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Now reading: Chapter 248 – Ashes of Certainty from Elven Invasion, a Action novel by Respro.

POV 1: Reina Morales – Southern Command Hub, Ushuaia

The hub humd with pressure like a bomb about to detonate. Operators scrambled at their stations, voices colliding in panicked bursts of data. Reina Morales stood straight-backed in the center, forcing calm into her every gesture.

The Gate filled the main screen. Its light had grown jagged—silver veins snapping into violet, black, and a sickly green glow that reminded her of algae rotting under sun.

“Report,” she said flatly.

“Ma’am,” one officer stamred, “satellite confirms: the Gate is spawning without lunar input. They… they’re independent now.”

Another officer chid in. “Multiple Nightborne titans are engaging both fleets indiscriminately. Estimated casualties on Elven formations—heavy.”

Reina’s hand pressed against the console. Her gut told her the truth long before the words were spoken: the Gate had slipped the leash.

She turned her gaze to her staff, sharp enough to cut steel. “Patch through to Admiral Kwan and Captain Harker. Priority signal: if the Elves bleed beside us, we exploit it. We don’t hesitate.”

The feed flickered, linking her voice into command bridges stretched across a thousand kiloters of ocean. “This is Morales. Our strategy holds: we strike what erges. Elves, Nightborne, shadows—it doesn’t matter. You kill what claws at your hull. Let them learn that humanity will not be swept aside.”

Her staff nodded, but Reina’s thoughts drifted darker. If the Gate has a will, then what does it want?

POV 2: Dyug von Forestia – The Shattered Vanguard

Steel and seawater blurred in Dyug’s vision as he wrenched his blade free from a Nightborne’s throat. The creature dissolved into mist that stung his skin like acid rain.

His knights had ford a half-ring of shields around him, battered but unbroken. They were no longer fighting mortals. They were fighting for survival itself.

Mary appeared at his side, helm dented, her golden-brown hair clinging damply to her face. Her spear dripped black ichor. “They don’t follow commands anymore,” she said grimly. “Even the High Elves admit it now.”

Dyug’s heart clenched. The words cut deeper than enemy claws. For centuries, his people had treated Nightborne as divine tools, instrunts of Luna’s judgnt. Now those tools shredded their masters like parchnt.

“Prince,” one knight pleaded, “the n— they look to you. The Queen is distant. Her will doesn’t shield us here.”

Dyug raised his sword. His voice carried, cracked but fierce: “Then hear ! We fight not for crowns, nor gods, but for the breath in our lungs and the brothers and sisters at our side! If the Nightborne bleed, then we kill them! Forestia lives through us, not through monsters!”

The cheer that rose was desperate, ragged, but real. For the first ti in his life, Dyug felt the leash of his bloodline slip. He was no longer the Queen’s son. He was their commander.

Mary caught his gaze, eyes blazing with dangerous pride. In that mont, Dyug realized she did not see him as a prince—she saw him as hers.

POV 3: Mary – Royal Knight Corps

The Corps fought like wolves in the storm. Their shields locked in shimring walls, spears darting with the precision of endless drills.

Mary ramd her spear through the eye of a shrieking Nightborne, its body convulsing before it collapsed under human artillery fire. She didn’t curse the mortals this ti. She lifted her weapon instead and pointed to the burning sea.

“Look around you!” she cried. “Knights of Forestia! The mortals stand, as we do. They bleed, as we do. No banners. No crowns. Only survival!”

Her Corps answered with a roar—not the polished call of parade grounds, but the howl of warriors who had tasted death and spat it out.

A torpedo strike slamd into another titan, forcing it to stumble into the path of her line. “Now!” Mary barked. The Knights surged, driving steel deep into weakened flesh until the monster toppled into the waves.

Breathing hard, Mary looked at the mortals on nearby destroyers—n and won she should have hated. Instead, she felt sothing sharp and fragile knitting itself in her chest: respect.

If this is treason, she thought, then let be the first traitor.

