The silence that followed Rowan’s command did not last.
It couldn’t.
Because sothing had already shifted beyond the point where words could contain it, and whatever fragile balance had existed between the three of us had now fractured in a way that could not be undone.
Kael moved first again.
This ti, there was no testing, no restraint, no attempt to asure Rowan’s response. His attack ca with full intent, his movent cutting through the space between them with a speed that forced the air itself to react. Rowan t him instantly, but the difference was clear now. This was no longer a controlled exchange. This was escalation.
Their collision sent a shock through the ground that I felt up through my legs, a physical reminder that what I was witnessing was not sothing ant to exist within a human city. The illusion that had kept everything hidden from the world around us strained under the force of it, flickering at the edges of my vision as if reality itself was being pushed too far.
Rowan blocked Kael’s strike, redirecting it with precision, but Kael didn’t retreat. He followed through, forcing Rowan back a step this ti, breaking the rhythm that Rowan had maintained until now.
"You’re holding back," Kael said, his voice low, controlled, and far too observant.
Rowan didn’t answer, but the tension in his shoulders made the truth visible even without words.
Kael noticed.
Of course he did.
"You shouldn’t," he added, his tone sharpening. "Not with ."
The next impact ca harder.
Rowan caught it, but the force behind it pushed him further than before, forcing him to adjust his stance instead of maintaining control. For the first ti since the fight had started, Kael gained ground.
And I felt it.
Not just physically.
Through the bond.
My breath tightened as sothing in my chest reacted, not with pain, but with a sudden, overwhelming awareness that did not belong entirely to . The connection with Kael, fractured as it was, pulsed sharply, as if responding to the shift in power between them.
It wasn’t loyalty.
It wasn’t attachnt.
It was sothing else.
Sothing instinctive.
"Stop," I said, the word leaving my mouth before I could decide whether I ant it.
Neither of them listened.
Kael moved again, faster now, his strikes no longer probing but decisive, each one aid with intent rather than reaction. Rowan countered, but the pattern had changed. He was no longer leading the movent. He was responding to it.
And that—
That was dangerous.
"Rowan," I said, louder this ti.
His attention flickered toward for the briefest second.
That was all Kael needed.
The next strike landed.
Not cleanly, but enough.
Rowan staggered back a step, his control breaking just slightly, just enough to make the shift undeniable.
Sothing inside snapped.
It didn’t feel like a decision.
It didn’t feel like a choice.
It felt like sothing that had been building quietly, waiting for a mont where hesitation would no longer be possible.
I moved.
The space between them closed in an instant, and I didn’t think, didn’t calculate, didn’t question whether I should be stepping into sothing that clearly existed beyond my understanding.
I simply reacted.
"Enough!"
The word ca out sharper than I expected, but it wasn’t just the sound of it that changed the mont.
It was what followed.
The air around us shifted. Not violently. Not explosively. But in a way that felt wrong. Both Rowan and Kael stopped. Not because they chose to. Because sothing forced them to.
I felt it then. The sa energy that had triggered the visions, the sa fracture in reality that had been pulling at the edges of my perception since the mont Rowan touched in the forest, surged outward in a way that felt both overwhelming and terrifyingly natural at the sa ti.
The space between us distorted.
The ground beneath my feet seed to ripple, not visibly, but in a way that made balance feel uncertain for just a second too long.
And both of them— Froze. My heart was racing. Too fast. Too loud. But beneath it, sothing else had taken hold. Sothing calm, steady. Sothing that did not feel human.
"What... are you doing?" Kael asked, his voice no longer entirely controlled.
That alone was enough to make realize sothing had changed.
"I don’t know," I said honestly.
Rowan’s gaze was fixed on now, not with fear, not with confusion, but with sothing far more dangerous.
Recognition.
"Elara," he said carefully, as if the way he spoke might affect whatever was happening.
"Stay where you are."
"I am," I replied, though it didn’t feel entirely true.
Because even though my body hadn’t moved— Sothing else had. The pressure in the air grew stronger. Not outward. Inward. As if everything around us was being pulled toward a single point.
Toward .
Kael stepped back slightly. Not out of fear. Out of calculation.
"This is what I was trying to tell you," he said, his voice lower now, more focused. "You don’t understand what you’re becoming."
"I didn’t ask for this," I said.
"No," Kael replied. "But that doesn’t change it."
Rowan stepped forward slowly this ti, his movents careful, deliberate in a way that was completely different from the fight just monts ago.
"You’re not losing control," he said, his voice steady, grounding. "You’re reacting."
"To what?" I asked, the question slipping out before I could stop it.
Rowan didn’t answer. Not imdiately. And that— That was enough. Because once again he knew sothing.
And once again— He wasn’t telling . The realization hit harder than the energy surrounding us.
"Don’t," I said quietly.
Rowan stopped.
"If you’re about to tell it’s nothing, or that you’ll explain later, or that I don’t need to know right now," I continued, my voice steadier than I felt, "then don’t."
A brief silence followed. Because this ti I wasn’t asking. I was drawing a line. And both of them felt it. Because whatever this power was— Whatever had just awakened—
It wasn’t sothing that belonged to either of them.
It was mine.
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