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Chapter 210: Chapter 205: Lyria’s Choice

Location: Thornhaven Village

Date/Ti: 1-2 Ashwhisper, 9938 AZI

Realm: Mid Realm

The vision slamd into Lyria without warning.

One mont, she was helping Mira hang laundry—simple work, mindless work, the kind that let her forget she looked nineteen instead of fourteen now—and the next, reality fractured into silver light and branching possibilities.

She dropped the wet shirt. Didn’t feel it hit the ground.

Copper eyes. Bronze skin weathered by millennia. Moving through the forest with chanical precision, each step asured, calculated, devoid of wasted motion.

Closer now. So much closer than before.

Two days. Maybe less.

The vision released her, and Lyria staggered against the cottage wall, gasping. The silver rune on her forehead pulsed with residual heat, marking her as what she was: Prophetess. Seer. Target.

"Lyria?" Mira’s voice ca from far away. "Lyria, your forehead’s glowing again—"

"I’m fine." The lie ca automatically. "Just... give

a mont."

She pressed her palm against cool stone, steadying herself. Her eleven-year-old sister watched with wide eyes, the basket of wet clothes forgotten at her feet. Mira had gotten used to these episodes over the past weeks—the sudden stillness, the glowing rune, the way Lyria’s eyes went distant and strange. But getting used to sothing wasn’t the sa as accepting it.

"Was it bad?" Mira asked quietly. "The vision?"

"Not bad. Just... close." Lyria straightened, willing her hands to stop shaking. "He’s almost here."

"The stranger?"

Lyria had told her sister about the copper-eyed man. Not everything—not the death visions, not the way he grieved—but enough. Mira was young, but she wasn’t stupid. She’d noticed Lyria watching the forest edge. Had heard the whispered argunts between their parents late at night.

"Two days," Lyria said. "Maybe less."

Mira bit her lip. At eleven, she still had the round face of childhood, the innocent eyes that hadn’t yet learned to hide fear. "Mama says he’s dangerous."

"Mama says all demons are dangerous."

"Aren’t they?"

Lyria hesitated. How did you explain to an eleven-year-old that sotis the most dangerous-looking path was actually the safest? That running from monsters sotis led you straight into worse ones?

"So are," she said finally. "But this one... I don’t think he wants to hurt , Mira. I think he wants to help."

"How do you know?"

Because I’ve watched him die for

a hundred tis. Because his grief when I’m gone is so vast it swallows him whole.

"I’ve seen it," Lyria said simply. "In the futures where he finds , he protects . Every ti."

Mira considered this with the solemn gravity of a child trying to understand adult problems. "Then why is Mama so scared?"

"Because she loves . And loving soone ans being scared of losing them."

Her sister nodded slowly, as if this made sense. Then she bent to pick up the dropped shirt, shaking dirt from the wet fabric with practiced efficiency.

"I hope you’re right," Mira said quietly. "About the stranger."

" too."

***

Lyria sat on her bed that night, door barred, siblings asleep in the other room, parents murmuring in worried tones by the hearth. She could hear her mother’s voice rising and falling—Kaela never handled uncertainty well—but the words themselves blurred into background noise.

She didn’t need to reach for prophetic sight this ti. The death visions lived behind her eyes now, permanent residents since the night she’d first seen them. His scream when he found her body. His broken weeping in the mountain snow. The blade he drove through his own heart on that distant cliff.

She’d watched him grieve her a hundred tis. Had morized every detail of his anguish without understanding why it hurt so much to witness.

But tonight, with him so close, sothing shifted.

That’s not how soone grieves for a stranger.

The thought crystallized with terrible clarity.

That’s not how soone grieves for a mission objective.

She’d seen soldiers mourn fallen comrades through prophetic glimpses of distant battlefields. Had witnessed commanders process the deaths of those under their command. It was sad. Painful. But it was contained. Professional grief, bounded by duty and training.

What the copper-eyed stranger felt when he found her dead...

There was nothing professional about it. Nothing contained. He didn’t mourn her like a soldier mourning a fallen asset. He mourned her like—

Like what? She didn’t have a word. Didn’t have a frawork to understand the depth of loss that drove a thirty-thousand-year-old demon to suicide.

