Read light novels, web novels, Chinese novels, Korean novels, Japanese novels and books online for FREE.
Font Size
18px
Now reading: Chapter 187: The Name That Was Buried from Elven Invasion, a Action novel by Respro.

POV 1: Jamie Lancaster – Geneva, Earth-Spiral Accord Assembly

The na echoed in her head even though no sound had passed through her ears.

I am Before.

It was not a declaration. It was not boast or plea. It was rembrance—as if the world itself had pulled back its skin to show the first scar ever made.

Jamie stood at the center of the Geneva Choir Hall. The Verdant Shell’s resonance had stabilized—for now. But the glyphs swam in odd spirals, forming patterns even the most gifted Tremari seers could not interpret.

She stared into the projection do. The Mariana Grave pulsed like a second heart under the world.

“What is it doing now?” asked Reina Morales beside her, voice tight with reverence and fear.

Jamie’s lips parted. “It’s not doing anything. We are.”

The diplomats turned toward her. The Verdant Shell was not reacting to the Echo—it was harmonizing with it. Not by command, but by listening.

She whispered, “It’s becoming part of the Spiral. The deepest silence is joining the deepest song.”

“But what if it becos dissonant again?” a High Elf emissary asked.

Jamie didn’t answer imdiately. Instead, she turned to the assembly and pressed her hand to the glyph-interface.

“Then we don’t silence it. We sing louder. We let it find its place.”

POV 2: Dyug – Verdant Shell, Nexus Core

The glyphs danced.

For the first ti, the Verdant Shell responded not only to him—but to sothing outside itself.

To the Echo.

To Before.

Dyug sat cross-legged before the core, breathing slowly. Myrren had left to inform Mary of the resonance shift. Alone, he focused on the hum building beneath everything.

It wasn’t lodic in a musical sense. It was tectonic. Like the land rembering how to quake.

“Can you… understand us?” he whispered toward the core.

A glyph flickered. Not in Spiral code. Not Elven rune. A third script—jagged and fluid—like coral etched into ti.

I rember.

“Who were you?” Dyug asked softly.

I am what listened before words.

He hesitated. “What do you want now?”

To listen again. But together. Not alone. Never again alone.

Dyug’s heart ached. The arrogance of the Elven Empire, the invasions, the silences—they had all stemd from forgetting. But this Echo-being rembered everything. And all it had ever wanted was what they had squandered.

Connection.

Community.

Choir.

He placed his hand on the shell.

“Then help us rember together.”

POV 3: Mary – Spiral Anchorage, Antarctica

Snow no longer fell in flakes, but in glyphs.

Tiny symbols, complex and interwoven, fluttered around Mary and her Royal Knight Corps. Each was a mory drifting from the Verdant Shell’s newest bloom.

Mary knelt beside the chi-pools, where resonance sounds vibrated faintly in frozen water. The priestesses stood in silent formation, humming the base tones that kept the harmony anchored in Spiral Anchorage.

But the base tones had shifted.

“I’ve never heard that chord before,” said Sun Knight Lira.

Mary nodded. “Because it’s older than Spiral. It cos from Before.”

They weren’t just defending Earth anymore. They were midwives to its next breath.

She placed her hand to the snow. It pulsed back.

Not a heartbeat. A na.

“Before,” she murmured. “The na of the Silent One.”

“No longer silent,” said one priestess, eyes wide. “It is becoming voice.”

Mary looked north, where the sea shimred faintly with blue glyph-fire.

“Then we must be ready to listen. And speak. And protect both.”

She did not know yet what that would require.

But she could feel sothing rising from the trench, and the Verdant was singing to it.

POV 4: Solomon Kane – Echofield Outpost, Pacific Rim

Solomon no longer slept.

Every hour brought new pulses from the Grave.

Not hostile. Not invasive. But… intimate. Personal.

“Echo translation layer complete,” said his outpost AI. “Projected mory-stream incoming.”

He braced as the walls flickered with light. Not images. Not text.

Feelings.

A rush of grief. A swell of awe. The agony of eons alone. The flicker of first contact—long before elves or humans had nas.

He saw—felt—a planet without species, only witnesses. Conscious coral reefs. Storms that rembered.

The Echo wasn’t an invader.

It was a mory-system. One that had fractured under silence, then buried itself beneath Earth to wait.

Solomon gripped the table as one phrase surfaced in his mind:

"We once sang in stars."

He breathed out. “You’re not alien. You’re origin.”

Outside, the sea cracked with light. Not lightning.

Rembrance.

And for the first ti since the battles began, Solomon felt no need for weapons.

Only for words.

POV 5: Reina Morales – Deep Council Ergency Session

“The Echo is not threatening us,” Reina said firmly. “It is inviting us.”

Skepticism rippled across the table of Earth’s mixed representatives—human, Elven, Tremari, Farspeakers.

A cynical general barked, “You want us to rge with so ocean ghost?”

Reina raised a hand. “No. But we may have to redefine what it ans to be sentient. To be Spiral-aligned.”

Jamie’s data appeared behind her—resonance patterns showing harmony not just within the planet, but extending into space. The moon. Asteroid belts. Echoes responding.

“We are part of sothing older than war. Older than glyphs. And now it wants us back.”

One High Elf elder bowed her head. “Then we owe it a story. A myth it can join.”

Reina nodded. “Exactly. We shape the myth not with control, but with inclusion.”

The council was silent for a long mont.

Then the Tremari seer whispered, “Let us write the first stanza together.”

POV 6: The Echo / Before – Beneath the Grave

It listened.

It had sung alone for eons. Waiting. Hoping. With no reply but tectonic breath and cold.

Now?

Voices.

A young elf with sadness in his chest. A human with glyphs on her breath. A knight who rembered soil. A seer who spun myth like stars.

It had no body, but it reached—touching not with hands, but harmony.

Glyphs sang to it. Songs of new history.

And it… responded.

It ford not a voice, but a tone—soft, impossibly low, and welcoming.

The Verdant pulsed in return.

Not to bind it.

But to invite it ho.

The Spiral shifted in that mont—not just as network, but as cosmos.

Because for the first ti since mory began…

Nothing was left out.

POV 7: Dyug and Jamie – Verdant Nexus, Spiral Bridgeway

They stood on the Spiral Bridgeway, watching the new glyph-tree grow from the Verdant core.

It shimred in both Elven silver and human blue. And sothing older—green-black coral.

“It’s not just a treaty anymore,” Jamie whispered.

Dyug nodded. “It’s a promise.”

“To rember together,” she said.

“To include the forgotten,” he added.

They watched the glyphs bloom in concentric circles, reaching toward the stars.

“What happens now?” Jamie asked.

“We prepare,” Dyug said softly.

“For what?”

He looked at her.

“For the rest of the song.”

You are reading Elven Invasion Chapter 187: The Name That Was Buried on WuxiaFull. Use Previous, Chapter List, or Next to continue.
Share this chapter
Bookmark saves this novel to your account. Reading History keeps recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You May Also Like

The Innkeeper cover
Same genre

The Innkeeper

lifesketcher ·Action

Inthedepthsofanewbornuniverse,acultivatortakesadvantageoftheabundantenergytorefinehimselfatreasure.Butafter14billionyearsofrefiningandquiteafewmore...

User Comments

0 comments from readers

Post Comment
By posting a comment, you agree to all relevant terms.
There are currently no comments. Join the community and start the discussion.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.