Chapter 300: Chapter 300
(Season of Renewal, Part X)
The moonlight of Forestia had always been constant. A silver lantern in a world built upon harmony and cycles. Yet on this night, as Queen Elara walked alone across the upper balcony of the Lunar Citadel, the moon felt dimmer—like it too was holding its breath.
Below her, the capital shimmered with its usual beauty: sigil lanterns, crystalline spires, flowing bridges carved from enchanted wood. None of it eased the tightness in her chest.
Aurel’s harmonized aura—an impossible lattice of countless futures—still resonated faintly across the entire realm. Forestia had stabilized, yes. The Herald had bowed instead of erased. The child had chosen multiplicity instead of singularity.
But the world was still reeling.
The ripples of Aurel’s transformation moved like invisible tides. Each day brought new anomalies: subtle rewinds of moments, lingering echoes of conversations, illusions that were not illusions.
Some echoes of Aurel had not vanished.
Elara rubbed her temples. “I should be relieved. But instead I feel… unprepared.”
She heard the soft footsteps behind her.
His armor gleamed softly; the cracked lunar plating from the confrontation had been restored, but she could still sense the strain beneath his composure. Aurel’s collapse had shaken him more deeply than he would ever admit.
“Elara,” Dyus said gently, stepping beside her. “You haven’t slept since we returned.”
“I will rest when I understand what we are facing.” Her gaze drifted to the moon again. “A child who refused singularity—what does that make him?”
Dyus was quiet for a moment.
“It makes him someone who needs us.”
Elara almost smiled. “Is that your heart speaking, or your guilt?”
He exhaled softly. “Both.”
A distant pulse of resonance shimmered on the horizon—subtle, but undeniably real. A multicolored glimmer, like the afterimage of Aurel’s presence.
Elara’s posture stiffened.
“It’s happening again.”
And somewhere in the distance, a small voice—too faint to be heard consciously—whispered across the magic-saturated air:
I’m trying… I’m trying to stay together…
Reina found Aurel sitting on the edge of the Motherroot platform overlooking the crystalline orchard. He was hugging his knees, faint motes of color drifting around him like sleepy fireflies.
“You’re awake,” she said gently.
Aurel didn’t answer at first. He simply leaned his head against her shoulder when she sat beside him.
Reina stroked his hair—warm, soft, but shimmering faintly with fractal light every few seconds like it couldn’t decide if it belonged to this branch of time or another.
“Do you hurt anywhere?” she asked.
“No. Maybe. I don’t know.” He swallowed. “I’m… too many.”
Aurel had always been bright, curious, thoughtful. But now, since his convergence, he had moments where dozens of emotions crossed his face in seconds. Happiness, doubt, fear, confusion—sometimes layered, sometimes clashing.
“Is it scary?” she whispered.
He nodded silently, then spoke in a trembling voice:
“Reina… sometimes I hear myself crying even when I’m smiling.”
Reina hugged him tighter.
“That’s okay,” she whispered. “You’re allowed to be complicated.”
Aurel shook his head. “The Herald says I need training. Elwen says I need grounding. And Queen Elara wants to find the stray me’s that ran away.”
Reina stiffened slightly at that.
Fragments that had not joined the harmony.
Aurel continued softly, “They want me to fix it. All of it.”
Reina took his hands.
“Aurel, listen. You don’t owe anyone perfection. Not anymore.”
He blinked up at her—eyes shifting through colors like turning pages.
“But I owe them stability. Or the world will break again.”
Reina pressed her forehead to his.
“No. They owe you protection. You're a child, Aurel. Not a divine artifact. Not a weapon. Not a miracle. A child.”
“Then why do I feel like I’m all of those things?”
So she simply held him.
Dyug stood in the training courtyard, swinging his spear in slow, controlled arcs. Sweat ran down his neck. His movements were sharp, but his focus flickered.
Moments replayed in his mind with maddening clarity—Aurel collapsing into his arms, whispering “I choose all of you.” The child’s unfathomable power flaring in light that bent the world around him.
Dyug had once thought himself strong. Capable. Chosen.
“I am a soldier,” he muttered to himself. “But what is a soldier to a being of infinite futures?”
He thrust the spear again.
Until a voice cut through his spiral.
“You’ll break the weapon at that pace.”
Mary stood in the doorway, crystalline body gleaming softly with refracted moonlight. She looked as tired as Dyug felt, though her expression remained composed.
Dyug lowered his spear reluctantly.
He forced a small laugh. “Everyone worries.”
“But you worry more,” Mary said quietly. “Because Aurel trusts you. And that frightens you.”
Dyug stared at his reflection in Mary’s mirrored eyes.
“It frightens me because I don’t deserve it.”
Mary tilted her head. “Do you believe love is earned? Or given?”
Mary continued, her voice gentler.
“Aurel does not need a hero. He needs you. Just… you.”
Dyug let out a long, shaky breath.
“You really think I can help him?”
