The voice echoed within her like a forgotten song — not frightening, but familiar, like the hush of trees before dawn or the weightless drift of dreams just before waking.
Lira's fingers brushed the surface of the silver pool.
It didn't feel like water.
It felt like memory.
The moment her skin met it, the pool glowed. Tendrils of light reached upward, not burning, but cool and alive, wrapping around her wrist and bracelet. Her breath caught — and in the space between heartbeats, her vision blurred.
She was no longer in the chamber.
---
She stood in a vast forest that felt both ancient and unborn. Trees towered like cathedral spires, their bark glowing faintly with flowing sigils. Stars peeked through a shifting sky that was neither day nor night.
Before her, a woman stood — the Verdant One.
She wore robes woven from wind and root, her crown a tangle of antlers and leaves. Her eyes shimmered, green as spring and deep as centuries.
"You are the last echo," the woman said, her voice layered with countless tones — child, mother, elder, flame.
"The last?"
"Of the line who remembered the way."
She gestured behind her. The forest burned. Strange machines crawled through the trees, splitting bark, poisoning roots, turning song to silence. And then — a wave of fog.
Not summoned.
Released.
"To protect what remained," the Verdant One continued. "The fog sealed the cradle. The Lunavir was hidden. But not forever."
Lira opened her mouth, but no sound came.
"You will be the first to open it again. But not the last."
The Verdant One stepped closer. "This world has not ended. But it has forgotten. The beasts, the spirits, the unity — they live on, scattered and bound by fear. You must remember for them. So they can remember themselves."
She raised a hand — and pressed two fingers against Lira's brow.
A jolt of warmth surged through her skull, not painful — illuminating. The forests she had never walked, the languages she'd never learned, the names of roots and winds and stars, bloomed within her like seeds finally fed light.
"Return," the woman said.
"And remember."
---
Lira gasped and staggered back from the pool.
The silver liquid dimmed, stilled, but a faint mark now glowed across her brow — a vine-like sigil, not permanent, but pulsing with gentle light.
Thalanir reached her side. "What did you see?"
Lira took a deep breath, eyes wide but focused. "It wasn't a vision. It was a message."
She looked toward the ceiling, where the crystalline roots still glowed with soft light.
"She knew I'd come. She knew we'd all forgotten… and now the remembering begins."
Renkai frowned slightly. "And if not all want to remember?"
Lira's eyes narrowed with something old stirring beneath her voice. "Then the forest will remind them."
She turned slowly. The light in the chamber was shifting — beginning to dim as if the place had given what it could. A soft sound came from behind — the drake's low breath. It waited still, far above, but the bond had not broken. The fog had not returned. The path upward remained open.
But a path forward also revealed itself — a smaller opening on the far side of the chamber. The bracelet shimmered once more, bright and deliberate.
Renkai stepped beside her, voice quiet. "So. What now?"
Lira turned to face the new path, the green glow of Lunavir steady on her wrist.
"Now we carry the memory forward."
...
The ruins breathed behind them, ancient and full, no longer hiding — but no longer calling, either. The drake waited where they had left it, coiled in moss and fog near the entrance, its golden eyes watching as they emerged into the grey light of forest dawn.
Lira paused at the threshold. The bracelet on her wrist was quiet now — warm, but no longer glowing. As if the task below had been completed. For now.
Renkai sniffed the air, ears flicking. "The mist feels different."
"It knows," Thalanir said simply, stepping beside them. "We left with memory. That has weight."
Lira looked up. The forest above seemed unchanged — same twisting branches, same thick canopy — yet it felt softer somehow. Less suffocating. The fog still curled between trees, but it no longer pushed them back. Instead, it parted gently as they began their way forward.
"We go back now?" Renkai asked.
Lira nodded. "To the academy. If any place has more records of this… if anyone tried to remember even a little, they would've written it there."
Thalanir's gaze lingered on the path ahead, fog stretching like a river before them. "The journey will be long. The forest doesn't make the same path twice."
"I think it will, this time," Lira said. "It let us come here. It let us see. I think it wants us to carry this out."
Renkai growled low, half amused. "And it could also throw a manticore in our path just to remind us who's in charge."
Lira smiled faintly. "That too."
They walked.
The forest deepened around them, ancient roots and moss-covered stones winding across the ground like veins. The fog grew thicker, but never harsh. Instead, it curled along their ankles, drifted past their faces — almost curious.
Birds called in the distance, their cries echoing through the mist like memory.
At one point, they passed a fallen tree with strange markings on its trunk. Thalanir ran his fingers over it.
"Old speech," he murmured. "Traveler signs. Someone passed here before us."
