The breach did not widen like the others.
It tore.
The thin vertical corridor split outward in jagged lines, like glass cracking under invisible pressure. The containnt field flared violently. Several runic stones shattered outright, fragnts skidding across the clearing.
Kael moved instantly, positioning himself between the rupture and Sarya.
Sereth did not retreat.
It turned fully toward the expanding tear, blue eyes blazing brighter than before.
"This is external pressure," Sereth said sharply. "Not initiated by our realm."
The air thickened.
Not hot like the first forest breach.
Not cold like the diplomatic crossings.
This felt dense.
Heavy.
As though gravity itself had shifted.
Sarya felt the mark on her palm surge with pain. She dropped to one knee, pressing her hand into the soil as energy pulsed through her arm.
Hollen’s voice crackled through her communicator.
"Global spike detected. This is not localized. I repeat, not localized."
The projection Sereth had displayed earlier flickered in midair again, unprompted. The three connected spheres vibrated violently.
And then—
The faint fourth node reappeared.
Brighter now.
Closer.
The tear widened another ter.
Beyond it, there was no darkness like before.
No forest.
No architecture.
Only swirling distortion. A storm of fragnted light and shadow twisting in unstable spirals.
Sothing stepped forward.
Not fully visible or ford.
Its shape flickered between outlines—sotis humanoid, sotis elongated and jagged, sotis nothing but a silhouette against distortion.
It did not cross completely.
It pressed against the threshold.
Testing it.
The ground trembled.
Sereth’s voice lowered. "This entity does not conform to dinsional mapping."
Kael’s grip tightened around his blade. "It feels wrong."
Sarya forced herself upright despite the pain racing through her palm.
"This isn’t a realm," she said.
The presence pulsed again.
The trees around the clearing began to lean inward, leaves tearing free and spiraling toward the rupture.
"It’s a fracture," she whispered.
Sereth turned sharply toward her.
"Clarify."
"It’s not a civilization. It’s what happens when too many realms strain the sa corridor."
The fourth node in the projection split into smaller unstable fragnts.
Hollen’s voice ca through again, strained. "Energy readings are spiking globally. Multiple minor anomalies forming."
Sarya’s heart pounded.
The bridge was no longer connecting three worlds.
It was weakening reality itself.
The presence pushed forward again.
This ti, part of it crossed.
A limb—or sothing like one—extended into Aurelion’s air.
Where it touched the ground, the soil blackened instantly.
Not burned.
Erased.
Kael struck at it without hesitation.
His blade t resistance like slicing through dense water. The limb recoiled but did not bleed.
It reford.
Sereth raised its hand and projected a concentrated pulse of pale energy. The pulse struck the limb directly.
The distortion rippled violently.
For a brief second, the entity’s shape stabilized.
Sarya saw it clearly then.
No face.
No eyes.
Just overlapping layers of fractured geotry folding in on itself.
It was not alive in any way she understood.
It was entropy with intention.
"It feeds on instability," Sereth said quickly. "Triadic strain has accelerated structural decay."
"You an we caused this," Hollen said faintly through the communicator.
"Yes," Sereth replied.
Sarya stepped forward.
"No," she corrected. "We triggered it."
The entity pushed further through the breach.
The containnt field cracked like glass under pressure.
Kael shouted, "Sarya!"
She ignored him.
She walked closer to the rupture.
The mark on her palm burned brighter than ever before.
This presence did not feel like hunger for territory.
It felt like gravity pulling apart threads that had been stretched too thin.
"If we fight it directly, we widen the corridor," Sereth warned.
"Then we don’t fight it," Sarya replied.
The entity’s fractured outline twisted toward her.
As if noticing her for the first ti.
She lifted her glowing hand.
Not to strike.
To realign.
Instead of pulling the breach closed, she did sothing different.
She expanded her awareness across all three realms.
Earth’s electrical grids.
Aurelion’s ley lines.
The third realm’s energy channels.
Three frequencies.
Misaligned.
Strained.
She adjusted her stance and focused inward, like centering herself before a strike.
Balance.
Not force.
...balance.
The projection between them shifted again.
The three spheres began to rotate in a smoother rhythm.
The fourth node flickered uncertainly.
The entity reacted imdiately.
Its shape distorted violently, as if losing traction.
Sereth’s eyes brightened. "You are stabilizing the tension distribution."
"I’m trying to create so balance," she said through clenched teeth.
The mark flared brighter.
Pain shot up her arm, but she did not break concentration.
The entity lunged forward one last ti—
And hit resistance.
Not from the containnt field.
Not from Sereth’s energy.
From the corridor itself.
The threads tightened.
The breach shrank rapidly.
The entity screeched—not a sound, but a distortion that rattled the bones.
Kael grabbed Sarya’s shoulder to steady her as the force pulled backward.
The fractured limb snapped back through the narrowing tear.
The portal collapsed violently into a thin line—
Then vanished.
The clearing fell silent.
The wind returned slowly.
The runic stones dimd.
Sereth stood motionless.
For the first ti since stepping into Aurelion, its voice carried sothing unmistakable.
Alarm.
"no one predicted this."
Sarya’s knees buckled.
Kael caught her fully this ti.
Hollen rushed forward despite herself.
"Is it gone?" she demanded.
Sarya forced herself to breathe steadily.
"No," she said quietly.
She looked at her hand.
The mark was no longer glowing evenly.
Thin cracks of light spread outward from it like fractures.
"We didn’t destroy it," she continued.
"We just delayed it."
Sereth studied her palm.
"The corridor has mory now."
Kael frowned. "mory?"
Sereth turned its glowing gaze toward the empty space where the breach had been.
"The fourth convergence will return."
The forest stood still.
Three realms had strained reality.
And sothing beyond them had noticed.
Sarya slowly lifted her head.
"How long?" she asked.
Sereth answered without hesitation.
"Not long."
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