When Lucien told Seraphine he intended to go with her to the location shown by her system, a strange smile appeared on her face.
It was small at first.
Then it curved a little further, just enough to make him imdiately suspicious.
Seraphine tilted her head and asked, "Are you sure it is because of the location?"
Lucien looked at her.
She held his gaze without blinking.
Then she added, "Are you sure it is not because you wanted to see and be with ?"
For a second, Lucien said nothing.
Then he smiled.
"Would you believe if I said that is a very big part of the reason?"
Seraphine froze.
The answer had landed too directly.
She broke eye contact first, crossed her arms, and looked away as if the nearest wall had suddenly beco more trustworthy than his face.
"Hmph," she said. "And then what? You’ll leave again, disappear sowhere, and forget about ."
This ti Lucien did not answer imdiately.
Because beneath the bite in her tone, he could hear the real thing.
Sadness and fear.
Seraphine knew, perhaps better than most, that Lucien was not soone she could simply ask to stay. His life moved with too much montum. Too many things pulled at him. Too many disasters kept finding his na.
And the forgetting...
That had hurt her in a way she could neither classify nor tolerate.
She trusted dicine. She trusted redies, treatnt, and diagnosis.
But she found no clean cure for herself.
Lucien felt the guilt of that settle in him quietly.
He wanted to say that he would not forget her.
He wanted to say that his mory would not fail her. That he had Photographic mory. That once she was held in his mind, she would remain there clearly.
But he knew better.
If he said that now, it would sound like a defense. A reassurance too thin for the fear underneath.
So for once, Lucien said nothing clever.
And Seraphine, seeing the apology and guilt in his face, unexpectedly smiled.
Just enough to rescue him from the mont.
"I’ll forgive you," she said, "if you let borrow Structural Insight."
Lucien stared at her in wounded disbelief.
"Sister," he said, pressing a hand dramatically to his chest, "that hurts."
Seraphine raised a brow.
"You only see as a convenient skill lender."
"Stop acting," she said flatly.
Then both of them laughed, and the last of the awkwardness dissolved with it.
After that, conversation ca easily.
They spoke first about simple things, then not-simple things, and then the sort of things only two people with dangerous minds and inconvenient curiosity could talk about for too long without realizing how much ti had passed.
They talked about dicine.
About the difference between curing a symptom and correcting a structure. About how most healers aid too low. About bodies as systems, souls as layered continuity, and minds as things more fragile and more stubborn than either philosophers or warriors liked to admit.
They talked about law too.
About whether understanding ca from depth or from exposure. About whether broad laws were inherently slower because they demanded more reality from the practitioner. About whether truth had shape before language, or whether language was part of how truth beca usable.
Lucien matched her well there.
That pleased Seraphine more than she showed.
Most people either feared how strangely she thought or tried to drag her back toward ordinary conversation too soon. Lucien never did. He could follow her into difficult ideas without looking exhausted, and when he disagreed, he did so in ways that made the discussion sharper rather than duller.
At so point, the conversation bent back toward him.
Toward Oblivion.
Toward mory.
Lucien’s voice grew quieter then.
"Thank you," he said.
Seraphine glanced at him. "For what?"
"For rembering."
She did not answer at once.
Her restraint had softened over the last stretch of ti, but that line still reached sowhere deeper than teasing could comfortably cover.
When she finally spoke, her voice was lower.
"You make that sound as if I did sothing extraordinary."
Lucien looked at her for a mont.
"You did."
Seraphine looked away first.
He did not press further.
After a while, they returned to the matter that had brought him there.
The location.
Seraphine explained that the system had revealed it shortly after she noticed sothing deeply wrong in her mory and forced herself through that wrongness until the forgotten shape of Lucien returned.
That was what she said.
Lucien listened.
And imdiately felt that she was hiding sothing.
Not lying exactly.
But omitting.
He knew the difference.
Still, he did not call her out on it.
The truth Seraphine did not say was too embarrassing to say aloud even inside her own mind.
The real condition had not rely been rembrance.
It had been realization.
Love.
That was the point at which the system had finally responded to her and revealed the special location.
Even thinking the word made her inwardly recoil with embarrassnt.
So she did not say it.
Soon the conversation shifted toward departure.
Seraphine said she still needed to prepare for travel.
Lucien, however, simply took out the Covenant of Pathless Sovereignty and placed it between them.
Seraphine stared at it.
"This is the thing you used before?"
"It’s charged," Lucien said. "Brother Seran made sure of it before I ca."
He explained its use simply.
Seraphine listened once and within seconds, she had already understood the principle well enough to operate it cleanly.
Lucien smiled.
She was the sort of woman who could learn dangerous things offensively quickly.
"You know the coordinates, right?" he asked.
