Sarya woke before her alarm.
Her body felt wrong.
Not sick. Not sore.
Misaligned.
As if sothing inside her had shifted slightly out of place overnight.
She sat up slowly. The red seam on her ceiling remained thin and steady, no longer spreading, but it pulsed faintly when she focused on it.
Her palm burned.
The mark was darker now, etched beneath the skin like ink trapped under glass.
She walked to the bathroom and turned on the tap. When she cupped water into her hands, the surface trembled unnaturally, small ripples forming outward from her fingers without movent.
Her reflection in the mirror flickered.
For a fraction of a second, Valeris stared back.
Not fully.
Not vividly.
But enough.
Her cheekbones were sharper. Her eyes carried that steady, warrior calm.
Then it was gone.
Sarya gripped the sink.
"I stabilized it," she whispered to herself.
But stabilization did not an separation.
Work was worse.
The fluorescent lights buzzed too loudly. Conversations layered over each other until she could pick out individual heartbeats beneath them.
She could hear her supervisor’s pulse from across the office.
She could sense tension building before soone spoke.
When a coworker dropped a stapler, Sarya’s body reacted before her mind did. She twisted sharply, ready to deflect an attack that never ca.
Everyone stared.
"You okay?" soone asked.
She nodded quickly and forced a small laugh.
"Just startled."
But her muscles remained tight for several minutes afterward.
By lunch, her head throbbed.
She escaped to the stairwell, pressed her back against the wall, and closed her eyes.
She felt it then.
A pull.
Not from above.
From sowhere deeper.
Aurelion.
The bridge was active even without the headset.
Her breathing slowed as she concentrated.
If she focused carefully, she could almost feel the forest air brushing against her skin.
The mark on her palm ward.
And then—
A whisper.
Not Eryndor.
Not Kael.
A different voice.
Familiar.
"Valeris."
Her eyes snapped open.
The stairwell was empty.
Yet the voice had been close. Close enough to feel like breath against her ear.
She swallowed hard.
The barrier between worlds was thinning in subtle ways.
---
That night, she did not hesitate.
She logged in.
Valeris materialized at the edge of the capital city. The sky above remained intact, though the faint seam still traced across it.
Kael found her almost imdiately.
He stopped short when he saw her.
"You look pale," he said.
She managed a small smile.
"I am."
He studied her more closely.
"The strain is manifesting."
Altheryn joined them shortly after, his expression calculating as always.
"The bridge is no longer external," the mage observed. "It is running through you."
"I can feel that," she replied dryly.
Kael stepped closer, lowering his voice.
"You should not carry this alone."
She t his gaze.
"I chose it."
"And you may choose differently."
She shook her head.
"If I sever it now, the fracture widens again."
Altheryn nodded reluctantly.
"He is correct. The structural integrity has improved. However, the conduit is absorbing overflow."
"In plain words," she said.
"You will begin experiencing cross-manifestations."
She exhaled slowly.
"Already happening."
Kael’s jaw tightened.
"What kind?"
She hesitated.
"Reflexes. Hearing. Reflections."
Altheryn’s eyes sharpened.
"Identity bleed."
The phrase settled heavily between them.
"What does that an?" Kael demanded.
"It ans," the mage explained carefully, "that prolonged dual anchoring may cause her consciousness to integrate aspects of both forms permanently."
Sarya felt sothing inside her steady rather than panic.
"And if that happens?"
"You will no longer be strictly human," Altheryn said quietly.
The words did not frighten her as much as they should have.
Perhaps because she had never felt entirely at ho in her human skin.
A sudden vibration ran through the air.
All three looked up.
The sky flickered faintly.
Not splitting.
Opening.
A small tear ford for a brief second before sealing again.
Kael drew his blade instinctively.
"That was not from our side," he said.
Sarya felt it too.
The pressure had not originated in Aurelion.
It had pushed outward from her apartnt.
Her stomach dropped.
She logged out imdiately.
Her living room was dark.
Too dark.
The lamp near her couch flickered weakly.
Her pigeon cage stood open.
Empty.
Her heart slamd against her ribs.
She scanned the room quickly.
The red seam on the ceiling pulsed brighter than before.
And beneath it—
On her carpet—
A feather.
Not from her pigeon.
Larger.
Black.
She stepped closer cautiously.
When she touched it, a rush of cold air spiraled upward, carrying the scent of damp earth and iron.
Aurelion.
Sothing had crossed.
A low scraping sound ca from her kitchen.
Her martial training returned without hesitation. She moved silently along the wall, keeping her breathing even.
The sound ca again.
tal against tile.
She rounded the corner.
And froze.
Standing in her kitchen—
Disoriented.
Breathing heavily.
Was a creature from the forest.
Not massive.
Not towering.
But real.
A shadow-wolf, smaller than the one she had defeated earlier in the story, its body flickering as if struggling to remain solid.
Its glowing eyes locked onto hers.
For a mont, both simply stared.
Then it lunged.
She moved instinctively, stepping aside and driving her elbow down across its neck. Her palm flared with energy on contact.
The wolf yelped—not with an animal sound, but with sothing distorted and chanical beneath it.
She grabbed a kitchen knife and slashed.
The blade passed through partially before connecting.
The wolf recoiled, snarling.
The room temperature dropped sharply.
Her pigeon’s cage rattled in the corner.
"You do not belong here," she said through clenched teeth.
The wolf lunged again.
This ti, when she struck it, the mark on her palm burned violently.
Light erupted from her hand.
The creature shattered midair into fragnts of red light that scattered and vanished.
Silence returned abruptly.
She stood in the center of her kitchen, breathing hard.
Her knife clattered from her grip.
The red seam in the ceiling dimd slowly.
Her pigeon fluttered back into the apartnt through the open window, landing clumsily on the back of a chair.
Alive.
Shaking.
She sank against the counter.
It had begun.
Not collapse.
Leakage.
Back in Aurelion, Kael and Altheryn stood where she had vanished.
The air remained tense.
Kael clenched his jaw.
"It crossed."
"Yes," Altheryn replied. "The bridge is stabilizing structurally, but perability has increased."
"She is fighting alone."
"For now."
Kael’s eyes hardened.
"Then we find a way to cross."
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