Third Arc (Fallen Heart) - 406. Full Moon I
The night had turned black and breathless.
Not the kind of peaceful darkness that lulls a house to sleep—but the kind that hangs in the air like smoke before a storm. Heavy. Dense. Watching.
Far from the gold-lit spires and smooth marble of Euphorion's capital, past the old border trails and half-forgotten paths, nestled deep in the hilly stretch of Zephyrus territory, stood a manor. Isolated. Oddly shaped. Too old for comfort, too new to be a relic. It didn't look like it belonged to anyone—but it was warded like it belonged to someone very important.
Magic formations pulsed faintly along its outer edge. Runes etched into jagged stone lit up and dimmed in soft rotations. Most were repelling barriers—older ones drawn in crescent shapes to keep out the wild beasts that roamed the nearby woods. Others were more recent. Thick, jagged spellwork laced with blood-pacted ink meant to shatter curses before they touched the door. And the third layer… darker. Designed to disorient anyone who arrived with hostile intent.
And tonight?
All three layers hummed. Uneasy. Like they sensed something coming.
Inside the manor, the air was warmer. Still, but not soft. The kind of silence that didn't cradle—it pressed. The kind that warned.
The master of the house, an old man named Silvan, sat near the hearth in a tall, cracked leather chair. The firelight played across his face—lined, shadowed, with a beard turned mostly to snow. His eyes, though dulled with time, still held sharpness. The kind that read too much, saw too much, lived too long.
He should've been asleep.
His two grandsons were already deep in their dreams upstairs. His three remaining servants had retired earlier after preparing tea and bolting all the windows—though they barely needed to, with how tightly sealed the manor's enchantments were.
But Silvan couldn't sleep.
Not because of the aches in his joints, or the way the storm wind howled past the chimney like a wolf sniffing for a crack.
No.
It was the letter.
The one sent a month ago. From the king of Euphorion himself.
"I will visit, with my queen, before the next full moon. Your insight is required."
That was all it had said.
No exact date. No formal seal of visit. Just a king's word.
Silvan folded and refolded the damn parchment five times that day. The letter now sat on the small table beside him.
They were supposed to come today.
And now it was almost midnight.
Still no rider.
No knock at the manor door.
No flare across the ward to signal royal approach.
Silvan stared into the fire. Not blinking. Not really seeing.
He'd lived long enough to know when his bones whispered something bigger than anxiety. This wasn't just nerves. This wasn't age.
It was instinct.
Something was coming.
And not just the king.
His hand twitched once, then slowly moved to his walking cane—not because he needed it to walk, but because he had things hidden inside it that were better drawn than left waiting.
He stood, quietly. Listened.
The wind moaned against the high windows again. Then the wards outside gave a soft pulse—one beat, then nothing.
He narrowed his eyes.
Not a break.
Not an attack.
Just… a ripple.
He turned from the fireplace and moved to the long hallway at the back of the sitting room. The manor creaked gently with his steps.
He passed the hall of books, passed the door marked with a forgotten language that no one else in the manor was allowed to touch. Then finally came to a small chamber with a wide arched window. It overlooked the northern edge of the estate.
Silvan pushed the curtain aside and peered out.
Nothing.
No light on the hills.
No movement among the trees.
But still—his gut twisted tighter.
He muttered a spell under his breath, and the glass shimmered. The trees beyond lit up faintly in his vision—outlined by threads of detection magic.
Still… no signs.
But the wards had felt something. That he was sure of.
He didn't bother with the staff bell. He moved back to the main room, grabbed the old iron teapot, and poured himself what remained of the bitterroot blend the servants had left for him. Cold now. He sipped anyway.
"Why do I feel like the monsters I've kept out for forty years are going to seem like kittens compared to what walks through my door tonight?" he muttered.
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