Seraphine nodded.
"Then use it."
There was no hesitation left in her after that.
She activated the disc.
The destination lay in the East.
Both of them stood side by side as the artifact awakened.
Space folded around them in smooth geotry.
The room dimd at the edges. The floor beneath them lost its ordinary certainty.
They looked at one another once.
Then the world gave way.
They reappeared on a ridge.
The landing was clean.
Seraphine’s system imdiately began resonating.
Its presence reflected in her expression before she even spoke.
"It’s here," she said quietly. "Closer now."
They followed the guidance.
The path led them over old stone, sparse wind-bent grass, and a slope that curved toward a half-hidden formation in the mountain.
Then they found the cave.
The system told Seraphine to enter.
So they did.
Inside, the air was colder than it should have been, but not hostile. The cave bent inward through natural darkness and then into sothing less natural.
The stone ahead had been shaped.
A dead end eventually stopped them.
Or rather, what looked like one.
Seraphine stepped forward and let her Law of Redy spread through the wall before them. Pale symbols surfaced one by one like sleeping things being recalled to duty. Ancient script lit beneath the stone, forming circles, lines, layered marks, and responsive arrays.
Then the wall parted.
Beyond it lay a chamber.
The instant Seraphine crossed the threshold, the entire room awakened.
Lines blazed across the floor. Lanterns long cold filled themselves with light. At the center stood a platform ringed with inscriptions and layered arrays so dense that Lucien’s eyes sharpened at once.
He stepped closer.
"This is a teleportation array."
Seraphine nodded faintly, though she looked no less surprised than he felt.
It was not an ordinary one.
The geotry was too smooth.
As they approached the center, the atmosphere grew heavier.
They looked at one another.
No words were needed then.
Both stepped onto the platform.
And the array answered imdiately.
Just then, light rose in a blinding surge.
And then the world changed again.
The transition was flawless.
One mont they were inside the chamber.
The next, they stood sowhere else entirely.
Lucien’s eyes narrowed at once.
He knew imdiately that they were no longer in the Big World.
The laws felt smaller here. Tighter around the edges.
He extended his senses outward and confird what instinct had already told him.
This was a smaller world.
He took out Starfruit Halo.
Starfruit Halo — A navigation relic. Once locked onto a chosen celestial reference, it provided an absolute fra of orientation... even within voids, warped space, or collapsing starfields.
The relic activated in his hand, orienting itself against the celestial reference he had long ago registered. The Big World.
When the result settled, Lucien’s gaze changed.
They were not only outside the Big World.
They were far outside the solar system.
That realization struck him more deeply than he expected.
They were on one planet among the vastness of the universe.
And what fascinated him even more was how perfect the transit had been.
There was no ti lag, no rupture, no void corridor, and no sensory delay.
It had not felt like travel.
It had felt like being correctly relocated.
Lucien’s interest in the original teleportation array rose at once.
That was not rely advanced.
That was beautiful.
But then both of them looked ahead.
And forgot the array for a mont.
Before them stretched a vast field.
Boundless in the way only deliberately emptied places could be.
They began walking.
At first, Lucien thought the feeling that touched him was only unease.
Then he recognized it for what it was.
Nostalgia.
A sudden, unreasonable nostalgia so deep it felt almost physical.
He searched his mory imdiately.
Nothing.
He had never been here before.
And yet the farther they walked, the stronger the feeling beca.
Everything around them felt deliberate.
It’s not natural in the ordinary sense.
Created.
Lucien could see it through Structural Insight.
The field, the air, the distances, the subtle slope of the land, the placent of stillness itself... all of it had been adjusted with Creation.
This world had been made with intention.
Lucien felt certain of it. It was the Primordial Sli’s doing.
Beside him, Seraphine had gone silent.
She felt it too.
The sa aching familiarity without mory. The sa impossible sense of having returned to sothing they could not na.
At one point, without discussion, Seraphine reached for his hand.
Lucien glanced at her.
She did not look back.
She simply held on.
So he let her.
And the two of them walked hand in hand through the empty field while nostalgia gathered around them like a forgotten truth trying to rember itself first.
Eventually they saw it.
A single hut.
It stood alone in the vast field as though the whole world had been shaped rely to leave that one structure untouched at its center.
Still holding hands, they both stopped.
Then they looked at one another.
Seraphine spoke first.
"I’ll go in first."
Lucien released her hand.
"Then I’ll wait."
She nodded once.
Then she walked toward the hut and entered.
Lucien remained outside.
Alone now, with the wind moving softly through the field and that strange overwhelming feeling pressing harder against his chest, he found that for the first ti in a while—
he truly did not understand what was happening anymore.
And that, more than anything else, told him this place mattered.
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