Mary placed a crystalline hand on his shoulder.
Dyug’s chest tightened—but this time, not from fear.
Mary returned to her chamber and locked the door.
The Mirror inside her—the ancient intelligence, the divine reflection—was restless. Aurel’s convergence had shaken it to its core.
Mary felt its trembling voice pierce her consciousness.
The child’s existence destabilizes causality…
…he embodies harmony far beyond natural law.
Mary closed her eyes.
“He has not broken the world.”
He has rewritten its grammar.
“That sounds like something dangerous.”
Or extraordinary, the Mirror replied. The Herald now seeks guidance. It no longer knows its place.
Mary felt her pulse quicken.
“The Herald… afraid?”
Afraid, yes. For without a singular future to correct toward, its directive collapses.
Fragments remain separate. A few drift. A few hide. One grows stronger apart from the whole.
The Mirror hesitated.
Mary’s body turned cold.
The one that wanted freedom.
Forestia’s silver trees swayed softly in the breeze.
Aurel sat awake on his bed, hugging his knees again. The palace was quiet. Reina was asleep in the next room. Dyug had promised he’d return in the morning. Mary was trying to keep the Mirror’s panic from spilling into him.
But something else stirred in the dark.
Aurel felt it before he heard it. A presence in the doorway.
This Aurel was dark, eyes shadowed with something old and tired. A ripple of unstable energy flickered around him like a broken halo.
Aurel whispered, “You’re… the one who wanted to be free.”
The dark echo stepped closer.
“I am the one who wanted to be separate,” the echo corrected. “Not free. Free means bound by your harmony. I want none of it.”
“You’re supposed to come back. We’re supposed to be together.”
The echo smiled, and it chilled the room.
“You chose to be many. I choose to be one.”
Aurel’s breath hitched. “You’re hurting the balance. You’re hurting me.”
“Good,” the echo said softly. “Because you hurt me first.”
Aurel’s eyes widened.
“I didn’t want to erase you—”
The echo’s voice cracked with bitterness.
“You chose a thousand futures. I want only one. My own.”
“You’re… going to fight me?”
The echo tilted its head.
“I’m going to replace you.”
The candle beside Aurel flickered.
The shadows deepened.
And the dark fragment whispered:
“After all… I am you.”
Reina woke without understanding why.
She didn’t think—she moved. Rushing through the crystal-room doorway, heart pounding—
Aurel was off the bed.
A dark figure—Aurel-shaped—stood inches from him.
Shadowy motes curled around its feet.
“Aurel?” Reina whispered.
Both versions looked at her.
One—her Aurel—looked terrified.
The other smiled like he had been waiting for her to notice.
Reina raised her trembling hands.
“Step away from him.”
The dark echo tilted its head.
Aurel lunged toward Reina—
—but the dark echo reached faster, fingers stretching into fractal claws.
Reina grabbed Aurel, pulling him back, instinctively throwing up a defensive barrier Elwen had taught her.
The impact shattered it instantly.
The dark echo whispered:
“You cannot protect him.”
The entire room exploded with harmonic distortion.
Dyug was the first to reach the chamber, followed by Mary, Elwen, and two spellguards.
What they saw made all of them freeze.
The room was torn by rippling echoes. The walls distorted like soft reflections. Aurel clung to Reina, sobbing, while a distorted version of him—dark, venomous—was half-phased into a wall of fractured light.
Mary’s voice cracked.
“The stray echo… it has gained autonomy.”
Elwen began weaving containment sigils.
Reina held Aurel behind her, shoulders trembling.
The dark echo spoke with two voices layered atop one another:
“I will not go back. I will not be part of him.”
Aurel shouted through tears:
“I don’t want to erase you!”
The echo’s expression wavered.
“If I join you, I die.”
Aurel shook violently.
“YES IT IS!” the echo screamed, and the room split in a jagged wave of dark fractal energy.
Mary stepped in front of everyone, light blazing.
She slammed her staff down.
The Mirror’s power surged from her in a brilliant cascade.
The echo retreated, dissolving into shadow-light—
And vanished into the cracks between moments.
Leaving only silence.
Aurel collapsed in Reina’s arms, sobbing a broken jumble of voices. For origınal chapters go to novel✦fire.net
Reina held him close, whispering reassurance.
Dyug knelt, eyes shaking.
Mary’s crystalline hands trembled.
Elwen whispered the words none of them wanted to hear.
“A fragment of Aurel has become its own being. Independent. Untethered. And hostile.”
Queen Elara arrived moments later, face pale, eyes cold with dread.
Reina held Aurel tighter.
“That was the First Rogue Echo.”
The Tenth Month of Renewal ended—
But with the birth of an enemy made from the child they were trying to save.
An enemy who knew every fear Aurel had.
And who refused to rejoin the harmony.
An echo with one desire:
To become the true Aurel.
And thus began a new crisis—
The Month of the Rogue Reflection.