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Chapter 339: Chapter 334: Paper People

Location:Off-World — Beastkin World (Sacred Grove)

Date/Ti:Mid Emberwane, 9939 AZI (Day 3)

Realm:Nexus Mission

Rael woke before dawn.

Not the fragnted surfacing of the previous day — actual consciousness, the body’s slow return toward function after deep sleep, clean water, and the Heartstone’s persistent warmth bleeding through the roots he lay against. His dark eyes opened. Found Reiko — still at the grove’s edge, still and watchful. Rael’s hand moved to his broken antler stumps. Touched them. The gesture of soone confirming that the worst thing that happened to them was still real.

It was.

Eden checked him with the calm efficiency of a doctor who’d been monitoring a patient’s overnight progress through instinct alone. Pulse stronger. Breathing deeper. The antler infections retreating under Green’s salve. She gave him broth, water, a nutrient compress, and watched him eat with the attentive patience of a woman who understood that refeeding a starving body was an act of engineering as precise as any bridge.

"There’s more," Rael said. His voice was still rough — years of speaking only to the trees had left it rusty on consonants and uncertain on volu. But the caretaker’s cadence was there. The discipline of a man whose role had been to hold knowledge and transmit it clearly.

Jayde settled into the listening posture. "Tell us."

***

"I couldn’t tell myself anymore. That’s where the story ended yesterday — I couldn’t say the Beast Lord works in strange ways. I couldn’t say perhaps the Ivory One sees what we cannot. She’d called us paper people. She’d called the beast traits — the very marks of the Beast Lord’s blessing — a disease. She’d raised the unblessed above the blessed and turned our oldest truth upside down."

He drank. Slowly. His dark eyes finding the Heartstone’s dim pulse.

"So I decided to act. I was the caretaker — not a warrior, not a speaker. I’d been trained to tend the grove, to listen to the Heartstone, to counsel. Not to rebel. But there was nobody else. The council was scattered. The warriors answered to the Mother’s enforcers. The settlents were isolated from each other by design — she’d reorganised the old gathering routes so that every path led through the capital, through her checkpoints, through the eyes of the unblessed guards she’d put in place."

"But you had the old paths."

His eyes brightened — the first real light Jayde had seen in them. "The old paths. The trails through the deep forest that our people had walked for generations before the Mother’s roads existed. Ga tracks, pilgrimage routes, and the secret ways that the caretakers had used since the first Heartstone bonding. Trails that didn’t exist on any map because we’d never needed maps. The land itself rembered where they were, and any Beastkin with beast sense could follow them."

He smiled. Thin. Tired. But real.

"She never found those paths. For all her cleverness, all her counting and asuring and reorganising — she couldn’t map what the forest held in its mory. The roads were hers. The forest was still ours."

***

"It took

two months. Walking at night. Sleeping in the roots of ancient trees during the day. The forest sheltered

— it knew what I was doing, the way the forest knows everything that walks beneath its canopy. Berry bushes bent their branches toward

when I was hungry. Streams surfaced at my feet when I was thirsty. The old growth closed behind

when the enforcers’ hunting beasts ca too near — branches tangling, roots rising, the forest making itself impassable to those who didn’t know its language."

He described the journey the way he described everything — not as logistics but as a relationship. The forest wasn’t terrain to be crossed. It was a companion helping a friend.

"The council won had been scattered to every corner of the world. So running settlents so remote the enforcers visited twice a year. Others in labour camps, stripped of their titles, working alongside the people they’d once led. I found one — an old bear Beastkin, Grandmother Tova, forty years on the council — splitting firewood in a logging camp with hands that had once held the authority of a nation. She looked at . Looked at the forest behind . And she said: ’I wondered when the trees would send soone.’"

"Seven of the original twelve. That’s how many I reached. Seven won who had led this world before the Mother dissolved the council. So were old — old enough to rember a ti before the current Ivory One, old enough to have sat in council with the previous Beast Lord’s vessel and to understand that the sacred white was a role, not a person. So were young — young enough to be angry, to want to fight, to have spent five years watching their world be stripped and sorted and counted and not been able to do ANYTHING."

"Did they believe you?"

Rael’s face changed. The thin smile died.

