Chapter 91 – The mory That Wasn’t Hers
POV: Liora
"I wasn’t born into this. I was made for it."
The words lingered in the chamber long after I spoke them.
For several monts, nothing happened. The silver symbols surrounding us continued to glow softly, and the woman standing across from remained silent, watching with the sa unreadable expression she always wore whenever I stumbled upon a truth she had known long before I did.
I wanted to ask questions.
A thousand of them.
I wanted to know who had created the White Wolves. I wanted to know why they had spent three thousand years shaping bloodlines and sacrificing lives in pursuit of so impossible goal. I wanted to know why I had survived when every healer before had died.
Most of all, I wanted to know why every answer seed to lead back to .
Before I could speak, a sharp pressure ford behind my eyes.
I froze.
The sensation had beco familiar over the past few days, but this was different. Stronger.
Much stronger.
It felt as though sothing inside my mind had begun pulling apart invisible walls that had been standing for centuries.
The pressure intensified.
I pressed a hand against my temple.
The woman imdiately straightened.
For the first ti since arriving, I saw genuine concern flicker across her face.
"You need to resist it."
I frowned.
"Resist what?"
She didn’t answer quickly enough.
Pain exploded through my skull.
The chamber vanished.
The floor disappeared beneath .
The world dissolved into silver light.
For one terrifying mont, I felt completely detached from my own body.
Then reality slamd back into place.
Except it wasn’t my reality.
I stood beneath a clear blue sky.
Warm sunlight brushed against my skin.
A gentle breeze carried the scent of wildflowers and distant water.
The abrupt change left disoriented.
I spun slowly, trying to understand where I was.
The fortress was gone.
The chamber was gone.
Everything connected to my life had disappeared.
Rolling green hills stretched endlessly beyond a village built from pale stone and dark timber. Smoke drifted lazily from chimneys. Children ran through open streets. rchants called to one another from market stalls overflowing with goods.
The place felt alive.
Peaceful.
Beautiful.
And sohow familiar.
The realization sent unease creeping through .
I had never been here before.
Yet my heart reacted as though I had co ho.
The sensation grew stronger when I looked down.
The hands resting at my sides weren’t mine.
Not exactly.
The skin was smoother.
The fingers slightly longer.
A silver band circled one wrist.
Tiny scars crossed the knuckles.
I stared.
A strange certainty settled over .
I knew these hands.
I knew every mark.
Every line.
Every imperfection.
The familiarity was impossible.
Yet undeniable.
Before I could process it further, laughter reached my ears.
I looked up.
A little girl was running toward .
Her dark hair bounced wildly behind her as she sprinted through the crowded square.
The mont she reached , she threw her arms around my waist.
Relief flooded through her.
Not my relief.
Hers.
The intensity of the emotion nearly knocked the breath from my lungs.
I felt her happiness.
Her trust.
Her complete certainty that everything was right now that I had returned.
Then another sensation followed.
Love.
Powerful.
Protective.
Overwhelming.
It crashed through so suddenly that my vision blurred.
The emotion wasn’t mine.
Yet sohow it was.
I knew exactly how much this child ant.
I knew the sound of her laughter.
I knew her favorite stories.
I knew how many tis she had scraped her knees learning to run.
The knowledge existed inside naturally.
As though it belonged there.
The realization terrified .
I wasn’t observing a mory.
I was living it.
The days that followed unfolded around in fragnts that sohow felt complete.
I healed injured villagers.
I comforted grieving parents.
I sat beside sick children until their fevers broke.
I listened to disputes and offered guidance.
People ca to for answers.
For protection.
For hope.
And every ti I looked into their faces, I felt sothing inside tighten.
Not because they were strangers.
Because they weren’t.
I knew them.
Every one of them.
The elderly baker who always worried about his grandchildren.
The blacksmith who pretended not to care when people praised his work.
The young mother who smiled through exhaustion.
The boys who spent every afternoon getting into trouble near the river.
Their lives felt woven into mine.
Their joys mattered.
Their pain mattered.
Their futures mattered.
The emotions grew so vivid that I occasionally forgot I was Liora.
I would catch myself thinking thoughts that weren’t mine.
Rembering events I had never lived.
Feeling attachnts I had never ford.
Each realization sent panic rushing through .
Yet no matter how hard I fought it, the mory continued pulling deeper.
As weeks passed, another emotion slowly erged beneath everything else.
Fear.
At first, it appeared only occasionally.
A passing concern.
A brief mont of unease.
But gradually it beca impossible to ignore.
Sothing was wrong.
I could feel it every ti I looked toward the mountains.