But she felt it.

Felt it like an echo in her own chest. Like a thread connecting them across the miles of primordial forest, pulling taut as he approached.

In the visions where she died, he didn’t just grieve. He shattered. Beca sothing hollow and broken that couldn’t rember how to want survival.

And in the single vision where she lived—where she stayed, where she trusted—he smiled. Small and fragile and wondering, like he’d forgotten his face could do that.

His survival isn’t just about him, she realized. And mine isn’t just about .

We’re connected sohow. Already. Before we’ve even t.

If I die, he dies.

If I live...

Maybe he rembers how to live, too.

***

"Absolutely not."

Kaela’s wings flared wide, primaries spread in the aggressive display that Lyria had learned to recognize as fear disguised as anger. Her mother paced the small cottage, unable to stand still, unable to look at Lyria directly.

"We’re leaving. Tonight. Your aunt in the Ironspine Mountains will take us in. We can hide there, stay quiet, wait until—"

"Until what, Mother?" Lyria kept her voice steady. "Until the Temple forgets I exist? Until Sharlin decides a mixed-blood Prophetess isn’t worth hunting?"

"Until you’re safe."

"Running won’t make

safe. I’ve seen what happens when I run."

Kaela whirled. "You’ve seen futures. Possible futures. Nothing is certain—"

"In every future where I flee before he arrives, I die." Lyria t her mother’s frantic gaze without flinching. "Every single one. The hunters find

in the mountains. They find

on the roads. They find

wherever I hide."

"Then we hide better. We go farther. The Lower Realm, maybe, or—"

"It doesn’t matter how far I run." Lyria’s voice cracked. "Sharlin’s hunters always find . And when they do, I die alone. Without anyone who could have helped. The Temple has seers too, Mother. Weaker than , but enough. They can narrow down regions, track prophetic signatures. Distance just delays the inevitable."

"We’ll protect you. Your father and I—"

"You’re Inferno-tempered, Mother. The hunters are Blazecrowned. You’d die trying to save , and I’d die anyway."

The words landed like stones. Kaela flinched, wings folding tight against her back. For a mont, she looked small—not the fierce protector Lyria had always known, but a frightened woman facing sothing she couldn’t fight.

"So what?" Her mother’s voice ca out raw. "You want to just... wait here? Let this stranger find you?"

"I want to survive. And the only futures where I survive are the ones where he reaches

first."

"He’s a demon, Lyria."

The word ca out sharp. Bitter. Carrying weight that Lyria didn’t fully understand—old pain wrapped in fresh fear.

"I know what he is."

"Then you know what they’re capable of. What they do."

"Mother—"

"They take what they want." Kaela’s voice cracked. "They don’t ask. They don’t wait. They see sothing they desire, and they take it, consequences be damned, lives be damned—"

"This one is different."

"They’re all the sa!"

The words rang through the cottage. Sharp. Bitter. Lyria had never heard this particular venom in her mother’s voice. Anti-demon sentint was common enough in the Mid Realm, but this felt personal. Specific. Like, Kaela wasn’t just afraid of demons in general.

Like she was afraid of sothing that had already happened.

"Mother." Lyria stepped closer, keeping her voice gentle. "What happened? Why do you hate them so much?"

Kaela went still. Sothing flickered across her face—old pain, quickly buried. Her wings pressed flat against her back, and for a mont, she looked like she might answer. Might finally explain the shadows that lived behind her eyes whenever demon-kind was ntioned.

Then the walls went back up.

"It doesn’t matter." Her mother’s voice hardened. "What matters is keeping you safe. And if you think I’m letting so demon take my daughter—"

"He’s not taking . I’m choosing to stay."

"You’re fourteen!"

"I’m a Prophetess." The words ca out sharper than Lyria intended. "I see futures. And I’m telling you—the futures where I trust him are the only ones where I survive. Where any of us survive."

Silence fell.

Aldris rose slowly from his place by the cold hearth. Crossed to stand beside his wife, one hand resting on her trembling shoulder. His pointed ears—so like Lyria’s own—twitched with the quiet distress he never let show on his face.