"Three believed

imdiately. They’d seen it — the emptiness behind the pink eyes. The way the Mother looked at Beastkin the way you looked at stones in a wall. Two more believed

but were afraid. They had families. Children in the labour groups. Speaking against the Mother ant losing everything, and they had everything to lose."

He paused. Long. The grove’s bioluminescence pulsed.

"And two refused. They knelt in front of

and wept and told

I was wrong. The Ivory One was the Beast Lord’s vessel. If the caretaker was calling her a fraud, then the caretaker was lost. The Beast Lord would not allow his vessel to be taken — therefore, the vessel had not been taken. Their faith was a closed circle. No evidence could enter it."

"They reported you."

"Within a day of my visit. They walked the Mother’s roads — not the old paths — straight to the capital. Straight to her." His jaw worked. "I don’t bla them. How can I bla soone for believing what I believed for three years? Their cri was faith. Mine was losing it too late."

***

"I knew they’d co. The mont I left those two, I knew. So I ran — not away. Toward. The Heartstone. If I could press my antlers to the stone, the way caretakers have done for a thousand generations, I could activate the deep bond. Broadcast through the grove’s network — every root, every branch, every leaf connected to the Heartstone carrying my voice to every corner of the world. Every Beastkin would HEAR what had happened. Not my words. The Heartstone’s truth. The stone doesn’t lie. It carries the caretaker’s heart, and the world hears."

His breathing quickened. The mory carrying physical urgency — muscles tensing, eyes widening, the body re-living the run even while it sat broken against a tree.

"I was twenty steps from the stone."

The words fell into the grove like sothing heavy.

"Twenty steps. I could see the light — the Heartstone pulsing, reaching for , the bond between us straining to reconnect. And then the guards ca through the trees. Six of them. Unblessed enforcers. Ard with the iron tools the Mother had taught them to forge."

He looked at his hands. The trembling had returned.

"She was already there. Standing beside the Heartstone. Waiting. She’d known — sohow she’d always known — that if I broke, I’d co here. She didn’t understand the BOND. Didn’t care about the Heartstone or what it ant. But she understood that this grove was my power, and a smart ruler takes the power before the person."

***

"She didn’t hold the trial in the grove. She held it in the capital. In the great hall. Publicly."

His voice had flattened. The caretaker’s cadence replaced by sothing else — the rhythm of a man reciting facts he’d morised because feeling them would kill him.

"Twelve chairs in the great hall. Only one occupied. She sat in the Ivory One’s seat — white fur, pink eyes — and three thousand Beastkin were packed into the hall and the square outside, listening through open windows. She wanted them to see."

"A performance."

"A lesson. She read the two elders’ report aloud. Every word I’d said — the paper people comnt, the fur-tearing, the unblessed elevation. Laid out as evidence of my instability. Then she asked

one question."

He closed his eyes.

"’Do you deny that you spoke against the Mother?’"

"What did you say?"

"I could have lied. Could have bowed and begged. Could have said the elders misheard . I might have survived." His dark eyes opened. Clear. Steady. The clearest they’d been since they found him. "I looked at the pink eyes that used to carry the Beast Lord’s light. And I said: ’You are not the Ivory One. The Ivory One is gone. Sothing else is wearing her skin.’"

The grove was silent. The Heartstone pulsed.

"Three thousand Beastkin. Not a sound. Because what I’d said was either the bravest thing anyone had spoken in five years or the most blasphemous thing anyone had spoken in thirty thousand. I could see them — fox and wolf and deer and bear, pressed together in that hall, their ears flat, their tails still. Three thousand people holding their breath. So of them WANTED

to be right. I could see it in their eyes — the desperate, guilty hope of people who had been pretending not to see what was happening to their world. And so of them wanted

to be wrong. Because if I was right, then their faith was a lie and their prayers had been answered by sothing that wasn’t the Beast Lord."

"What did she do?"

"She smiled. Not the Ivory One’s smile — sothing thin. The way you smile at an insect that’s climbed onto your food." She turned to her guards. ’The caretaker is unwell. He requires correction.’"

***

"They held

in the square. In the open."

Rael’s hands moved to his antler stumps. His fingers hovered — not touching. The bone carried the mory.

