Night fell heavier over the capital after Dorian's visit.
Not darker-just watchful.
Storm clouds pressed low against the spires, muting the moonlight into a dull silver haze. From the highest chamber of the Alchemist's Tower, Lyra could see the city flicker with lantern glow, unaware of how close it had come to unraveling.
Or perhaps it had already begun.
The Philosopher's Heart hovered in its framework, faintly luminous, pulsing at irregular intervals-as though adjusting to a rhythm it had only just discovered.
Lyra stood before it barefoot, her palms hovering inches from its crystalline surface.
"You're restless," she murmured.
Behind her, Elias paused mid-notation.
"You speak to it now?"
"It listens."
"It is an artifact."
"It's more than that."
Elias set his quill aside and approached slowly.
The Heart gave a faint thrum.
He noticed.
Of course he did.
"It responds to emotional proximity," he said carefully. "That does not equate to sentience."
Lyra tilted her head slightly. "You built something designed to merge mortal emotion with alchemical precision. And you're surprised it behaves like something alive?"
His jaw tightened.
"I designed it to obey."
She turned then, studying him in the candlelight.
"And when it doesn't?"
Silence lingered between them.
The storm outside deepened, thunder rolling in distant waves.
"We cannot afford uncertainty," Elias said at last. "Dorian will not wait."
"He wants control."
"He wants dominion."
"And you?" she asked softly.
His gaze flickered to the Heart.
"I want to ensure no one ever has to beg fate for mercy again."
Lyra stepped closer.
"That isn't the same as control."
He didn't respond.
Because somewhere inside, he knew the difference.
The following morning brought no sunlight-only a pale, diffused glow filtered through enchanted glass.
Lyra descended to the lower laboratories, following the scent of crushed herbs and heated metal.
She found Elias already at work, sleeves rolled high, dark circles faint beneath his eyes.
"You didn't sleep," she observed.
"Sleep is inefficient."
"It's necessary."
"For you, perhaps."
She folded her arms.
"You can't outthink exhaustion."
He didn't look up. "I can attempt to."
Lyra crossed the room and placed a bundle of freshly gathered herbs onto the central table.
"Starblossom fern," she said. "I went back at dawn."
His head snapped up. "You what?"
"I reinforced the outer wards before I left," she added calmly.
"You left the tower unaccompanied after Dorian breached it?"
"Yes."
Elias stared at her as though recalibrating his entire understanding.
"You're reckless."
"You're controlling."
They held each other's gaze.
Tension simmered-not hostile, but charged.
He exhaled sharply. "Did you encounter anything?"
"The forest feels thinner," she admitted. "Like something beneath it is pushing upward."
His expression darkened.
"The fissure you described-if the Heart fragment was buried there-"
"Then someone sealed it intentionally," she finished.
"Yes."
They fell into thoughtful silence.
Lyra began grinding the fern into paste.
"What if the curse spreading through my village isn't random?" she asked. "What if it's a leak?"
"A leak implies containment failure."
"You said the guardian's sigils were fractured."
He went still.
"If something ancient was bound beneath Valenwood," Elias said slowly, "and the fragment we detected was part of the Heart's early prototypes..."
Lyra's stomach dropped.
"You experimented there."
"Years ago."
"And it went wrong."
His silence confirmed it.
"What did you bind?" she pressed.
He stepped back from the table.
"An emotional resonance core," he said reluctantly. "An attempt to give the Heart reactive consciousness."
"You tried to make it feel."
"Yes."
"And?"
"It grew unstable."
Lyra's voice softened. "Because you were grieving."
His expression flickered-anger, defensiveness, something rawer.
"Emotion introduces volatility," he said tightly. "That is precisely why it must be refined."
"Or understood," she countered.
Thunder cracked overhead.
The tower trembled faintly.
The Heart pulsed in response.
Both of them felt it.
A ripple through their magic-subtle, but unmistakable.
"It's synchronizing," Elias murmured.
"With what?"
He looked at her.
"With us."
By midday, the tower's wards had been doubled.
Elias etched new sigils into the foundation stones while Lyra infused them with organic magic-roots threading invisibly through mortar, reinforcing structure from within.
They worked in near silence, their movements gradually falling into unspoken rhythm.
At one point, their hands brushed while inscribing a shared rune.
The contact sent a spark through the line-gold weaving seamlessly into silver.
The sigil brightened beyond expectation.
Elias pulled back first.
"That shouldn't be possible," he muttered.
"It feels natural," Lyra said quietly.
He didn't argue.
Because it did.
The attack came at dusk.
Not loud.
Not explosive.
Subtle.
A tremor beneath their feet.
Then another.
Lyra froze mid-step on the staircase.
"Do you feel that?"
"Yes."
But this tremor wasn't external.
It was rising from below.
From the tower's foundation.
From the earth.
A crack split the lower chamber floor.
Dark vapor seeped upward.
Lyra's breath caught.
"It's the forest," she whispered.
"No," Elias said grimly. "It's what I buried."
The fissure widened.
From within, something shifted-massive and slow.
