise on legs that wouldn’t hold its weight.

The shadowbeast’s eyes found hers. Dark and deep and filled with sothing that transcended the boundary between human and beast. rcury rune flickering. Fading. The light that had blazed so brightly was guttering like a candle in a storm.

Sothing passed between them. Sothing Lyria felt even through the filter of prophecy—a bond deeper than blood, stronger than magic, forged in shared survival and absolute trust. The kind of love that didn’t need words because it lived in every breath, every heartbeat, every mont of existence.

I’m sorry, those dark eyes seed to say. I’m sorry I couldn’t protect you longer.

Then the light went out.

The beast lay still.

***

The vision should have ended there.

Lyria had seen death before. Seen futures where Thornhaven burned, where her family fell, where her own blood stained forest leaves. Prophecy showed possibilities, not certainties. Showed what might happen so she could help prevent it.

But this vision didn’t end.

It shifted.

The girl stood over her shadowbeast’s body. Perfectly still. Perfectly silent. Her silver-white hair hung around her face like a curtain, hiding her expression. The hunters were regrouping, forming new positions, preparing for capture now that the beast was gone. They moved with professional efficiency, confident that the real threat had been neutralized.

They didn’t see what Lyria saw.

The gold in the girl’s eyes was spreading. Consuming the white. Swallowing the pupils until nothing remained but molten amber that burned like twin suns in a face gone terrifyingly blank. Her hands hung at her sides, talons gleaming, but they weren’t shaking with grief.

They were still.

Too still. The stillness of sothing gathering itself. The stillness before an avalanche.

"You killed him."

The words ca out flat. Dead. Empty of everything that made them human. But underneath them, sothing stirred. Sothing vast and ancient and furious that had been sleeping for a very long ti. Sothing that rembered fire that burned across galaxies and wars that shattered planets and the absolute refusal to bow before anyone or anything, ever, no matter the cost.

"You killed him," the girl repeated. Her voice cracked. Splintered. Reford into sothing that wasn’t quite human anymore. "You killed him."

The hunters finally noticed sothing was wrong.

The lead hunter’s confident smile faltered. She took a step back, hand rising to form a defensive ward. "Contain her. Now. Before she—"

Too late.

Golden fire exploded outward.

Not the controlled flas from before. Not essence shaped by will and training and careful cultivation. This was sothing else entirely—raw power pouring from a vessel that had stopped trying to contain it. The girl’s skin cracked along invisible fault lines. Light blazed through the fissures, turning her into sothing that looked less like a person and more like a star trying to wear human flesh.

Wings erupted from her back.

They weren’t the wings Lyria had glimpsed in previous visions—delicate things, nascent and folded and hidden beneath clothing. These were unfurled. Massive. Burning with phoenix-fire that set the very air ablaze, each feather a tongue of golden fla that writhed and twisted with hungry purpose. The heat washed outward, and the nearest hunters didn’t even have ti to scream before they beca ash.

And she scread.

The sound shattered the vision into a thousand pieces, each one showing Lyria a different angle of the sa catastrophe. She saw hunters turned to cinders in heartbeats, armor and flesh and bone reduced to the sa grey powder. Saw the forest ignite, ancient ironbark trees that had stood for millennia becoming pillars of fla that reached toward a sky turning orange with reflected fire. Saw animals fleeing, beasts howling, birds bursting into fla mid-flight as the heat beca too much for living things to bear.

The fire spread. And spread. And spread.

It followed the girl as she rose into the air, wings beating, eyes blind with grief and rage and power she’d never learned to control. It obeyed her. Reached out like a living thing seeking fuel, hungry for anything it could consu. Where she flew, devastation followed—a wake of destruction that carved through the world like a knife through paper.

Lyria watched villages burn. Hamlets she’d never seen except in vision, filled with people who had nas and families and dreams, reduced to smoking craters in the ti it took to draw breath. She watched cities crumble—great walls that had stood for thousands of years lting like ice in sumr, populations fleeing through streets that turned to rivers of liquid stone.

