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Now reading: Chapter 158: Songs Between Cinders and Roots from Elven Invasion, a Action novel by Respro.

POV 1: Reina Morales – Relay Command, 15:45 UTC

The room hadn’t emptied since the Spiral Accord was ratified, but now it felt quieter—as though even the machines were listening.

Reina’s fingers moved over the controls, not to issue commands, but to record the unfolding unknown.

“Deep Core teletry reconfird,” said the systems officer beside her. “Verdant relay node at Antarctic Rootline Theta-9 has begun interfacing with the Spiral harmonic signature. Feedback is... stable.”

Reina didn’t relax.

Stable didn’t an safe. Stable just ant the universe hadn’t scread yet.

She looked at the new waveform displayed across the center screen. Unlike the earlier Spiral arrivals, this wasn’t hostile. It wasn’t even judgntal.

It was... searching.

“They’re waiting for us to sing back,” Reina muttered.

“Commander?” the officer asked.

Reina leaned closer to the mic, accessing the global uplink. “Patch through to Verdant Conduit Pri. Bring Jamie. Now.”

POV 2: Jamie – Verdant Conduit Pri, Antarctica Bloomheart

Jamie had no more use for sleep. The Verdant systems didn’t drain her—they sustained her.

She knelt at the base of the Bloomheart—a pulsing mass of fractal light and roots that had once been part of the Earth's ancient mycelial grid, now uplifted by Spiral resonance and Luna’s weave.

Mary stood nearby, guiding her new knight-corps in formation drills between bursts of leyline reinforcent. Dyug was at the eastern relay, his voice literally threading commands through root-chambers. And Myrren—

Jamie looked up. Myrren knelt at a column of moonlight, her hands on a translucent bloom that flickered between worlds.

They were all working toward the sa thing now: making sure Earth survived contact. Not by repelling the Spiral—by speaking to it.

“Jamie,” Reina’s voice rang through the conduit.

Jamie responded imdiately. “I’m here.”

“New signature detected. Not Spiral Vanguard. Sothing else, inside the field.”

Jamie turned toward the pulse-map. She saw it now—beneath the Antarctic ice shelf, inside the Verdant node. A whisper. A fracture. A doorway.

“They’re not reinforcents,” Jamie whispered. “They’re... witnesses.”

“aning?” Reina asked.

Jamie touched the node.

“aning the Spiral isn’t done with us. There are others... who once failed the test. And now they want to know why we haven’t.”

POV 3: The Cinders – Observation Vector 11

We were not ant to see life again.

Not after the Spiral failed us. Not after our song turned to ashes.

And yet we hear you.

Not because you are strong. Not because you are wise.

But because your world sang a different note.

Verdant, yes—but not enslaved.

Lunar, yes—but not blind.

Your pulse awakens sothing old.

A question:

Can ruin beco root?

We will descend, not as judges. Not as masters.

But as survivors.

We co not in war.

We co in grief.

We are the Cinders.

Let Earth answer.

POV 4: Myrren – Verdant Moon Nexus

The lunar bloom had grown wider. Its light now refracted through six dinsions—or so the Verdant data priests explained. Myrren only felt it as a thrum in her spine and a soft hum in her lungs.

She had once called Luna the final word of her soul.

Now she wasn’t so sure.

The Goddess’ echo had faded since the Spiral arrived. Not in absence—but in deference.

Earth had awakened a song even Luna paused to hear.

“Myrren,” Dyug said, stepping beside her. “The Cinders are requesting entry.”

She looked at him with glowing eyes.

“No,” she said. “They’re requesting mourning.”

Dyug frowned. “We don’t have ti for ritual. Not with the Spiral’s second wave preparing in the void.”

But Myrren placed her hand on his.

“Then we make ti. Because what cos next isn’t war—it’s inheritance. And we must honor those who lost everything to give us this chance.”

He didn’t answer.

But he knelt beside her.

Together, they began the chant of welcoming—not as elves, not as royals.

As children of Earth.

