Lucien and the four won did not delay for long.
Once preparations were complete, they departed through the Covenant of Pathless Sovereignty.
When the leap ended, they stood upon the Middle Continent.
The place that greeted them was not gentle.
Heat rose from the ground in visible waves. Black stone stretched across the landscape in cracked shelves. Farther ahead, jagged volcanic ridges clawed toward the sky, and rivers of molten rock moved between them like wounds that refused to cool.
The air tasted of ash, mineral, old fire, and pressure.
Lucien studied the volcanic region before them.
The system’s coordinates pointed deeper.
"Let’s move," he said.
They advanced quickly.
The deeper they went, the more intense the elents beca.
The four won grew quieter.
Even Marie stopped making side comnts.
Soon, they reached a formation half-buried beneath a ring of basalt cliffs.
At first glance, it looked like a collapsed shrine.
But as they approached, the outer stone peeled away beneath their senses, and the truth revealed itself.
A chamber.
Similar to the special chamber Lucien and Seraphine had once entered.
An instant-teleportation array lay inside.
But this one was different.
The array was circular, but four great corners extended from it like elental anchors. Each corner held a different cluster of clauses, though they did not glow yet. The center of the array was empty, but not inactive.
Lucien could feel it waiting. Interest hit him once again.
Marie stepped forward first.
Her eyes had narrowed.
"The system told us how to activate this array."
Kaia, Sylra, and Marina nodded.
Lucien nodded as well.
The four of them moved without further discussion.
Each woman walked to a different corner of the array.
Marie stood where earth-heavy clauses slept beneath the stone.
Kaia moved toward the water-vein inscriptions, though there was no visible water in the chamber.
Sylra stood where the air itself seed thinner and more responsive.
Marina stopped at the fire corner, where faint heat pulsed beneath the lines.
Lucien watched carefully.
This array was not ant for just anyone. It demanded four distinct answers before it would awaken.
Lucien walked to the center.
The mont he did, the array pulsed once.
The four won looked at him.
Marie’s expression was serious.
"Luc, we are going to activate it."
Kaia added softly, "If sothing feels wrong, leave the center."
Marina looked at him and tried to grin.
It ca out weaker than usual.
"Or just do your usual impossible thing."
Sylra said quietly, "Be careful."
Lucien smiled faintly.
"I should be saying that to all of you."
Marie shook her head.
"Too late."
Then their auras surged.
Four colors moved inward.
They t at the center beneath Lucien’s feet.
The array awakened.
For one heartbeat, Lucien felt sothing look at them.
Then the chamber vanished.
•••
They reappeared in another tiny world drifting sowhere in the void.
The first thing that struck them was not danger.
It was familiarity.
A strange nostalgia passed through the air. It pressed gently against the heart, like a song one had never learned yet sohow knew where it would end.
The won went still.
Before them stretched a vast field.
It was beautiful.
To one side, green hills rolled beneath a deep blue sky. Their slopes were heavy with flowers and low stone outcrops.
Farther away, a volcanic ridge smoked quietly. Its fire was contained, warm rather than violent.
On another side, rivers curved through glass-clear valleys before falling into misted basins.
Above all of it, wind moved freely through high grasses, carrying the scent of rain, ash, earth, and sunlight.
Marina’s lips parted.
"This place looks familiar."
Kaia whispered, "I feel that too."
Sylra held one hand to her chest.
"But I don’t rember knowing it."
Marie looked across the field with a rare expression of uncertainty.
"It feels like coming ho to a house I never lived in."
Lucien said nothing. He felt this before with Seraphine too.
He activated Structural Insight quietly.
The world shifted into strings and clauses.
Lucien began morizing what he could.
The clauses beneath the grass. The balancing lines between the four regions. The way each elent flowed toward a central point and retreated without conflict. The world had not ford naturally. It had been made to rember.
The four won were already moving.
They were following sothing.
Lucien followed behind.
•••
They eventually reached a waterfall.
It fell from a high cliff of pale stone into a deep blue pool below. Mist gathered around it in soft curtains, and the air there felt cooler. Behind the falling water, a dark opening led into a cavern.
The four won stopped.
Their expressions changed at the sa ti.
Marie looked toward the cave.
"The system says we have to enter."
Lucien looked at the cavern too.
"I’ll co with you."
Kaia turned toward him.
There was apology in her eyes before she even spoke.
"Luc..."
That was enough.
He understood.
If they could bring him, they would have said so imdiately.
But none of them did.
This part was theirs.
Lucien smiled faintly.
"It’s fine."
Marina looked conflicted.
"My prince..."
"I’ll be nearby," Lucien said. "If anything goes wrong, shout loudly."