Every ti I listened to distant rumors carried by travelers.
Every ti village leaders exchanged worried glances they thought nobody noticed.
Danger was coming.
The certainty lived inside long before I understood why.
The woman whose life I was experiencing knew it too.
She spent more ti patrolling the borders.
More ti preparing defenses.
More ti watching the horizon.
She smiled for the villagers.
She reassured them.
She promised everything would be alright.
But every night, when she was alone, fear crept through her.
Not fear for herself.
Fear for them.
Fear that she wouldn’t be enough.
Fear that she wouldn’t be able to save everyone.
I felt every ounce of it.
The weight of responsibility.
The burden of being everyone’s last line of defense.
The terrible knowledge that one day she might fail.
When the attack finally ca, it arrived before dawn.
The mory shifted so violently that I nearly lost my balance.
One mont the village slept peacefully.
The next it erupted into chaos.
Screams shattered the morning silence.
Fire spread across rooftops.
Warriors stord through the streets.
The sll of blood filled the air.
Panic exploded everywhere at once.
I ran.
Not away.
Toward the danger.
The urgency was overwhelming.
Every instinct demanded the sa thing.
Protect them.
Save them.
Don’t let them die.
The battle consud everything.
I healed wounds faster than they appeared.
I shielded children from collapsing buildings.
I dragged the injured to safety.
I pushed my power further and further until every nerve in my body felt as though it were burning.
Still it wasn’t enough.
More enemies arrived.
More villagers fell.
The situation deteriorated faster than I could stop it.
Desperation clawed through .
The realization hit with brutal clarity.
We were losing.
The people behind trusted completely.
They believed I could save them.
And for the first ti in my life—
I couldn’t.
The grief nearly broke .
Then determination took its place.
Cold.
Absolute.
Unshakable.
A decision ford.
Not because I wanted it.
Because there was no other choice.
If I couldn’t save myself and them—
then I would save them.
Even if it cost everything.
Power erupted through my body.
Silver light flooded the battlefield.
The force was beyond anything I had ever experienced.
The ground cracked beneath it.
The sky itself seed to tremble.
Enemy warriors vanished beneath the wave of energy.
The village was protected.
The people survived.
For one brief mont, victory felt possible.
Then the price arrived.
Agony tore through every part of .
My body began failing instantly.
Bones fractured.
Organs collapsed.
Blood filled my lungs.
The power I had unleashed consud from the inside.
I fell to my knees.
Voices scread around .
People rushed toward .
Hands reached for .
Tears blurred my vision.
The little girl from earlier was crying.
Others were begging to stay awake.
To hold on.
To keep fighting.
The sound shattered what remained of my heart.
Because I wanted to stay.
I wanted more ti.
I wanted to watch them grow.
I wanted to live.
Yet I already knew there would be no miracle.
The darkness was coming.
I could feel it.
My breathing beca shallow.
The world began fading.
The faces around blurred.
The sounds grew distant.
And despite everything, one final emotion remained.
Hope.
Not hope that I would survive.
Hope that my sacrifice would matter.
Hope that one day this cycle would end.
Hope that soone would succeed where I had failed.
The feeling lingered until my final breath.
Then my heart stopped.
The mory shattered.
I slamd back into my body so violently that I collapsed onto the stone floor of the hidden chamber.
Pain shot through my palms.
Air tore into my lungs.
My entire body shook uncontrollably.
For several seconds, I couldn’t separate the present from the past.
I could still sll the smoke.
Still hear the screams.
Still feel the agony of dying.
The mory remained vivid enough to feel real.
Because it had been real.
Slowly, I lifted my head.
The silver-eyed woman was watching .
She didn’t look surprised.
She looked sad.
As though she already understood what I was only beginning to realize.
My chest tightened.
I pressed a trembling hand against my heart.
It was beating.
Alive.
Strong.
Yet I rembered exactly what it felt like when it stopped.
I rembered the fear.
The determination.
The grief.
The hope.
Not because I witnessed them.
Because I lived them.
The truth settled over with terrifying clarity.
That mory had not belonged to a stranger.
It had not belonged to an ancestor.
It had not belonged to soone who rely resembled .
I had felt too much.
Known too much.
Recognized too much.
There was only one explanation left.
I slowly rose to my feet.
My legs were unsteady, but my voice wasn’t.
When I finally spoke, the words erged quietly.
Not frightened.
Not confused.
Certain.
"That wasn’t imagination."
The woman remained silent.
I t her gaze.
And for the first ti since entering the chamber, I wasn’t asking a question.
I was acknowledging a truth.
A truth that changed everything.
"That was ."
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