Chapter 313: Chapter 313
(Season of Reflection, Part XI)
Aurel held his mother as gently as his small arms allowed, lowering her to the moonlit floor as if she were spun from fragile starlight. Elara’s breath fluttered against his shoulder—unsteady, shallow, pained. Silver blood stained his fingers.
His new eyes—swirling silver and shadow, lunar and Echo intertwined—took in every detail with impossible clarity.
The fractured harmonics in her core.
And beyond all that… the remnants of her will, stubborn and luminous, still fighting for breath.
Elara’s eyelids fluttered open, a sliver of moonlight peeking through her exhaustion. She reached up, brushing her fingertips across Aurel’s cheek.
“You… woke,” she whispered. “You chose to wake.”
“I chose you,” Aurel answered.
The corridor around them hummed with residual shockwaves, the dust of evaporated Echo fragments still drifting like tiny silver motes. Dyug knelt beside them, armor scorched and cracked. Mary steadied herself against a pillar, fractures glowing faintly as she regained balance. Reina hovered behind them, staff trembling in her hand.
“For what?” Elara breathed. “For coming back to me?”
“For making you fight alone.”
A faint smile tugged at Elara’s lips.
“A queen… never fights alone,” she murmured. “Her people… just take a little too long to arrive.”
Reina blinked tears away. Dyug bowed his head. Mary’s crystalline lashes lowered.
Aurel took Elara’s hand and pressed it firmly to his heart.
“I’m here now,” he whispered. “And I won’t let anything take you away.”
Elara closed her eyes, exhaling softly.
And for the first time since the Citadel fell into chaos—
Queen Elara let herself sleep.
But Aurel did not allow her body to fall limp. Shadows cradled her. Moonlight supported her. He rose, small but unwavering, carrying her weight with a power no child should bear.
The Citadel trembled once.
Then fell utterly silent.
As if the entire fortress was holding its breath.
Aurel stood in the center of the hall, moonlight bending to him, shadows spiraling from his feet.
“Dyug,” he said quietly, “prepare a chamber for her. One shielded from Echo resonance.”
Dyug nodded without hesitation. “I’ll create a lunar prism barrier.”
“Reina,” Aurel continued, “stay with me. Your presence anchors her pulse.”
Reina rushed forward, hands glowing with gentle energy. “Always.”
She straightened, wincing as her cracked form shifted. “What is your command?”
Aurel’s eyes softened.
“You’ve done enough. Sit.”
Mary blinked—stunned to silence. No one had told her to rest in centuries.
Reina touched her arm, smiling faintly. “You heard him. Sit.”
Mary sank to the floor, crystalline knees carefully bending.
Aurel turned toward the far corridor—toward the place where thousands more Echo fragments lurked like an unending tide.
He took one slow breath.
Silver and shadow spiraled around him.
And for the first time, Dyug understood—
Aurel wasn’t becoming a weapon.
He was becoming a balance.
Reina pressed glowing palms against Elara’s shoulder, feeling the Queen’s pulse respond—weak but steadying with every second she poured gentle lunar warmth into her veins.
But her eyes weren’t on Elara.
The child she helped raise.
The boy she slept beside during storms.
The little hands that tugged at her dress and asked a thousand questions every morning.
Silver and black light pulsed around him with each breath.
Reina bit her lip hard.
She could almost see the Aurel she knew—sweet, timid, laughing—beneath the swirling power. But she also felt something jagged. Something deep. Something… dangerous.
Dyug noticed her trembling.
He came close and murmured:
“He’s still him. Don’t forget that.”
Reina nodded, but her voice shook. “He’s changed. I can feel it. The Echo residue… it didn’t just fuse with him. It’s talking to him.”
Dyug’s jaw tightened. “That’s what I fear.”
Mary, seated against the wall, cracked her crystalline eyes open.
“He is stable,” she said softly. “But balance is delicate. If he leans too far toward shadow, the fragment within him may dominate. If he leans too far toward light, the lunar half may overload.”
Reina’s stomach twisted. “So everything is dangerous.”
“Yes,” Mary said calmly. “Everything.”
Aurel lifted his chin and called out to the corridor.
The word wasn’t a plea.
A ripple passed through the Citadel.
Shadows stirred like restless beasts.
Dyug lifted his spear. “Reina. Stay with Elara. If anything breaks through us, you protect them both.”
Reina nodded, planting her feet beside the Queen.
She forced a steady breath.
“You better come back,” she whispered toward Aurel.
He didn’t turn—didn’t need to.
But a shiver crawled down Reina’s spine.
Dyug followed Aurel into the corridor, heart pounding like a war drum. The walls had grown darker—the silver etchings flickering between light and shadow as if undecided which one to obey.
“Aurel,” he said quietly, “what are you planning?”
Aurel raised a hand, gathering rising energies.
“The Citadel resonates with me now,” he said. “But the fragments are still connected to the Core’s reflection field.”
“That field nearly killed you,” Dyug snapped.
Aurel’s expression didn’t change.
“Yes. But it also connects everything that broke. And everything trying to heal.”
The boy pointed at the far end of the corridor.
A low rumbling echoed.
The first wave of Echo fragments emerged—hundreds, then thousands, crawling, slithering, jerking forward like an incomplete army.
Dyug stepped in front of Aurel.
“No. You stay behind me.”
Aurel glanced at him, eyes steady.
