The ruins lay quiet, though the silence was uneasy—like a wound waiting to bleed again. The survivors gathered in a half-circle, torches flickering against broken stone, their eyes fixed on the fragile glow in Elara’s arms.
Kael stood between them and the child, jaw set, shoulders squared. He could feel their mistrust pressing against him as surely as their blades had during the standoff before the battle.
The scarred woman stepped forward, her spear dragging against the ash-strewn ground. “You proved it can break them,” she said, voice flat. “But proof is not the sa as trust. That thing weakens the spawn, yes. But I saw the way it faltered. I saw how your witch burned her own fire to keep it alive.”
Elara lifted her head, weary but unbroken. “Its light isn’t infinite. It’s bound to , to us. But without it, we’d be carrion in the dust.”
The woman’s scar twisted as her lips pressed into a hard line. She looked at her people—n and won bloodied, trembling, yet alive when they should have been bones. The truth of Elara’s words hung heavy in the air.
Kael seized the mont. “We don’t ask you to love it. Only to fight beside it. If you try to kill it, you may as well cut your own throats.”
Murmurs rippled through the survivors—resentnt, fear, a few voices of grudging agreent. The scarred woman silenced them with a raised hand. Her eyes fixed on Kael. “Then hear , stranger. You keep it alive, you keep it under your fla’s leash, and you bear the burden if it turns. If it damns us, the bla is yours. Do you swear this?”
Kael hesitated. Swear? His instincts scread against binding himself to a creature born of their enemy. But Elara’s hand touched his arm, steady, burning faintly through his battered armor. Her eyes t his, fierce yet pleading.
“We can’t fight them alone,” she whispered.
Kael exhaled slowly. His voice was iron when he spoke. “I swear it. The burden is ours.”
The scarred woman nodded once. No warmth, no trust—only survival’s grim necessity. “Then we march at first light. East lies the Cinder Gate. The old citadel there has walls enough to hold for a ti. If the child is truly a key, perhaps the lock waits for you there.”
Elara’s arms tightened around the child. Its glow pulsed faintly, as if echoing the word “gate.” She shivered. “It knows. It feels the path.”
The scarred woman gave a sharp gesture, dispersing her people. They lted into the ruins to rest, leaving Kael and Elara alone beneath the fractured sky.
Kael stared into the distance, where the horizon throbbed faintly with the buried heartbeat of the Unborn. His hands clenched, aching for the weight of the sword lost inside that monstrous chest.
Beside him, the child stirred, whispering faintly in Elara’s arms. “Chains... gate... father.”
Kael’s blood ran cold. East, then. To the gate. To the lock. To the shadow of the rising titan.
And in the ashes of trust, a fragile alliance was forged—one step from hope, one step from ruin.
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