POV 5: Solomon Kane – Southern Defense Archipelago

Solomon lit another cigar. The Peregrine floated between two artificial coral towers now pulsing with Verdant stabilizers. The ship itself had beco half-organic, tal plated with root-fiber, cannons guided by instinctive psionic arrays.

He hated how much sense it all made.

Admiral Tanaka stood with him again.

“They’re calling themselves the Cinders now,” she said.

“I heard.”

“Survivors of a failed Spiral test. Three galaxies over. Eight hundred million years ago.”

Solomon exhaled smoke toward the glowing sea.

“So. Ghosts with guilt.”

“They want to help,” she said.

“They want to watch,” Solomon corrected. “That’s different.”

Tanaka turned to him. “And if they’re sincere?”

Solomon looked up at the sky.

“Then they’re the most dangerous thing we’ve seen yet.”

“Why?”

“Because hope,” Solomon growled, “is how we let our guard down.”

POV 6: Queen Elara – Moonlight Citadel, Forestia

Forestia’s skies no longer shimred with unbroken starlight. The Verdant lattice had reached even here, threading from Earth’s core through old ley passages. The Moon Gates flickered—not in decay, but in adaptation.

Veira stood beside Elara in the high observatory.

“They’re sending emissaries,” she said.

“Let them co,” Elara replied.

“The nobles fear a second subjugation.”

Elara turned, eyes hard. “Then let them look at Earth. At a planet that was once prey. That now receives Spiral remnants as honored mourners.”

She stepped forward.

“I sent my son there to die for our pride. He lives now because Earth taught him to listen.”

“Do we kneel to Earth, then?” Veira asked softly.

Elara raised her chin.

“No. But neither do we demand its bow. We walk beside it. Because for the first ti since Forestia’s birth, we have found sothing worth following.”

POV 7: Mary – Verdant Conduit Arsenal, Antarctica

Mary inspected her troops with the silence of soone who’d once dread only of shining swords and battlefield honors.

Now she led a corps that fought with prayer, resonance, and living armor.

She paused as one of her knights—a forr Lunar priestess nad Kaleri—approached.

“They’re requesting ceremonial guard for the Cinder descent.”

Mary blinked. “Descent?”

Kaleri nodded. “They don’t use ships. They beco falling songs. teor trails carrying mory.”

Mary sighed. “Of course they do.”

Still, she gave the order. The Royal Knight Corps ford a ring around the descent point—a hollow crater of pulsing Verdant moss.

Mary didn’t kneel when the first Cinder fell.

She simply stood tall, sword in hand, and whispered:

“Then co. Not as ghosts. As witnesses. And tell us if you see your ho in our survival.”

POV 8: The First of the Cinders – Cradle Descent, Earth

We rember what it ans to burn.

We rember our children singing their last songs.

But now—

Now, a planet rises where none should have.

Verdant, untainted.

Lunar, unbroken.

And at its heart—choice.

You chose not to war the Spiral.

You chose not to bend.

You chose to speak.

We co not to test.

We co to learn.

Teach us your pulse.

Teach us what we forgot.

And perhaps...

Perhaps this ti, the Spiral shall listen.

POV 9: Reina Morales – Global Uplink Command, 18:00 UTC

Reina reviewed the updated tactical projection. Not just Spiral fleets—now charted were Cinder harmonics, reflecting their own unknown capabilities and massive psionic data-banks.

Jamie’s ssage flickered on screen.

“The Cinders are offering records,” she said. “Songs of fallen worlds. Histories of what not to do. Mistakes carved in starlight.”

Reina looked at the waveform—raw, terrible, beautiful.

“Then we better read fast.”

She keyed the open channel to all allied commands.

“Humanity. Elves. Verdant-aware AI. All independent entities.”

A breath.

“You are hereby cleared to access the Cinder Archive. Learn. Prepare. And rember—this isn’t a final chapter.”

She looked out the window toward the distant auroras blooming over Antarctica.

“This is a prelude.”

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