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Now reading: Chapter 107 – The Woman Who Built the Cycle from Alpha Kael's dangerous Obsession, a Fantasy novel by Moriyebaspen.

POV: Seraphina

Seraphina had spent most of her life studying patterns.

Long before kingdoms rose and fell. Long before bloodlines beca legends. Long before history buried truth beneath centuries of myth, she had learned a simple lesson.

Everything repeated.

People called it fate because they lacked the patience to observe long enough.

People called it destiny because they preferred simple answers.

People called it coincidence because accepting the alternative was far more uncomfortable.

Seraphina knew better.

Nothing repeated without reason.

Nothing survived thousands of years without structure.

And nothing endured countless failures unless sothing ensured its survival.

That was why she stood motionless before the large observation window overlooking the fortress below.

Her attention wasn’t focused on the wolves moving through the courtyards.

Nor on the warriors training in the distance.

Nor on the servants carrying supplies between buildings.

Her thoughts remained fixed on a single person.

Liora.

The girl had progressed faster than expected.

Far faster.

For weeks, Seraphina had monitored every report arriving from within the fortress. Every unusual incident. Every behavioral change. Every sign connected to the awakening.

At first the progression followed familiar patterns.

Confusion.

Disorientation.

mory ergence.

Identity instability.

Those stages were expected.

They always appeared.

What concerned Seraphina now was the speed.

Liora wasn’t rely experiencing the mories.

She was analyzing them.

Understanding them.

Drawing conclusions from them.

That developnt should not have occurred yet.

A faint crease appeared between Seraphina’s brows.

For soone else, the expression might have indicated worry.

For Seraphina, it represented calculation.

She crossed the chamber slowly before stopping beside an ancient table covered with docunts.

Maps.

Reports.

Personal notes.

Records accumulated over centuries.

Most people would have viewed the collection as impossible.

A lifeti of research.

A lifeti of secrets.

For Seraphina, it was simply unfinished work.

Her fingers drifted across several pages before stopping on the most recent reports concerning Liora.

The information confird what she already suspected.

Increased mory integration.

Pattern recognition.

Predictive awareness.

Behavioral adaptation.

The signs were becoming increasingly obvious.

Liora was no longer reacting to the cycle.

She was studying it.

The distinction mattered.

Because reaction created confusion.

Analysis created understanding.

And understanding inevitably led to dangerous questions.

Seraphina lowered herself into a chair.

The movent was graceful despite the weight of centuries resting upon her shoulders.

Silence filled the room as she reviewed the reports once more.

Not because she needed to.

Because the act helped organize her thoughts.

The situation reminded her of previous attempts.

That realization lingered longer than she expected.

Previous attempts.

The phrase would have horrified almost anyone else.

To Seraphina, it was rely accurate.

She rembered every one of them.

Not every detail.

Not every face.

Not every conversation.

Ti eventually blurred even the most significant mories.

Yet she rembered enough.

She rembered the won who ca before.

The ones who awakened.

The ones who rembered.

The ones who ca dangerously close to understanding.

Each had been different.

Different personalities.

Different strengths.

Different weaknesses.

Yet eventually they all reached the sa point.

The point where mory beca awareness.

And awareness beca threat.

The thought settled heavily inside her mind.

Because Liora was approaching that point now.

Faster than any of them had.

Seraphina rose once more and walked toward a large shelf carved directly into the stone wall.

Several old journals rested there.

Most had never been seen by another living person.

She selected one carefully.

The leather cover had faded long ago.

The pages inside contained notes written centuries earlier.

Observations.

Experints.

Failures.

Records of outcos.

Seraphina opened the journal and turned through several entries.

A familiar na appeared.

Then another.

And another.

Different won.

Different generations.

Different iterations.

The similarities between them remained impossible to ignore.

Each had eventually begun asking the sa questions.

Each had eventually noticed the sa patterns.

Each had eventually realized the cycle existed.

The mories resurfaced effortlessly.

Faces long buried by ti.

Voices she hadn’t heard in centuries.

Determined won who believed awareness alone would allow them to succeed where others failed.

None of them had.

A slow exhale escaped her.

Not from sadness.

From certainty.

Because she knew sothing they never did.

She knew what caused the resets.

Her gaze shifted toward the window again.

Far below, wolves crossed the main courtyard unaware of the truths hidden beneath their feet.

Unaware of the chamber.

Unaware of the woman imprisoned there.

Unaware of the chanisms controlling events around them.

The ignorance protected them.

Knowledge never had.

Seraphina understood exactly where every previous cycle had broken.

Not at the beginning.

Not during the struggles.

Not during the discoveries.

The collapse always occurred at the sa point.

Awareness.

The mont understanding reached a critical threshold, events began correcting themselves.

Pressure erged.

Conflicts escalated.

Relationships fractured.

Circumstances aligned.

The cycle responded.

Not consciously.

Not emotionally.

Systematically.

Like a structure protecting itself from disruption.

The realization had taken Seraphina centuries to fully understand.

Even now, she respected its elegance.

And feared its efficiency.

That was why Liora’s progress concerned her.

Not because the girl was rembering.

Rembering was inevitable.

Not because she was awakening.

That had always been part of the process.

The problem was timing.

Liora was arriving at conclusions decades too early.

The mories should have surfaced gradually.

The awareness should have developed slowly.

The understanding should have taken years.

Instead, everything was accelerating.

The imprisoned woman.

The pregnancy.

The bond with Kael.

The awakening.

Every variable seed to be moving faster than expected.

Seraphina disliked unpredictability.

She disliked it imnsely.

Her fingers tightened slightly against the edge of the table.

Not enough to reveal emotion.

Enough to acknowledge it.

The acceleration changed things.

It created possibilities.

Possibilities inevitably created complications.

And complications often created consequences.

For several minutes she remained silent, considering outcos.

Calculating probabilities.

Examining paths forward.

The process ca naturally after centuries of practice.

Eventually her attention drifted toward the hidden chamber deep beneath the fortress.

Toward the woman imprisoned there.

Toward the bloodline she had spent generations searching for.

Toward the future rapidly approaching.

A future arriving much sooner than anticipated.

The realization settled into place with cold certainty.

Liora was rembering too much.

Too quickly.

And if that continued, the cycle would respond.

It always did.

The question was not whether intervention would occur.

The question was how severe it would be this ti.

Outside, the fortress continued its routines without understanding the storm quietly forming around it.

Inside the chamber, Seraphina finally allowed herself to voice the conclusion she had been avoiding.

Her words were little more than a murmur.

Soft enough that no one else would ever hear them.

Yet the weight behind them carried centuries of experience.

"She’s rembering too early."

The silence absorbed the statent.

Seraphina’s gaze remained fixed on the horizon beyond the fortress walls.

A horizon filled with possibilities she had already seen too many tis before.

Then she spoke again.

This ti with absolute certainty.

"This will complicate things."

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