Runes flared violently across the tower walls.
The Heart above began beating faster.
Unstable.
"Elias-"
"I need you upstairs," he said sharply.
"I'm not leaving."
"You must anchor the Heart."
"I'm not abandoning you!"
Their eyes locked-fear mirroring fear.
Then the ground ruptured.
Stone shattered.
From the darkness emerged a shape like the forest guardian-but larger, twisted, its antlers branching like broken crowns of fire and shadow.
Its body was fractured light and smoke, veins glowing molten gold.
And in its chest-embedded-was a shard of crystalline metal.
A fragment of the early Heart.
It roared.
The sound cracked glass.
Elias stepped forward, magic coiling around his hands.
"I sealed you," he said coldly.
The creature's hollow gaze fixed on him.
Recognition.
Accusation.
Lyra felt its agony-raw, unfiltered.
"It's not attacking," she whispered.
"It's destabilizing."
The creature surged forward.
Elias unleashed a blast of silver energy.
It struck the beast-but only fractured its form further.
Golden fissures spread along its body.
Lyra stepped forward despite Elias's shout.
She raised her hands.
"Stop!" she cried.
Her magic flared-not aggressive, but reaching.
The creature hesitated.
Its roar shifted-less fury, more pain.
"It remembers," Lyra said breathlessly. "You tried to force it to feel without giving it balance."
Elias's expression faltered.
The beast lunged again-this time not at him, but toward the upper chamber.
Toward the completed Heart.
"It's drawn to it!" Elias realized.
"If they merge-" Lyra began.
"It could stabilize."
"Or explode."
The creature bounded up the staircase with terrifying speed.
Lyra and Elias raced after it.
By the time they reached the apex chamber, the Heart was blazing.
The beast crashed into the suspended framework.
Energy detonated outward.
Lyra shielded her eyes.
The fragment in the creature's chest vibrated violently.
Elias rushed to the control console, adjusting sigils at impossible speed.
"Lyra!" he shouted. "I need you to synchronize with it!"
"You told me not to touch it!"
"Do it now!"
She didn't hesitate.
Lyra pressed both palms against the Heart.
Gold erupted.
The creature howled as the fragment tore free from its chest-ripping into the central chamber of the Philosopher's Heart.
For a heartbeat, everything went silent.
Then-
It beat.
Louder.
Stronger.
Alive.
The fractured guardian dissolved-not in agony, but release.
Its smoke coiled gently before dispersing into nothing.
The Heart stabilized.
Light softened.
Lyra sagged-but Elias caught her again.
Their faces inches apart.
"You could have died," he breathed.
"So could you."
The Heart pulsed steadily behind them.
Different now.
Balanced.
Elias looked at it-and for the first time, there was no obsession in his eyes.
Only awe.
"It forgave me," he whispered.
Lyra smiled faintly. "It understood you."
He looked at her then.
Not as a catalyst.
Not as leverage.
But as something irreplaceable.
Below them, the fissure sealed.
Far in Ashbourne Hollow, the black veins along crop roots began to recede.
And in a distant manor, Lord Dorian watched his scrying orb fracture with a sharp crack.
His expression darkened.
"So," he murmured coldly. "You've accelerated."
He turned toward the capital skyline.
"Then I will escalate."
Back in the tower, Lyra and Elias remained standing close-closer than before.
The storm clouds finally began to thin.
A faint sliver of moonlight broke through the glass.
The Philosopher's Heart glowed softly between gold and silver.
Not weapon.
Not tool.
Something new.
Something becoming.
Elias brushed a stray strand of hair from Lyra's face without thinking.
She stilled-but didn't pull away.
"We're bound to this now," he said quietly.
"To each other?" she asked.
His breath caught.
The Heart beat once-resonant, certain.
"Yes," he answered.
Outside, the kingdom shifted-subtle, unseen.
Destiny was no longer a straight path.
It was a weaving.
And at its center stood a golden heart that no longer beat alone.
The Philosopher's Heart did not sleep.
It pulsed through the night like a second moon suspended within the tower's apex chamber-steady, resonant, aware.
Lyra lay awake on a narrow cot Elias had reluctantly conjured near the laboratory hearth. She had insisted on remaining close to the Heart after the creature's dissolution. Not because she feared another breach-but because she felt it.
A tether.
Subtle. Warm.
Alive.
Across the chamber, Elias stood at the balcony overlooking the capital. He had not moved in nearly an hour.
"You're staring at it like it insulted you," Lyra murmured into the dim light.
"It nearly destroyed the tower," he replied without turning.
"It nearly freed what you trapped."
His shoulders stiffened.
The words were not cruel.
But they were true.
He finally faced her.
"I did what I believed necessary."
"And now?"
His gaze drifted to the Heart.
"Now I am reconsidering the definition of necessary."
Lyra sat up slowly.
"That creature wasn't evil."
"It was unstable."
"It was hurting."
He studied her quietly.
"You feel its remnants."
She nodded.
"Not anger. Not vengeance. Relief."
The Heart pulsed once-as if in confirmation.