The fire swept across the Lower Realm like a tide. Jumped the borders into the Mid Realm. Climbed toward Upper. Nothing stopped it. Nothing could stop it. Because the girl wasn’t trying to destroy—she was simply broken, and her breaking was tearing the world apart.

Lyria saw Thornhaven.

Her ho. Her village. Two hundred souls who’d chosen to protect her when easier choices existed.

She saw the fire reach the tree line. Saw Elder Torvald rallying defenders, his Blazecrowned essence flaring as he tried to form a barrier. Saw her father pushing Kaela toward the shelter, shouting sothing she couldn’t hear over the roar of approaching flas.

She saw her mother’s wings wrap around Mira.

She saw the twins—Joren and Kael—huddled together in the shelter they’d built beneath the cottage, the one ant to protect against beast attacks and royal raids. Flas poured through cracks they’d thought were sealed. Smoke filled the small space. The boys held each other, and Lyria couldn’t tell if the sounds they made were coughs or sobs or prayers.

She saw them stop moving.

She saw Sharlin laughing from her Temple, auburn hair whipping in hot wind, convinced she’d won because she didn’t understand what was happening. The High Priestess watched the destruction spread and assud it was divine judgnt, assud the gods had finally answered her prayers.

Right up until the golden fire reached even there.

She saw the demon king with purple eyes standing on a battlefield of ash. The flas couldn’t touch him—his power was too vast, too ancient, sothing in him made of the sa fire—but that almost made it worse. He stood alone in a world of cinders, staring at sothing in his hands. A charred ribbon, maybe. Or a lock of silver-white hair. Sothing small and broken and precious.

The sound that ca from his throat wasn’t grief.

It was the death of hope itself.

She saw Doha.

The planet. Her world. Ho to billions of souls, cradle of cultivation, birthplace of gods and monsters, and everything in between. She saw it from above—impossible perspective, prophetic vision carrying her to heights no mortal could reach.

It was dying.

The fire had reached too deep. Touched sothing that should never have been touched—the planetary essence itself, the life-force that made Doha more than just rock and water and air. That force was unraveling now, bleeding out like blood from a mortal wound. Great cracks spread across continents. Oceans boiled. The sky turned colors that had no nas.

And at the center of it all, hovering above the devastation with wings spread wide and eyes that saw nothing, was the girl.

Not a savior.

Not a Phoenix-Dragon rising to remake the world.

A destroyer. A force of nature with no one left to love and nothing left to lose. The grief had burned away everything else—conscience, control, the fragile human heart that might have pulled her back from the edge. She wasn’t evil. Wasn’t cruel. Wasn’t anything anymore except pain given form and fla.

She hadn’t ant to end the world.

She’d just wanted to stop hurting.

And now everything burned.

***

Lyria woke choking on screams she couldn’t voice.

Her body convulsed. Hands clawed at blankets, at her own face, at the silver rune that blazed like a brand on her forehead. Blood trickled from her nose, her ears, the corners of her eyes—the price prophecy extracted, paid in the currency of her own body. Her wings beat uselessly against the bed, scattering feathers across the small room.

"Lyria!" Her mother’s voice cut through the chaos. Hands on her shoulders—strong, calloused, familiar. Wings wrapping around her, blocking out the dim light from the banked fire. "Lyria, co back. Co back to ."

She couldn’t breathe. Couldn’t think. The images wouldn’t stop—fire and ash and the girl’s empty eyes and Mira’s body curled around the twins and her father’s face as flas consud—

"Lyria."

Kaela’s voice sharpened into command. Inferno-tempered cultivation flared, warmth without burning, driving back the cold that had settled in Lyria’s bones. The familiar essence wrapped around her like a blanket, anchoring her to the present.

Slowly, agonizingly, reality reasserted itself.

Cottage walls. Familiar creaking floorboards. The sll of her mother’s herb-drying rack, the distant sounds of Thornhaven waking to another winter morning. Her father’s footsteps approaching, concern etched in every line of his half-elven face.