"How long ago?" Renkai asked.
"Hard to tell. Could be decades… or yesterday." His hand lingered on the final mark — a symbol of three circles entwined. "This was a spirit mark. They knew of the Cradle."
They continued on, feet soft against leaf-covered ground. The bracelet began to pulse again — not urgent, but steady. It seemed to pull slightly to the left at forks in the trail, guiding them silently.
As the forest shifted, so did the light.
Hours passed.
They made camp beneath a twisted ash tree with hanging moss. The drake had not followed them; they felt its absence like a missing moon in the sky. But its blessing lingered — a sense of calm, of silence with purpose.
Thalanir pulled out a worn leather notebook, flipping through blank pages. "I'll write down what we saw. Before it fades from the edges."
Lira sat nearby, hand resting over Lunavir. Her voice was quiet. "Do you think they'll believe us at the academy?"
"No," Renkai said plainly. "But some will listen."
"And the rest?" she asked.
Thalanir looked up. "The rest will have no choice once the old world starts to rise again."
Night fell slowly. The fog glowed faintly under starlight.
Lira dreamed of the pool again. But this time, the woman did not speak.
This time, she simply watched.
By the time the forest began to thin, the fog had turned to soft ribbons of silver between the trees. The light ahead shifted — not quite sunlight, but not the deep twilight of the ancient woods either. It was the in-between glow of the outer grove, where the wild gave way to the structured world of walls and towers.
Lira slowed her steps.
Ahead, past the last row of gnarled trees, the silhouette of the academy's watchtower rose above the mist — its windows glinting faintly, banners stirring in the light breeze. She hadn't seen it in days, yet it felt like months.
The bracelet around her wrist pulsed once, then quieted — its glow fading into a soft shimmer, like a secret kept.
Behind her, footsteps stopped.
She turned.
Thalanir stood tall and quiet, the light brushing his silver hair and stag-antler crown. Renkai, in his fox form, paced once, then stilled — eyes alert but calm.
And farther back, still half-shrouded in mist, the drake watched. Massive. Silent. Eternal.
"This is as far as we go," Thalanir said gently.
Lira felt her throat tighten. "You're not coming in?"
Thalanir gave a small, respectful smile. "A glowing stag and a scaled beast don't exactly blend well into scholarly halls."
Renkai let out a short huff. "And I'd rather bite through bone than listen to professors drone about star charts."
Lira smiled faintly but her heart tugged.
The drake stepped forward once. Fog parted around it like reverence. Its gaze locked with hers — not demanding, not sorrowful. Just presence.
"You'll find more truth in there," Thalanir said, gesturing toward the academy. "And maybe more questions too. But we'll be near."
"You're not leaving the forest?" she asked.
Renkai stretched, shaking his fur. "Not if I can help it. The moment I step past the gates, they'll want me on a leash."
Thalanir smirked. "Or teaching defensive runes."
They both looked at her then — the way one watches a growing flame. Quiet hope behind the humor.
Lira stepped forward and touched Renkai's fur, brushing her fingers along his neck. "Thank you. For protecting me."
He snorted softly. "Don't get used to compliments. You earned your place."
Then she turned to Thalanir and met his steady gaze. "You'll come back when I call?"
"Where the fog clears," he said softly, "I'll follow."
The drake gave one final exhale, a warm wind brushing past her like a farewell. Then it turned, its vines trailing like living banners, and vanished once more into the deeper grove.
Lira stood at the border a moment longer.
Then she stepped through.
The gates of the academy loomed high and quiet. No one was outside — too early, or too late. Her boots echoed softly against the stones as she passed through the outer halls. The familiar ivy-wrapped archways, the scent of old parchment and polished wood — it all felt distant now, like visiting an old dream.
She reached her room without crossing a single soul.
Her hand hesitated on the door.
Then she opened it.
The space inside greeted her like a breath held too long: soft throws on the cot, her worn satchel on the hook by the window, dried herbs hanging from the shelf… and in the center of it all — a lump of white silver fur curled tightly in her blanket.
"Fluffy," she whispered.
The creature twitched, ears flicking. Then — in a flash of recognition — Fluffy chirped and launched himself into her arms.
She laughed, falling back into the bed with his warmth pressed against her chest. He sniffed her hair, licked her chin, and purred so loudly it nearly masked her heartbeat.
Lira wrapped her arms around him, burying her face in his fur.
Here, in the quiet of her room, with the fog left behind and memory still fresh, her breath finally steadied.
No visions.
No ancient voices.
Just Fluffy.
Just home.
Her eyes fluttered shut before she even meant to sleep.
The bracelet on her wrist shimmered once — then went still.