"A stag’s antlers aren’t decoration. They’re us. Our connection to the Beast Lord, to the land, to the song that runs through everything alive on this world. Breaking a stag’s antlers is like—" He searched for words. "Like cutting out the part of you that hears music. The world still makes sound. But you can never hear the lody again."

"Two guards. Unblessed. They gripped the base of the right antler and twisted."

His voice was very quiet.

"The connection to the Heartstone went dark before the pain hit. A light I’d carried since I grew my first points at twelve sumrs — a warmth so old I’d forgotten it was separate from . Gone. Like a door slamming shut in a room that had always been open."

"Then the left. The sa sound. The sa darkness. Twice."

"She collected them." His voice was flat. "Had them carried to her compound. An attendant told

later — she mounted them on her wall. In her private chambers. Crossed, like a trophy."

(Trophies. She didn’t know what they connected to. She broke them because they were the most visible symbol of what she hates — the beast nature. And she mounted them because that’s what you do with trophies, WHERE SHE COS FROM.)

"After the antlers, the whip. Twenty lashes. In the square. In front of three thousand people who had known

since I was a fawn." His voice maintained its flatness — the recitation of a man who would break if he let feeling touch these words. "So turned away. So couldn’t. So — the enforcers — watched with their arms crossed. Learning."

"And then?"

"Then she declared

outcast."

The word fell into the grove with the weight of a body hitting ground.

"Outcast. My na unsaid. My family forbidden to acknowledge . No Beastkin can shelter , feed , touch . I beco invisible. A ghost among the living." His patchy fur rippled. "We are communal in our blood. Our biology requires touch. Presence. The sound of other voices. Isolation kills us — the beast aspect retreats first. Then the body follows."

He looked at his arms. The missing fur. The skin visible through the gaps.

"She threw

from the capital. The Beastkin I passed on the road — people I’d known my whole life, people who’d brought their children to the grove for the seasonal blessings, people I’d counselled through grief and celebrated through joy — they looked through . They had to. Speaking to an outcast makes you outcast. She’d taken our oldest law and sharpened it into a knife."

"You ca to the grove."

"Three days. Crawling. The grove was the only place left. The Heartstone still knew

— even with the antlers gone, the soul-bond held. Weaker. A trickle where there’d been a river. But enough to keep

breathing."

He looked at the dim stone.

"That was nearly two sumrs ago. Two YEARS." The bitter correction again. "The grove feeds

what it can. But the Heartstone weakens. And I—"

He didn’t finish. The state of his body was the end of the sentence.

***

That evening. The grove’s edge. Firelight and bioluminescence.

Rael slept. The sedative pulling him under gently. His breathing the steadiest it had been since they’d found him.

Jayde and Eden sat across the fire. The accumulated evidence of two days of listening arranged between them — not on paper, in the shared space of two minds that had been trained to build intelligence pictures from fragnts.

"The calendar change," Eden said. First.

"Gold. Gemstones. Gunpowder. Road engineering. Bridge design. Iron forging. Hunting trophies mounted on walls." Jayde paused. "Disgust with beast traits. Elevation of human appearance."

"All of it from sowhere else."

"All of it."

Eden was quiet. Then: "In the Federation. I used to trade for books on the black market. Stories from a dead blue world — fiction, fantasy, tales of impossible things. Banned. Contraband from a civilisation that had destroyed itself."

Jayde waited.

"The stories were about souls travelling between worlds. Dying in one place and waking up in another. Living a second life in a body that wasn’t theirs. The books called them transmigrators."

The word sat in the grove’s air like the last piece of a picture settling into place.

"I read those stories and thought they were beautiful nonsense. Then I died in a ti machine and woke up as an orphan on Doha."

"So the Mother is a transmigrator. A soul from sowhere else, wearing the Ivory One’s body — the one person in this world whose word was already law."

"Yes."

"Like us."

"Like us."

The fire crackled. Reiko’s breathing at the grove’s edge. Takara on the Heartstone — white fur glowing faintly in the artifact’s light, his ears forward, whatever he heard in the pulse kept to himself.

Tomorrow, they would enter the capital. See the Mother operate. Understand the full scope of what five years of a transmigrator’s unchecked authority had done to a world that had been beautiful.

Tonight, the word hung between two soldiers in a dying grove — borrowed from fiction, describing reality, and closing the distance between what happened here and what do we do about it to sothing that could be asured in days.

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