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Now reading: Chapter 323 - 322: The First Wave from Book 1 of Rebirth of the Technomage Saga: Earth's Awakening, a Fantasy novel by TracyDunwoodie.

Location:Seven Peaks; Imperial City; Federation Border; Worldwide

Date/Ti:TC1853.12.17 (Dawn to Midday)

The pulses stopped at dawn.

Not gradually — not a final compression from minutes to seconds to nothing. They simply ceased. One mont, the formation network was registering spikes every forty minutes, each one rattling the diagnostic crystals and sending brief surges through the ley line junctions. Then silence. Complete, absolute, wrong.

Marcus was in the technomagic workshop when it happened. He looked up from the relay communicator, he was running through its fifth diagnostic cycle, and felt the absence like a held breath. The monitoring array showed flatline readings. Not depleted — holding. As if the entire spiritual energy system of the planet had drawn inward, gathering itself.

He was running before the thought finished forming.

He reached the command center in under a minute. Raven was already there, standing before the formation display with Kairos beside her and Thorne at the communication array. She turned when Marcus entered, and the look on her face told him she already knew.

"The energy withdrew," Marcus said, forcing his voice steady. "All of it. Every pulse, every gradual increase — it’s pulled back. Like water receding before a —"

"Before a wave," Raven finished. "How long?"

"I don’t know. Hours. Maybe less."

Kairos spoke without turning from the window. His voice carried the particular weight of soone who had watched worlds breathe for longer than human civilization had existed. "Less."

Raven closed her eyes for three seconds. Opened them.

"Sound the assembly bell. Everyone to shelter positions. Combat disciples to the periter. Core team to stations." She looked at Thorne. "Where are Elian and Aren?"

"With i. Residential quarter. She has standing orders."

"Good."

The assembly bell rang across Seven Peaks — three long tones followed by two short, the pattern that every soul in the territory had drilled until it lived in muscle mory. Not an attack signal. Not a retreat signal. The one they’d created specifically for this, practiced twice during the preparation week. The one that ant: it’s here.

Thirteen thousand people moved.

***

The morning passed in organized urgency. Not panic — the weeks of preparation had burned panic out of them and replaced it with procedure. Families moved to shelter assignnts. Children were guided to reinforced interior spaces. Workshop crews secured equipnt. Agricultural teams retreated from the fields. Formation engineers made final checks at their nodes. Combat disciples took positions along the periter walls and watched the tree lines with weapons drawn and spiritual senses extended.

Raven stood on the Verdant Spire’s observation platform and watched her people execute the protocols they’d practiced. Taron was at the northern wall, Stormheart unsheathed and humming. Jace held the eastern approach with his twin daggers — Flashstrike and Tempestfang — and a Moonveil Blossom sitting on his shoulder like it had nowhere else it would rather be. Naida had vanished into the periter shadows, her Ghoststride turned to full concealnt. Mira was in the recovery ward, her thirty first-responders positioned across five triage stations, each one set up in under three minutes that morning.

Shen Wuyan stood at the formation network’s primary control node, both hands flat against the crystal interface. Eight hundred and forty-seven years of cultivation experience focused on a single purpose: holding the line.

Coop was in the Formation Hall with Silas, monitoring the overflow buffers. His Cognitect perception — invisible to everyone but Raven — was reading the formation architecture with a clarity that no spiritual cultivator could match. Every node, every junction, every energy pathway was mapped in his mind like a circuit diagram drawn in thought.

Marcus had done what he could. Thirteen converters. Seven relay communicators. Blueprints were distributed to every ally who would listen. His hands were steady. He’d checked that this morning and been surprised again.

Lin Yue’s alchemy stockpile sat in sealed containers across four distribution points — four thousand pills that represented a week of disciplined, relentless production. Not enough. What they had.

Bjorn’s forge was banked. Every weapon tested, every formation-enhanced blade verified, seven fractured swords repaired with his own hands during the week of waiting. He stood at the western wall with his hamr across his back and Freya beside him, watching the southern horizon with the calm focus of a man who’d survived Northern winters that killed weaker people and saw no reason to flinch at what was coming.

Forty-one weapons sat in his forge on racks of clean stone, the doors thrown wide to the southern sky. Five months of Spirit-Touched Smithing — every piece forged with intention, quenched in solution still carrying traces of the golden rain’s blessing. Spears. War hamrs. Battle axes. Glaives. Halberds. Bows. Not just swords. The sect needed an arsenal, and Bjorn had built one. Whether the weapons would wake depended on sothing no smith could control. But he’d done his part. The rest was between the steel and the world.

At the ninth bell, the golden motes that had been drifting through the atmosphere since the previous evening began to move. Not falling — flowing. Pulled southward in gentle currents, as if drawn by sothing beyond the horizon. The air itself seed to lean, the way trees lean before a gale that hasn’t arrived yet but has already announced itself in the behavior of the wind.

