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Chapter 9 - The Second Mark.

The village was called Veildusk. Quiet. Tucked beneath the eastern ridge of the valley, its buildings hunched like old men bracing for a storm. Smoke drifted from crooked chimneys. No one smiled. No one asked questions.

‎It was a place people passed through — never stayed.

‎And yet, Caelum had come back.

‎He stood beneath the twisted tree in the square, boots dusted with frost, cloak dragging the damp earth. The villagers avoided his gaze. Good. Fear was still a useful currency here.

‎A woman stepped from the shadow of the inn. Black coat, red scarf. Raven hair twisted in coils. A thin blade sheathed at her hip.

‎Vireya.

‎She moved like a wraith, silent but always watching.

‎"You took longer than expected," she said, falling in step beside him.

‎Caelum didn't look at her. "She found the first seal."

‎"I know," she replied. "I saw it burn."

‎He glanced at her now. "You were watching?"

‎Vireya smiled faintly. "You're not the only one with shadows."

‎They entered a tavern that hadn't seen life in days. Dust covered the counters. Chairs stacked like corpses in a corner.

‎Vireya produced a folded map from her coat and unrolled it on the nearest table. A red mark burned faintly where the chapel ruins had once stood.

‎Beside it, another glowed — near the village's outer well.

‎"She's already moving toward it," Vireya said. "But she doesn't know what she's looking for."

‎"She will," Caelum said.

‎"She has the boy now," she added, carefully.

‎Caelum said nothing.

‎"I thought you said that wasn't supposed to happen yet."

‎"It wasn't."

‎"So what changed?"

‎He looked at her then — not angry, not surprised. Just tired.

‎"Fate doesn't always follow instruction."

‎*

‎**

‎Elira

‎**

‎The village came into view just after dusk. Small, worn down, suspicious — exactly the kind of place where secrets rot in the soil.

‎Elira held Tovin's hand tighter as they passed shuttered homes and closed shops. A few villagers stared. One muttered a warding charm under his breath. Another spat as she walked by.

‎"Charming," Elira muttered.

‎They reached the inn. No sign, no fire, but it wasn't locked. She pushed the door open, half-expecting an ambush.

‎Empty.

‎Good.

‎*

‎The next morning, Tovin led her toward the well on the village's edge.

‎"I had another dream," he said.

‎Elira glanced down. "You dream more than you sleep."

‎"I saw the same symbol again. It was below the water."

‎She frowned. "The same sigil from the ruins?"

‎He nodded.

‎She eyed the well warily.

‎It was old — stones cracked, the rope worn. A bucket dangled halfway down.

‎"I'll check it," Tovin offered.

‎Elira grabbed his shoulder. "Absolutely not."

‎She summoned a flicker of witchlight from her palm and lowered it into the well.

‎The light floated slowly down the shaft.

‎Halfway, the stones began to glow.

‎And then she saw it.

‎The second mark.

‎Etched in blood-iron script. Same shape, same ancient rune.

‎But this time, a second symbol overlapped it. Twisted. Almost corrupted.

‎Something — or someone — was interfering with the original design.

‎Elira stepped back. Cold sweat on her neck.

‎Someone else knew the seals were awakening.

‎*

‎**

‎Caelum

‎**

‎Vireya stood at the well's edge, watching from the other side of the village wall.

‎"She's close," she whispered.

‎"She's always been," Caelum replied.

‎Vireya turned to him. "You could end this. Reveal the full prophecy. Tell her what she really is."

‎Caelum's eyes narrowed.

‎"She's not ready."

‎"She's stronger than you think."

‎"She's more dangerous than you know," he said flatly.

‎Vireya tilted her head. "And the boy?"

‎Caelum didn't answer.

‎Instead, he looked toward the well.

‎"They were never meant to meet so soon. Something's unraveling."

‎*

‎**

‎Elira

‎**

‎She left the well feeling like she'd swallowed fire.

‎The symbol beneath the water still burned behind her eyes.

‎Two seals.

‎Two calls.

‎But what disturbed her most wasn't the magic.

‎It was the strange pressure building inside her.

‎Something familiar.

‎Like a door inside her soul was unlocking—slowly.

‎And whatever waited on the other side?

‎Was no longer asleep.

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