Ares, Asher and Lara shouted at the sa ti.
The girl tilted her head, listening to sothing none of them could hear.
Then she pointed toward the heart of the ruins — a collapsed archway leading into darkness.
"Daddy," Shay said simply. "There is sothing there."
A wind rose without warning, spiraling through the broken fortress. Dust and dead leaves lifted from the ground, swirling like restless spirits. The temperature dropped sharply, cold enough to bite exposed skin.
A deep, resonant sound rolled through the stones — not quite a voice, not quite thunder. More like the earth rembering sothing it wished it hadn’t.
The ruins answered.
Cracks glowed faintly along the ancient walls, thin lines of pale light bleeding through the stone like veins awakening after centuries of sleep.
Lara’s heart slamd against her ribs. She was anticipating.
"Ares..." she whispered.
His stare was locked on the glowing fortress, eyes dark and unreadable — but sothing primal had awakened there. Recognition. Dread. Resolve.
"Stay behind ," he said again, voice lower now, edged with sothing lethal.
From sowhere deep within the ruins, a shape began to move.
Not walking but opening.
And the island, silent until now, finally exhaled.
"It looks like an entrance," one of the archaeologists said, his voice dropping instinctively, as if the ruin might hear him.
A seam in the darkness shifted — not opening, not closing, but parting just enough to let a blade of pale daylight slip through. The weak light spilled across the threshold and died there, swallowed whole by the blackness beyond the broken archway, as though the interior refused to give anything back.
Then ca the sound.
Stone grinding against stone from sowhere deep below.
Not the brittle crumble of ruin. Not the hollow crash of collapse.
But movent that was slow and deliberate.
Lara stepped forward before anyone could grab her.
Her body moved first, mind lagging behind, as if she were sleepwalking with her eyes open. The world around her dulled — the chatter, the wind, even the bright survey flags faded to background noise. Sothing tugged at her from inside the ruin, steady and insistent, like a thread looped around her waist.
"He’s calling ," she said softly, not turning back, her voice distant and strangely calm. "He’s calling for ."
The wind died.
Not faded but died. Leaves went still. Loose dirt settled. Even the air felt heavier, thicker, as if the island itself were holding its breath.
"Lara, where do you think you’re going?" Ares was beside her in an instant, fingers closing firmly around her arm.
The contact snapped sothing.
She blinked hard, confusion flashing across her face as awareness rushed back in. For a second, she looked almost embarrassed, like soone caught speaking aloud to themselves.
"This... this looks like an entrance to a mausoleum," she said, more firmly now, though her voice still carried a faint echo of that earlier trance.
Tools paused mid-motion. Conversations cut off. Every eye in the excavation site shifted toward her.
"How could you possibly know that?" Scarlet snapped, stepping forward, arms crossed tight across her chest. "What do you know, hmp."
The anger in her voice had little to do with archaeology. She’d been sidelined all morning, ignored while decisions were made without her, and the resentnt finally found a target.
Lara didn’t even look at her.
She drifted past them toward a leaning section of the structure — a half-collapsed tower tilting at an unnatural angle, as if the earth had tried to swallow it and failed.
Moss clung to the ancient stone in thick, damp sheets, dark as old bruises. Here and there, dirt had flaked away to reveal carvings beneath: spirals that twisted too tightly, claw-like gouges, symbols that seed to shift the longer you stared at them.
Unfamiliar to everyone else.
Not to her.
Her brow slowly tightened, not in fear but in concentration — the expression of soone trying to catch a mory that kept slipping just out of reach.
"It should have been buried here," she murmured.
She glanced up at the pale sky, then down at the ground, studying the angle of the light, the stretch of her shadow across the uneven earth as if aligning invisible markers only she could see.
Ares stepped closer, unease sharpening his voice. "What did you say?"
Lara didn’t answer.
She crouched.
Her fingers brushed the moss-slick stone just beneath the skeletal fra of a narrow window slit on a wall.
Carefully, almost reverently, she drew a knife and slid the blade into the mortar line. The ancient binding crumbled with surprising ease. She pried the brick loose and lifted it free.
The instant it ca out, a vibration ran through the wall.
So faint it might have been imagination.
But Lara went completely still. Because she knew that sensation.
Her heartbeat quickened.
Without a word, she started clearing away the moss from the second brick. Then the third. Dirt packed beneath her nails. Stone scraped softly against tal as she worked with sudden urgency, like soone racing a clock no one else could see.
And then—
An edge of tal revealed itself beneath the hollowed wall.
Logan leaned closer.
"What the—"
He dropped to a knee and helped pull the remaining bricks free. One by one, they ca loose and six of them were removed, exposing a hollow in the ancient wall that had been sealed so perfectly it might have been invisible to anyone not searching for it.
Sothing circular lay embedded inside.
Slowly, as the last debris fell away, a tal disc erged — about half a foot across, blackened by age yet untouched by rust, as if ti itself had hesitated to claim it.
At its center, an intricate sigil had been carved deep into the tal.
Not decorative but for authority.
Lines intersected in impossible geotry, forming a symbol so old it felt less like writing and more like a command given shape. No known language claid it. No modern system could translate it.
Except Lara didn’t hesitate.
Her breath caught, eyes widening not in confusion — in recognition.
The crest of Helias.
The seal of the Gabriella Guild.
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