"I’m here," Lyria managed. Her voice ca out scraped raw, broken glass wrapped in sandpaper. "I’m... I’m here."

"What did you see?" Aldris knelt beside the bed, gentle hands checking her pulse, her temperature, the dilation of her pupils. The pointed ears he’d inherited from his elven parent twitched with worry—a tell he’d never learned to control. "Your rune—it was blinding. Lit up the whole cottage. We thought..."

He didn’t finish. Didn’t need to.

Lyria couldn’t answer. Not yet. The vision still burned behind her eyes, afterimages of a future too terrible to speak aloud.

The girl.

The shadowbeast.

The fire that ended everything.

"Mama." Her hand found Kaela’s, gripped hard enough to bruise. Her mother didn’t flinch, didn’t pull away. Just held on with matching desperation. "I have to warn her."

"Warn who?"

"The girl. Silver-white hair. Gold eyes." Lyria’s breath hitched, caught on images of that hair charred to nothing, those eyes burning with nothing behind them. "There’s a shadowbeast with her—massive, with a rcury rune—and they love each other. Really love each other, the way you and Papa do. And if it dies..."

She couldn’t say it. Couldn’t make her throat form the words.

Kaela’s wings tightened around her. "Lyria. Breathe. Tell us what you saw."

"If it dies," Lyria whispered, "she destroys everything. Not on purpose. Not because she’s evil. Because grief breaks her, and when she breaks, she takes the whole world with her."

Silence filled the cottage.

Kaela and Aldris exchanged a look Lyria had learned to recognize over ten days of prophecies—the one that ant our daughter sees impossible things, and we have to decide how much to believe.

But this was different.

This wasn’t a vague warning about Temple hunters or dragon politics or the purple-eyed king in his demon realm. This was specific. Imdiate. A future that would beco inevitable if she didn’t act.

"She’s in the Lower Realm." Lyria pushed herself upright, ignoring the way her vision swam. "Hidden in a forest sowhere. Safe, for now. But they’re coming for her. Sharlin’s hunters. They’ve already found her trail. They’ll reach her in days, maybe less, and they’ll kill her shadowbeast because they think that will make her easier to capture, and she’ll—"

Her voice broke.

She couldn’t say it again. Couldn’t describe the fire and the ash and the way her siblings’ bodies had looked, curled together in death like they’d tried to protect each other until the very end.

"I have to warn her," Lyria said. "Whatever it costs. I have to make her leave before they find her."

"Lyria." Kaela’s grip tightened, wings shifting to force eye contact. "You’ve never sent a vision before. You don’t even know if you can. And if it works—" She stopped. Swallowed. "Prophecy always has a price. You know that."

"I know."

She knew. By all the gods, she knew. Every vision left her weaker, every prophecy carved a little more of herself away. Ten days of uncontrolled sight had cost her weight, sleep, pieces of herself she couldn’t na. Sending one—projecting across realms to touch a mind she’d never t—would cost sothing she might not be able to afford.

But she’d seen the alternative.

She’d seen her mother burn. Her father fall. Her village beco ash on the wind. Her siblings dead in each other’s arms.

And she’d seen the girl—broken, blazing, destroying everything she’d ever loved because the one thing she couldn’t live without had been taken from her.

If I don’t warn her, Lyria thought, everyone dies anyway. At least this way, there’s a chance.

She t her mother’s eyes. Saw the fear there, the desperation, the fierce protective love that would burn down kingdoms if it ant keeping her children safe. Saw the understanding that ca with it—the recognition that so things couldn’t be prevented, only chosen.

"Help ," Lyria said. "Please. I have to try."

Kaela’s wings trembled. Her jaw clenched. For a long mont, she didn’t speak—just stared at her daughter with the expression of soone being asked to hand over the only thing that mattered.

Then she turned to Aldris.

Sothing passed between them—years of partnership, of trust, of decisions made together in darkness. Aldris closed his eyes. When he opened them again, they were wet.

"What do you need?" he asked.

Lyria almost sobbed with relief.

"Everything I have," she whispered. "And probably more."

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