Kairos found Raven on the observation platform. He’d been standing in the open since dawn, feeling the ley lines with senses that even mortality couldn’t entirely blunt. His dark robes were still, but the silver runes stitched into the fabric were pulsing in a rhythm that matched nothing she could hear.

"South," he said.

Raven looked south. Beyond Seven Peaks, beyond the valleys and the satellite settlents and the farmland and the distant smudge of the outer ring cities, the horizon had changed. Not dramatically — you had to know what to look for. But the line where sky t earth was brighter than it should have been. A faint shimr. Golden. Like sunrise in the wrong direction.

"How fast?" she asked.

"Minutes." He paused. The runes on his robes pulsed faster. "I have observed this phenonon precisely once before. On a world called Verath, approximately nine thousand years ago. The conditions were different — natural restoration, not forced. Gentler." Another pause. "This will not be gentle."

"You could have led with that."

"You already knew."

She did. She turned to the relay communicator.

"All stations. This is the Sect Master. Minutes, not hours. Everyone in position. Formation network to maximum."

Shen Wuyan’s voice ca back, steady as bedrock. "Already done."

From across the territory, acknowledgnts rolled in. Northern wall. Eastern approach. Western wall. dical stations. Formation Hall. Satellite settlents reporting through relay pillars — Millhaven, Stonecroft, Ashford Crossing, all secured.

Raven looked south again. The shimr was brighter now. Visible to anyone watching. A curtain of golden light stretching across the entire southern horizon, climbing the sky from below like dawn breaking upward from the earth instead of falling from above.

It was beautiful. It was terrifying.

"Mama?"

She turned. Elian stood at the top of the observation stairs. i was behind him, one hand on his shoulder, her expression caught between apology and recognition that so things couldn’t be prevented. The boy had co because he’d felt it — the sa way he’d felt the shadowspawn at Thornwall from three hundred kiloters away, the sa way he’d felt Kairos approaching before anyone else on the mountain.

His golden eyes were luminous. Not glowing — not yet — but carrying a depth of light that hadn’t been there the night before, as if sothing inside him was rising to et what was coming.

"I know," Raven said before he could explain. "You couldn’t stay inside."

"It’s calling ." Simple. Honest. The words of a six-year-old describing sothing no adult on the planet fully understood. "The ground. The light. All of it. It’s saying wake up."

Aren was behind i, wrapped in his quilt, frost crystallizing along its edges despite the mild morning. His ice-blue eyes were wide but not frightened. Northern Clans didn’t run from storms.

Raven looked at i. i nodded once. I won’t leave them.

"Stay behind . Both of you. Don’t move from this platform."

She turned south.

The curtain of golden light had reached the lower sky. It stretched from east to west as far as she could see — an unbroken wall of spiritual energy so dense it was visible to the naked eye, shimring and shifting like aurora compressed into a single advancing front. It moved slowly enough to watch and fast enough to feel inevitable. A wave that had been building for eight hundred years, compressed by human arrogance into a single cataclysmic release.

Thirteen thousand people watched it co.

***

It hit at the tenth bell.

Not with the violence of an explosion or the crash of water against a shore. It arrived the way sunrise arrives — a boundary between before and after that passes through everything it touches and leaves nothing unchanged.

The golden light reached Seven Peaks from the south and swept through the territory like a tide flowing through sand. Where it passed, the world shifted. Colors brightened — greens beca erald, stone turned from gray to silver-white, the sky deepened into a blue so rich it seed painted. The spiritual energy that had been climbing steadily for weeks didn’t surge. It arrived. All of it. At once.

Every piece of electrical technology in Seven Peaks died.

The Neural Net communicators went dark. The automated surveillance crystals — the ones running on hybrid circuits — flickered and went silent. In the satellite settlents, electric water pumps shuddered to a halt. In distant Luminous Haven, the formation-powered street lighting that used electrical amplifiers guttered out. Every device on the continent that depended on electrical current ceased to function in a single, simultaneous instant, as if the fundantal principle that made electricity possible had been quietly overwritten by sothing older and vastly more powerful.

Then the converters kicked in.

Marcus’s ugly boxes of copper and formation stone — thirteen units scattered across Seven Peaks and its territory, each one designed to draw ambient spiritual energy and convert it into electrical output — activated within seconds of the blackout. Not all of them smoothly. Two sputtered. One in Stonecroft required a manual restart that a quick-thinking formation engineer provided by slapping it hard enough to reseat the coupling crystal. But they ca online. Ergency power flowed to the systems that mattered: recovery ward monitors, relay communicators, the formation network’s diagnostic array.

Not everything. Enough.

The relay communicators humd to life on pure spiritual power — the formation-based units that Marcus and Silas had designed specifically for this mont, powered by energy that the wave made stronger instead of destroying. Seven Peaks could still talk to its settlents. Could still coordinate. Could still function as the island of stability that Raven had built it to be.

For cultivators, the wave was intoxication.