POV 4: Queen Elara – Throne of Moonlight

The fortress-ship’s grand hall groaned as lunar wards buckled under strain. Queen Elara’s hands glowed with raw moonlight, her skin slick with sweat.

The Gate resisted her control like a beast snapping its chain. It pulsed, not in obedience, but in mockery. The priestesses at her feet wept blood, their voices cracking as chants faltered.

“Elara,” whispered Lord Caelir, a golden-haired High Elf, his voice trembling. “The Nightborne no longer obey. Even Dyug rallies his own banner—”

Her hand lashed out, striking him silent. “Do not speak my son’s na to ,” she hissed. Yet the words burned her throat.

For in the deep of the Gate, she felt it: an intelligence vast and alien, watching her as one might watch an insect claw at glass. It pressed into her mind, not words, but intent:

I am not your weapon. I am not your leash. I am becoming.

Elara staggered, fury and dread twisting inside her. For the first ti in centuries, the Queen of Moonlight felt powerless.

Her voice turned cold as death. “Prepare the High Priestess Corps. If the Gate must be fed blood to obey, then I will drown the ocean in it.”

The courtiers bowed low, but terror flickered in their eyes. None dared to et her gaze.

POV 5: Captain Nathaniel Harker – USS Providence

The Providence rocked as another Nightborne carcass slamd into the waves nearby. The bridge was a storm of alarms, n and won shouting across panels of flickering light.

“Target at grid five-two! Its wings are folding—vulnerable!”

“Port batteries, fire!” Harker barked.

The ship roared, guns pounding the titan until it crumpled. A nearby Elven frigate loosed a volley of silver-tipped ballistae that pierced its spine. For a surreal mont, mortals and elves fought in unison—an unspoken rhythm of survival.

“Sir,” a young officer whispered, awe in her eyes, “they’re… protecting our flank.”

Harker didn’t look away from the chaos. “Protecting themselves. Don’t dress it as more than it is.”

But inside, he knew the truth: the line between ally and enemy was dissolving in the salt spray. He clenched his jaw, thinking of Indigo’s sacrifice. If this is the crack we’ve been waiting for, we wedge it open. No matter the cost.

POV 6: Reina Morales – Southern Command Hub

The feeds across her screens painted a story she could scarcely believe—human destroyers shielding Elven ships from titans, Elven Knights throwing themselves into fire to cover human retreats.

Her staff murmured, bewildered. So even smiled.

Reina Morales did not smile. She raised her voice, iron-hard. “Broadcast this. Every ship, every city, every bunker. Show them that the Elves bleed beside us, that monsters fall when we stand together. Let hope spread faster than fear.”

Technicians scrambled, uplinks sparking alive. Across continents, people saw it: titans burning under combined fire, Knights and sailors back-to-back against impossible odds.

Reina leaned on the console, her voice dropping low. “But don’t forget this either. The Gate isn’t weakening—it’s adapting. Today we survive. Tomorrow we might face sothing worse.”

Her aide swallowed. “Then… what’s the plan?”

Reina’s gaze stayed locked on the screen, where the Gate pulsed like a living heart. “We plan for an alliance. Even if it’s born in blood and lies. Because alone, we break. Together, maybe we bend.”

Closing Scene

The Southern Pacific had beco a crucible of fire and salt.

Dyug, once a prince chained to royal duty, now stood as a commander of survivors, his loyalty no longer to crown but to the living.Mary, spear in hand, discovered kinship with the very mortals she was raised to despise.Queen Elara, her throne of moonlight trembling, faced the truth that the Gate no longer answered to her voice.Captain Harker, teeth clenched, accepted the fragile, bitter truth—that alliance was forged not in diplomacy, but in fire.Reina Morales, in Ushuaia, turned chaos into strategy, pushing humanity and elves alike toward a bond neither side had imagined.

And through it all, the Gate pulsed—darker, brighter, more alive.

Not a passage. Not a weapon.

But a will.

The war was no longer between worlds. It was against the very fabric of creation.

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