"Lyria." His voice was soft. Pained. "How can you be certain? Visions can be interpreted in many ways. Prophets have been wrong before. If you’re wrong about this demon—"

"I’m not wrong."

"How do you know?"

"Because I’ve seen it too many tis to doubt." Lyria held her father’s gaze. "The details change. The paths branch and twist. But so things stay constant across every tiline."

"What things?"

"Him. His loyalty. His... dedication." She struggled to find words for what she’d witnessed. "In futures where the Temple captures , he dies trying to free . In futures where I flee, and they catch

elsewhere, he tracks my killers across realms before taking his own life. In futures where I’m already dead when he arrives—"

Her voice broke.

"He doesn’t survive long after. Any of them."

Aldris and Kaela exchanged glances. Sothing passed between them—confusion, concern, the dawning realization that their daughter was describing sothing beyond normal devotion.

"Lyria," her father said carefully, "demons don’t form those kinds of attachnts. Not to strangers. Not to anyone outside their own kind."

"I know."

"Then how do you explain—"

"I can’t." The admission cost her. "I don’t understand it either. But I’ve seen it. Felt it. The way he grieves isn’t... normal. It’s too big. Too deep. Like losing

destroys sothing fundantal in him."

She touched the silver rune on her forehead. Let its warmth steady her.

"I don’t know what connection we have. I don’t know why fate has tangled our threads together. But I know this: if I run, we both die. If I stay, if I trust him..." She took a breath. "Maybe we both get to live."

Kaela’s wings drooped. The fight drained out of her slowly, replaced by sothing raw and wounded.

"I can’t lose you," her mother whispered. "I already watched you age five years in a single night. I can’t—"

"You won’t lose ." Lyria crossed the distance between them. Took her mother’s hands—felt them trembling, felt the fear Kaela couldn’t hide. "Not if I stay. Not if I trust what I’ve seen."

"You’re asking

to hand my daughter to a demon."

"I’m asking you to trust that I know what I’m doing. That my visions an sothing." She squeezed her mother’s fingers. "Please, Mama. Let

do this."

Kaela stared at her. At the face that looked nineteen instead of fourteen. At the silver rune that marked her as sothing more than the child she’d raised.

"If he hurts you—"

"He won’t."

"If he touches you—"

"He won’t. Not... not like that." Lyria felt heat rise in her cheeks. "Whatever we are to each other, it’s not... he’s not coming here for that. He’s coming to protect . To keep

safe from Sharlin."

"And you believe that?"

"I’ve seen it. A hundred tis, a hundred different futures." Lyria held her mother’s gaze. "In every version where he reaches

alive, he keeps his word. Every single one."

Long silence.

Aldris’s hand tightened on Kaela’s shoulder. So wordless communication passed between them—twenty years of marriage condensed into a look, a breath, a shared understanding.

Finally, Kaela’s wings folded. Surrender.

"When?" she asked hoarsely. "When does he arrive?"

Lyria reached for prophetic sight. Felt the thread between them humming with proximity.

"Soon," she said. "Very soon."

***

Word spread through Thornhaven by morning.

The Prophetess had seen a demon approaching. The Prophetess had decided to stay. The Prophetess believed this stranger would protect her—protect all of them—from the Temple hunters who would surely co.

Reactions varied.

Elder Torvald called a council eting, his weathered face grave as he listened to Lyria explain what she’d seen. So villagers trusted her without question—she’d proven herself during the awakening, had spoken prophecy that rang with truth. Others were less certain. A demon? Here? What guarantee did they have that this stranger wouldn’t burn Thornhaven to ash the mont he arrived?

"He’s not coming to destroy us," Lyria said for the third ti. "He’s coming to help."

"How do you know?" demanded Garrick the blacksmith, massive arms crossed over his barrel chest. "Demons lie. It’s what they do."

"I’ve seen his soul." The words surprised her even as she spoke them. But they were true. In the visions, in those monts of terrible grief, she’d glimpsed sothing beneath his frozen surface. Sothing old and wounded and desperately hoping. "He’s not lying. He can’t lie about this—it’s too deep."