“Dyug… I’m not the one who needs protection anymore.”
Dyug’s grip tightened on his spear.
Aurel looked up at him—too small for the power he held, but too determined to be swayed.
“You taught me to stand,” Aurel whispered. “Let me.”
Then he nodded, raising his spear.
He would fight beside him.
Mary watched from the Bastion threshold as moonlight and shadow erupted down the corridor. The shockwave lit her crystalline skin in flashes—silver, black, silver again.
Aurel fought with terrifying precision.
Every movement was sharp, decisive, instinctive.
Every breath rippled with dual resonance.
Every strike erased Echo fragments in spirals of unmaking.
But Mary saw something no one else could.
In the space around him.
Reality bent strangely when he focused too much power at once. She could see faint fractures forming in the air—hairline distortions shaped like broken reflections.
This was not sustainable.
Even Dyug, brave as he was, showed signs of strain—eyes narrowed, shoulders tense, breathing hard as he fought in Aurel’s wake.
Mary pushed herself to stand.
Reina glanced at her frantically. “Mary, don’t! You can barely move!”
“Reina… I have served the High Elves since I was little. I have crossed battlefields that would turn soldiers blind. Do not worry.”
Mary felt her own cracks ache with each step.
She walked forward anyway.
Aurel was burning too fast.
If no one anchored him…
If no one guided him…
If no one stopped him at the right moment…
She placed her hand on the wall to steady herself.
Shadows flared down the corridor.
Silver light erupted in reply.
The clash shook the entire Citadel.
Mary whispered to herself:
“Hold on, little prince. Hold on.”
Aurel moved like he had fought for centuries—instinct honed not by experience but by unity.
The fragment within him whispered.
Silver beams burned through entire lines of fragments. Shadow tendrils ripped apart clusters with silent precision. The two energies spiraled around him, coiling like twin dragons—devouring everything in their path.
But with every second, something in him throbbed.
From beneath the Citadel.
From the Core chamber.
The place where he had broken.
The place where his fragment had formed.
The place where the reflection had first whispered:
Dyug grabbed his shoulder. “Aurel!”
Aurel’s vision blurred.
“Something… is calling me.”
Dyug gritted his teeth. “Ignore it.”
The fragments surged again—stronger, larger, merging into monstrous forms. The corridor shook violently.
Dyug pulled Aurel behind him, slashing through a giant Echo mass.
But the calling grew louder.
Finish what we began.
Aurel clutched his head, wincing.
Dyug cursed, lifting Aurel into his arms and retreating down the corridor.
“We’re pulling back!”
Aurel struggled weakly. “No—Dyug, we can’t retreat. If we leave this corridor—”
“I don’t care,” Dyug snapped. “You’re not going into the Core chamber again.”
“That wasn’t a suggestion.”
Aurel’s eyes opened—silver and shadow blazing.
“I have to go,” Aurel whispered. “Something… something important is there. Something that can end this.”
Dyug’s face twisted in fear and defiance.
“Aurel… please. Don’t make me choose.”
Aurel reached up and touched his cheek gently.
“I’m not choosing against you,” he whispered. “I’m choosing all of us.”
The corridor trembled.
A deep pulse echoed through the Citadel—like a heartbeat.
A heartbeat he recognized.
Aurel’s voice dropped to a whisper.
“It’s the part of me I didn’t fuse with.”
Dyug’s blood ran cold.
“You mean… there’s more?”
And his voice trembled—not with fear, but with dreadful realization.
“My other half is still alive.”
Reina heard Aurel’s words and felt ice run through her veins.
Another fragment—alive.
Then Aurel wasn’t whole.
He was only half-broken.
Might be the source of the Citadel’s corruption.
Mary reached Reina’s side, gripping her staff to stay upright.
“Reina,” she whispered, “go to them.”
Reina blinked. “But Elara—”
“I will guard the Queen,” Mary said, voice thin but firm. “Aurel needs you more.”
Reina hesitated—only for a breath.
Then she sprinted down the corridor.
Her boots hit the moonstone floor in sharp echoes.
Dyug turned as she reached him, Aurel limp in his arms for a moment—then awake again, gripping Dyug’s armor with trembling fingers.
“Aurel!” she cried. “Stop—come back!”
Aurel opened his eyes.
“Reina,” he whispered, voice cracking. “If I don’t find him… he’ll find me.”
The fragments roared.
The Citadel trembled.
And somewhere, deep beneath them— The latest_epɪ_sodes are on_the n͟o͟v͟e͟l͟f͟i͟r͟e͟.net
A second heartbeat answered Aurel’s.
Reina grabbed Aurel’s hand.
“We’re going together,” she said fiercely.
Dyug nodded. “All three of us.”
Mary’s voice echoed from down the hall:
“And you will not face this alone.”
Mary stood in the corridor, fractures glowing brightly as she forced herself forward.
Aurel’s eyes softened.
“Mary,” he whispered, “your body—”
“Will endure,” she said. “Because you must endure.”
Aurel took a shuddering breath.
“We go,” he said quietly, turning toward the path leading down into the Citadel’s depths.
Toward the other half of his soul.
Dyug lifted his spear.
Reina raised her staff.
Mary steadied her cracked form.
And Aurel took the first step downward.
The heartbeat louder.
“At the bottom… we’ll find the truth.”
They descended into the dark.