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Now reading: Chapter 258 – The Silence Between Pulses from Elven Invasion, a Action novel by Respro.

POV 1: Reina Morales – Port Ross Command, Antarctica

The pulse had stopped.

For the first ti in thirteen days, the sea was silent—too silent. The screens lining Port Ross Command showed nothing but static-laced sonar feeds and faint, dying signatures beneath the Ross Trench. The tremors had ceased, the light had faded, and yet… the air still humd.

Reina Morales stood in the center of the operations room, eyes bloodshot, posture rigid. Her uniform bore scorch marks from where power conduits had blown during the last pulse. Around her, technicians whispered in restrained panic, afraid to raise their voices as if sound itself might wake what now slumbered below.

“Report,” she said flatly.

An analyst looked up from her console. “Ma’am, global resonance readings are dropping. Energy fields around the trench are stable—for now. But there’s a persistent distortion spreading outward in rings. It’s—”

“—alive?” Reina interrupted.

The analyst swallowed. “Responsive. Every ti we scan it, the distortion shifts away—like it’s avoiding us.”

Reina’s jaw tightened. “So it knows we’re watching.”

She turned toward the viewport. Beyond it, the frozen horizon glowed faintly under the aurora’s red veins. Ships—human and elven both—floated on the icy waters like wounded animals. Smoke still rose from the wrecks near the harbor.

“Where’s Queen Elara?” she asked.

“Still aboard the Moon’s Wrath, ma’am. Her fleet’s on defensive standby.”

Reina’s expression hardened. “Good. Keep them that way.” She stepped closer to the window, voice dropping to a whisper ant for herself alone.

“The Gate learned. It rembered. Now it’s waiting to see if we will.”

POV 2: Dyug von Forestia – Aboard the Silver Dawn

The storm had passed, leaving the world unnervingly still. The Silver Dawn floated among ice fragnts and the twisted remains of alliance drones. Dyug leaned against the railing, his armor unpolished, his expression grave. The sea below was dark, but it wasn’t the sa darkness as before—it was aware.

Mary stood beside him, her white cloak fluttering in the cold. “No movent for six hours,” she said softly. “Whatever hatched down there isn’t surfacing. The priests are calling it the Silence Between Pulses.”

Dyug smirked without humor. “A poetic way to say we’re standing on top of a sleeping god.”

He lifted a tablet—a hybrid of mortal tech and elven crystal—showing the final waveform recorded before the thirteenth pulse ended. It wasn’t noise. It was music—a complex pattern that ford a geotric lattice resembling a map.

“Reina’s analysts think it’s coordinates,” he said. “But they don’t lead anywhere on Earth. Or Forestia.”

Mary frowned. “Then where?”

Dyug’s gaze darkened. “A third point between both worlds.”

A cold wind swept across the deck. He pocketed the tablet, his voice low. “If the Nightborne were conduits, this thing is the bridge. And it’s not just rebuilding the Gate—it’s redefining it.”

Mary’s hand brushed the pendant at her chest, the token Dyug had forged from silver and steel. It pulsed faintly—once, then again, slower this ti.

She whispered, “It’s syncing with us. Listening for sothing.”

Dyug’s eyes lifted toward the dim moon above. “Then the next ti it speaks… we’d better have sothing to say.”

POV 3: Queen Elara – Aboard the Moon’s Wrath

The lunar diadem no longer glowed.

Queen Elara sat in her private sanctum, surrounded by the dim shimr of extinguished runes. Her priestesses knelt silently before her, their chants fading into exhausted murmurs. For the first ti in centuries, the Queen felt mortal.

Caelir entered quietly, bowing low. “Your Majesty. The mortal commander requests parley aboard her base. She says it’s urgent.”

Elara’s eyes—once radiant as moonlight—were dulled by fatigue. “She wishes to discuss what neither of us understands.”

Caelir hesitated. “And if she blas us?”

“She has that right,” Elara said, standing slowly. Her voice regained so of its old regal edge. “But if she seeks alliance, then we cannot falter. The goddess is silent, Caelir, and I fear her silence is not absence—but judgnt.”

She approached the window, watching the flickering aurora paint the ice below. “The thirteenth pulse stripped away divine pretense. Now it is queens and commanders who must bear the cost.”

Caelir’s tone softened. “And if the next pulse cos?”

Elara closed her eyes. “Then Luna’s heir—whoever she deems worthy—must answer it. Even if that heir is no longer .”

POV 4: Reina Morales and Queen Elara – The Ergency Parley

The summit chamber was colder than the outside air. Power conduits humd faintly, their blue glow the only light besides the aurora beyond the translucent walls.

Reina stood on one side of the table, her expression a mask of exhaustion and defiance. Elara stood opposite, composed yet pale, her robe still streaked with salt from the sea. Between them lay a single holo-map—an overlay of human sonar and elven rune-lore.

“The readings form coordinates,” Reina said. “But they point to a location that doesn’t exist. A void between worlds.”

Elara’s gaze drifted to the hologram, studying the spiral of symbols. “It exists. We call it Varethil—the Between-Realm. A realm of reflection, created when Forestia’s moon and Earth’s sun first crossed paths in the old cycle.”

Reina’s brow furrowed. “You’re saying this thing is trying to open a gate there?”

“No,” Elara said softly. “It’s trying to pull us there.”

The room fell silent.

Reina folded her arms. “And what happens if it succeeds?”

Elara looked up, eyes hardening. “The world becos a mirror—and mirrors devour their makers.”