"Pretty words," Garrick muttered. But he didn’t argue further.

In the end, the village voted to trust her. Again. Two hundred souls putting their lives in the hands of a fourteen-year-old girl with a glowing forehead and visions she couldn’t fully explain.

Lyria hoped desperately that she was worthy of that trust.

***

That night, Lyria stood on Thornhaven’s outer wall.

The primordial forest stretched endlessly before her, ancient trees forming a dark sea beneath winter stars. Ashwhisper had begun—the final month of winter, when the world held its breath before spring’s return. Cold air bit at her exposed skin, but her wings kept her warm enough, wrapped around her shoulders like a feathered cloak.

Sowhere out there, the copper-eyed stranger moved through shadows, following a trail that led to her.

She wondered what he thought about while he traveled. Whether he felt the sa strange pull she did—that thread of connection humming between them, growing stronger with each passing hour. Whether he had any idea that the Prophetess he hunted was already waiting for him.

Already choosing him.

The thought should have frightened her. She was fourteen years old—or she had been, before the sacrifice that aged her into a young woman’s body. She had never been courted, never been kissed, never thought much about romance beyond the vague assumption that soday, eventually, soone would catch her interest.

She hadn’t expected this. Hadn’t expected to feel so certain about a stranger she’d never t. Hadn’t expected the sight of his grief to carve itself into her heart like the silver rune carved into her forehead.

Behind her, soft footsteps approached. Lyria didn’t turn—she’d felt her father’s presence before he reached the wall.

Aldris settled beside her, leaning against ancient wood worn smooth by generations of watchers. His pointed ears caught starlight, and his quiet face held none of his wife’s fear. Just... sadness. The particular sadness of a parent watching their child grow up too fast.

"Your mother’s finally asleep," he said. "It took a while."

"I know. I could hear her crying."

Aldris was quiet for a mont. "She’s not angry at you. She’s just..."

"Scared. I know."

"It’s more than that." Her father’s voice dropped. "There’s sothing she’s never told you. Sothing from her family’s past. I don’t know the details—she’s never shared them, even with . But I know it involves demons. And I know it hurt her badly."

Lyria turned to look at him. "What happened?"

"I don’t know. She won’t say." Aldris t her eyes. "But whatever it was, it left scars. Deep ones. So when she looks at you choosing to trust a demon... she’s not just seeing you. She’s seeing old wounds being torn open."

"I can’t change what I’ve seen."

"I know. I’m not asking you to." Her father reached out, tucking a strand of hair behind her pointed ear. "I’m just asking you to be patient with her. She’s fighting a battle you can’t see."

Lyria nodded slowly. She hadn’t thought about it that way—had been so focused on her own visions, her own certainty, that she’d forgotten her mother was a person with her own history. Her own ghosts.

"I’ll try," she said.

Aldris smiled. Small. Sad. Proud in a way that made her chest ache.

"That’s all I ask." He kissed her forehead, careful to avoid the silver rune. "Get so sleep, little star. Tomorrow will be a long day."

"I don’t think I can sleep."

"Try anyway. Whatever’s coming, you’ll face it better rested."

He left her there on the wall, his footsteps fading back toward the cottage. Lyria watched him go, then turned back to the forest.

Whoever you are, she thought into the darkness, whatever we’re ant to be to each other—I’m staying. I’m trusting you.

Don’t make

regret it.

The silver rune pulsed warm against her skin. Not painful anymore. Almost... comforting. Like the mark itself, recognized the choice she’d made and approved.

Behind her, Thornhaven slept. Two hundred souls who’d voted to protect her, to risk everything for a mixed-blood Prophetess who could see futures they couldn’t imagine. Her family huddled in their cottage, Mira curled between the twins, parents whispering worries they thought she couldn’t hear.

They were all counting on her to be right about this.

And if I’m wrong?

The thought surfaced unbidden. She pushed it down. Couldn’t afford doubt now. The choice was made. The path was set.

Lyria wrapped her wings tighter and kept watching the forest.

And forty kiloters away, still moving, still searching, the stranger with copper eyes felt sothing shift in his frozen chest.

Almost like hope.

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