Spiritual energy so dense it was nearly liquid flooded through every ridian, every dantian, every cultivation foundation in the sect. Disciples on the periter walls gasped, staggered, gripped their weapons as their bodies processed levels of ambient energy that veterans of traditional cultivation academies would have considered impossible. Foundation Anchoring students felt their liquid essence surge — hours of cultivation progress compressed into seconds. Core Crystallization practitioners felt their crystalline foundations resonate with harmonics they’d never experienced, as if the structures they’d built inside themselves were suddenly being fed the energy they’d always been designed for.

On the northern wall, Taron braced one hand against the battlent as Stormheart blazed at his hip, the sword spirit singing through their bond with an intensity that nearly brought him to his knees. Not pain. Recognition. The sword rembered sothing from before its awakening — so echo of what spiritual energy was supposed to feel like — and it was singing because the mory had beco real.

At the eastern approach, Jace’s twin daggers pulsed with light so bright that the Moonveil Blossom on his shoulder leaned away, then leaned back, then began to glow in sympathy — its petals opening wider than they ever had, drinking the energy with the sa desperate gratitude as every living thing in the territory.

For non-cultivators, it was overwhelming.

In the shelters, civilians clutched each other as sothing they had no frawork to understand washed through them. Not pain — nothing so simple. A sense they’d never possessed, switching on without warning. So fainted. So wept. A few laughed helplessly as their nervous systems tried to process input from a channel that had been dormant their entire lives. Children handled it better than adults — their systems more flexible, their minds less encumbered by expectations of what reality was supposed to feel like.

Ivy Millward, five years old and sitting in her father’s lap in shelter twelve, looked up at Daven with eyes that had gone very wide. "Daddy," she whispered. "I can hear the flowers."

Daven held her tighter and didn’t know what to say. Nora pressed her face into his shoulder, and they sat in the golden light and felt the world beco sothing they had no language for.

In the residential quarter, a woman seven months pregnant gasped and pressed both hands to her stomach. Not in pain. In wonder. Sothing had changed inside her. Sothing had begun.

The golden generation that Kairos had predicted was starting.

And beneath Seven Peaks, the spiritual vein — the deep channel of energy that circled the mountain’s roots and fed the formation network — sang. A vibration felt in the bones of every person standing on the mountain. Low. Resonant. Ancient. The sound of a world rembering what it was supposed to feel like.

***

Elian shone.

Not taphorically. The boy’s skin was luminous — a warm golden radiance pouring from him as if a light had been kindled inside his chest and was burning through from within. His eyes, always golden, beca liquid amber. Deep. Vast. Carrying a depth that no six-year-old’s eyes should have held, as if sothing far older than the child was looking through them.

His Pillar Soul nature — the dinsional anchor that tied him to Ascara’s fundantal structure — fully activated in the presence of energy levels that hadn’t existed on this world in over eight hundred years. He didn’t stagger. Didn’t gasp. He stood on the observation platform with his bare feet on the stone, and his face turned to the sky, and what he felt was everything.

Every person in Seven Peaks. Every plant growing in the gardens. Every creature stirring in the forests beyond the walls. The ley lines singing beneath the earth. The formation network blazing like a constellation of light. The swords on Sword Mountain vibrating in their stone sheaths. The spiritual vein circling the roots of the mountain. The golden wave sweeping across the continent, touching everything, changing everything, waking everything.

He could feel the people in the shelters — their fear, their wonder, their confusion. He could feel the combat disciples on the walls — alert, focused, gripping weapons that humd with new energy. He could feel the forest beyond the periter — old things stirring in burrows and dens, eyes opening that hadn’t opened since before any human alive had been born.

He could feel it all the way to the edges of the continent. Millions of people. Billions of living things. A world waking up.

"Mama," he said, and his voice carried a harmonic it had never held before — deeper than a child’s voice should have been, resonating with sothing ancient that lived in the earth beneath his feet. "The world is waking up."

Raven put her hand on his shoulder. His skin was warm — too warm, almost feverish — and the golden light pulsed in ti with his heartbeat. Behind them, Aren had pressed himself against the railing, frost racing across the stone in intricate patterns that reflected the energy surging through his own developing channels. i stood between the boys with her hands on their backs, steady as a mountain.

"I know," Raven said softly. "Can you tell what you feel?"

"Everything." He pressed his palm flat against the stone. "The ground is happy. Really, really happy. Like it’s been thirsty for a long, long ti and soone finally gave it water."

She believed him. Elian had never been wrong about what the earth told him. And what he felt now was a planet drinking energy it had been starved of for eight centuries, and finding it good.

Raven held her son on a mountaintop while the world changed around them, and for one mont — between the terror of what was happening and the weight of what would co next — she let herself feel what Elian felt. Not through his senses. Through her own. Dragon fire flickering in her chest. Phoenix strength humming through her bones. Kirin earth-sense resonating with the mountain beneath her feet. The golden light pouring over her skin like warm rain, and the deep, fierce joy of a world restored.

One mont. She gave herself that.

Then she opened her eyes and went back to work.

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