Reina exhaled through her nose, then pointed to the map. “Then we stop it. Together. I’ll deploy seismic torpedoes and orbital beams to sever its anchors. You stabilize the runes so we don’t tear the crust apart.”

Elara gave a faint, bitter smile. “A mortal commanding the moon. The world truly has changed.”

Reina t her gaze evenly. “We’ve all bled for this world. Rank and divinity don’t matter anymore.”

For a fleeting mont, there was respect in the Queen’s eyes. “Very well, Commander Morales. We fight—until even the silence screams.”

POV 5: Mary – The Lunar Choir’s Call

The night before the operation, Mary knelt beside a damaged elven ward on the frozen shore. Around her, human engineers repaired comms towers while priests etched runes into the ice. The sll of oil and ozone filled the air—a strange harmony of science and sorcery.

She pressed her palm to the ward’s surface, whispering, “Luna, if you still see us… guide us through what you no longer guard.”

For a mont, there was nothing. Then the ward pulsed faintly beneath her hand. Not Luna’s voice—but sothing like it, weaker, fragnted.

A whisper brushed her thoughts:

Daughter of twilight… the child awakens where no light can reach.

Mary’s heart clenched. “Then tell how to stop it.”

The voice faded, leaving only one echo behind.

Do not stop it. Bind it.

The light went out.

Mary rose slowly, frost gathering in her hair. She turned toward the horizon, where the faint glow of the trench lingered like a heartbeat under ice. “Bind it… but to what?”

Her answer ca not in words—but in the rhythmic pulse of the token around her neck, beating in perfect ti with the frozen sea.

POV 6: Dyug – The Plan

Hours later, Dyug t Reina in the command hangar. Both looked as though they hadn’t slept in days.

She pointed to the holographic model of the Ross Trench. “We’re calling it Operation Eclipse. You and Mary will lead the elven strike teams through the lower rift while our submarines deploy seismic charges to break the resonance lines.”

Dyug studied the map. “And if it reacts?”

“Then we buy ti,” Reina said simply. “Long enough for the queen’s choir to complete the counter-seal.”

Dyug’s expression tightened. “If this thing’s evolving, the seal won’t hold forever.”

Reina nodded. “Maybe not. But maybe that’s all we need—a little forever.”

He gave a grim smile. “Spoken like a true elf.”

“Spoken like soone who’s run out of choices.”

POV 7: Queen Elara – Invocation

When the operation began, the Moon’s Wrath hovered above the ice like a celestial altar. Elara stood at its center, surrounded by the Moon Choir. Their voices rose in unison, weaving a lattice of silver across the sky. The aurora bent and reshaped itself, forming a spiral of light descending toward the Ross Trench.

“By the moon’s last grace,” she intoned, “let the path of reflection be bound, and its hunger sealed.”

The runes below ignited. Beams from Earth’s orbital cannons pierced the clouds, striking the sea where the trench yawned. The ice split in radiant arcs, revealing the abyss below—no longer black, but shimring like a mirror.

Dyug’s voice crackled through the comms. “Charges planted. We’re ready.”

Reina’s command echoed from the ground. “All units, brace for detonation!”

Elara raised her hand—and hesitated. A whisper coiled through her thoughts, not Luna’s but colder, older.

You bind the bridge, yet you stand upon it.

Her eyes widened. “No—”

The light flared.

POV 8: The Ross Trench

The sea erupted.

Columns of light spiraled upward as the charges detonated. The ice shattered for miles. For a heartbeat, the trench’s mirror-surface cracked—and through it, the reflection of another world stared back.

Forests of silver, moons that bled gold, and a sunless sky. A realm caught between breaths.

And then, from its depths, tendrils of crystal reached outward—searching, grasping, wrapping around the beams ant to destroy it. The abyss had learned. It reflected the attack.

Dyug shouted over the comms, “It’s turning our weapons against us!”

The Silver Dawn shook violently.

Mary raised her spear, chanting in Luna’s tongue. “Bind, not destroy!”

The runes on her armor flared to life. The pendant at her chest burst in silver fla. The tendrils froze mid-motion, their reflected light twisting back inward. The sea stilled once more.

And then—silence.

POV 9: Aftermath

Hours later, the ocean had cald again. The mirror was gone, replaced by thick ice crusts and drifting steam.

Reina watched from the command deck as Dyug’s fleet limped back to port. She could see Mary standing at the bow of the Silver Dawn, her light dim but steady.

“Status?” she asked.

Her aide hesitated. “The energy readings have dropped to near-zero. Whatever was down there—it’s dormant again.”

Reina exhaled, tension breaking from her shoulders. “Then we’ve bought ourselves ti.”

She looked toward the horizon, voice low. “But not peace.”

POV 10: Beneath the Ice

Deep below, the cracked reflection stirred faintly—like an eye opening beneath frost.

From the abyss ca a whisper, gentle and patient:

Cycle… delayed.

Awaiting next resonance.

The light dimd. The pulse went silent.

But sowhere, in the bones of every elf and the hearts of every human who’d heard it once before, the faintest echo remained—waiting for the next beat.

Closing Scene

Reina Morales stood upon the frozen shore, staring into the endless Antarctic night.Queen Elara, her power still fractured, looked skyward and whispered a prayer for a goddess who no longer answered.Dyug and Mary watched the calm sea, knowing the silence was not victory—only reprieve.

The world had survived the thirteenth pulse.

But the fourteenth was only learning to breathe.

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