Marie laughed once, though her expression remained tense.
"That, I can do."
Sylra gave him a small nod.
Kaia smiled softly.
Then the four of them entered the cavern behind the waterfall.
Lucien watched until the falling water swallowed them from sight.
Only then did he turn away.
He flew upward.
If this tiny world was artificial, then it had either been severed from sowhere, copied from sowhere, or preserved from sowhere. Lucien wanted to know which.
He rose above the waterfall and looked across the world with Structural Insight still active.
The more he studied, the more certain he beca.
This place was not rely a special location.
It was a preserved mory of a real place.
Sowhere in the Big World, there might once been a land like this.
And sohow, it was connected to the Liberators.
Or at least to these four.
Lucien’s expression grew serious.
"What are these locations, really?" he murmured.
The world answered only with wind.
•••
Inside the cavern, the four won moved deeper.
No one spoke.
Even Marie remained silent.
The cavern should have been dark, but it was not entirely so. The air slled faintly of wet stone, old ash, clean water, and sothing warr.
Sothing lived-in.
Their steps slowed.
Then the cavern opened.
At the end of the path was a simple makeshift ho.
A small fire pit sat near one wall. A woven carpet lay on the floor. A low wooden table stood near the center,. A bed rested against the side wall, covered by simple blankets that looked as though soone had once folded them carefully and never returned to disturb them.
The sight struck them harder than grandeur would have.
Marina’s eyes grew moist before she understood why.
Marie swallowed.
"I feel like I have been here before."
Kaia shook her head slowly.
"No," she whispered. "It feels like we belonged here."
Sylra’s hand moved lightly over the table.
"Or belonged to the one who lived here."
No one answered.
They moved without deciding to.
Each step felt guided by old habit rising through forgotten bones.
Marie walked to the carpet and sat cross-legged upon it as though she had done so a thousand tis.
Kaia moved near the fire pit and sat beside it with a calmness that made her eyes tremble.
Sylra sat by the low table. One hand rested naturally on its edge.
Marina walked to the bed and sat there. Her fingers tightened in the blanket as though she had once guarded that place with her whole being.
For a mont, nothing happened.
Then the world inside them opened.
Golden light surged out of their bodies.
The Will of the World.
It rose from the four of them and ford four panels of light in the air.
Four perspectives.
Four mories.
Four old roads returning.
The won stared.
And then the visions began.
•••
They saw a world before their own voices existed.
Earth slept first. Not as silence, but as patience.
Stone held pressure. Soil gathered mory. Mountains rembered being lifted from the deep. Every footprint, every root, every buried bone, every fallen house, every seed pressed into dark ground left sothing behind.
Then, one day, the earth rembered enough to feel itself.
A small orb of brown-gold light opened beneath the roots of an ancient tree.
It trembled.
It did not yet know it was alive.
...
Fire woke elsewhere.
Not in destruction. But in warmth.
In volcanic breath. In hearths. In lightning-split trees. In the heat of blood. In the hunger of stars reflected in mortal flas. It had burned for ages without asking why.
Then a great change passed through the world.
A red-gold orb sparked into awareness above a bed of cooling lava.
It spun once.
Then flared in surprise at its own existence.
...
Wind awakened high above a valley.
It had moved everywhere.
Through grass. Across oceans. Between mountains. Through lungs. Around wings. Through ruins. It had carried voices long before it understood what voices ant.
Then, at last, it heard itself.
A pale green orb ford in the eye of a quiet storm.
It drifted uncertainly.
Then danced.
...
Water woke beneath falling rain.
It had flowed through rivers, blood, tears, seas, springs, clouds, and hidden veins beneath stone. It had reflected faces that never returned and carried grief too heavy for hands.
Then consciousness gathered in a clear pool below moonlight.
A blue-white orb rose from the water.
It pulsed softly.
...
The four won watching trembled.
The places were familiar.
The earth-slope.
The lava ridge.
The wind-valley.
The moonlit pool.
They had seen those places outside.
Marie whispered, "Those are..."
Kaia finished for her.
"Spirits?"
Marina looked at the vision with wet eyes.
"Why do they feel familiar?"
Sylra did not speak.
She only stared.
The visions continued.
The four spirits did not know themselves yet.
They were small, round, luminous beings, little more than elental consciousness wrapped in light. They had no hands, no faces, no voices. Yet they understood more than newborn creatures should have, because before awareness they had been part of the world for ages.
Experience had existed before identity.
That was why they could move.
That was why they could understand.
That was why they knew, instinctively, that sothing had made their birth possible.
Each spirit saw a thread.
Leading toward sothing higher.
Sothing wounded.
Sothing waiting.
And so they followed.
User Comments
0 comments from readers