Elias descended the steps toward the center of the chamber.
"I designed the early resonance core to extract grief and refine it into structured energy," he said carefully. "Emotion stripped of chaos."
"You tried to distill sorrow."
"Yes."
"You can't," Lyra said gently. "Sorrow isn't poison. It's weight."
He inhaled slowly.
"And what would you know of weight?"
Her gaze darkened-not with anger, but memory.
"My mother died in winter when I was twelve. Fever took her in three days. The healers tried everything."
Elias stilled.
"I remember begging the earth to give her back," she continued. "I poured magic into her hands until I couldn't stand."
"And?"
"She was still gone."
The words hung between them-raw and honest.
"You didn't build a tower," Elias said quietly.
"No," Lyra replied. "I planted a garden."
Silence wrapped around them-not heavy, but reflective.
The Heart glowed softer now.
Balanced.
As if absorbing not only power-but understanding.
Morning brought unsettling news.
A messenger hawk struck the tower's outer ward with frantic urgency.
Elias dissolved the protective barrier just long enough to catch the parchment tied to its leg.
Lyra watched his expression shift as he read.
"What is it?"
"Ashbourne Hollow."
Her chest tightened.
"Speak."
"Dorian's men have arrived," Elias said evenly. "Under the guise of royal inspection."
Lyra's pulse pounded.
"They know the curse is lifting."
"They suspect the source," he corrected.
"And they're looking for leverage."
He didn't need to say her name.
She was leverage.
Lyra moved toward the stairwell.
"I'm going home."
Elias stepped in front of her.
"No."
"They're my people."
"And Dorian will expect that response."
"I won't hide while he threatens them."
"You won't walk into a trap."
They stood inches apart.
"You don't command me," she said quietly.
"No," he replied. "But I can reason with you."
"Then reason."
"If Dorian cannot control the Heart, he will attempt to destabilize it," Elias said. "And you are integral to its stability."
"My village is integral to me."
The words cut through the air.
He faltered.
She saw it.
The conflict.
Finally, he exhaled.
"We go together."
Lyra blinked.
"You would leave the tower?"
"I would not send you alone."
The admission settled between them-unexpected, unguarded.
She nodded once.
"Then we leave now."
Ashbourne Hollow looked smaller from the ridge than Lyra remembered.
Not diminished-just fragile.
Dorian's crimson banners hung at the village square. Armed soldiers stood beside the well, speaking with forced civility to wary townsfolk.
Lyra felt anger coil low in her chest.
Elias's presence at her side was quiet but unmistakable-silver magic coiled beneath his skin like restrained lightning.
"Let me speak first," he murmured.
She arched a brow.
"Afraid I'll set something on fire?"
"Yes."
Despite everything, she smiled faintly.
They descended into the square together.
Conversations halted.
Whispers spread.
"Lyra."
Her name rippled through the villagers-relief, fear, hope tangled together.
Dorian stepped forward from the steps of the apothecary.
His smile was polished.
"How touching," he drawled. "The prodigal herbalist returns-with company."
Elias inclined his head slightly.
"Lord Kalt."
"Alchemist."
The tension between them was almost visible.
Dorian's gaze shifted to Lyra.
"I was inquiring after unusual magical disturbances," he said smoothly. "Your village has been... fortunate."
"Fortune favors resilience," Lyra replied evenly.
"Indeed."
His eyes flicked between them.
"You've accelerated progress."
"We've corrected a mistake," Elias said.
Dorian's smile thinned.
"Ah. Accountability. How noble."
The villagers watched nervously.
Lyra stepped forward.
"You have no jurisdiction here," she said firmly.
Dorian's expression cooled.
"I represent the crown."
"You represent ambition."
A few villagers inhaled sharply.
Elias subtly shifted closer to her-not restraining, but ready.
Dorian descended the steps.
"Be careful, Miss Ashborne," he said softly. "Power is safest when aligned with governance."
"Power is safest when balanced," she replied.
For a moment, the world narrowed to the four of them-the villagers, the soldiers, the sky itself holding breath.
Then-
A child screamed.
Everyone turned.
At the edge of the square, the earth cracked.
Black veins spidered through the cobblestones.
Lyra's stomach dropped.
"That shouldn't-" Elias began.
The fissure widened.
From within rose dark vapor-thicker than before.
Not a guardian.
Not fractured.
Something deeper.
Dorian stepped back instinctively.
"So," he murmured, interest sharpening. "It appears your correction was incomplete."
The ground erupted.
A massive serpentine form surged upward-scaled in obsidian shadow, eyes blazing molten gold.
The villagers scattered.
Lyra didn't.
She ran toward it.
"Lyra!" Elias shouted.
The serpent reared, towering above the square.
Its gaze locked onto her.
Recognition flickered.
The Heart's resonance.
"It's drawn to me," she realized.
"No," Elias corrected, racing to her side. "It's drawn to the tether."
Dorian watched from a safe distance-calculating.
The serpent struck.
Elias intercepted with a shield of shimmering silver.
The impact blasted both of them backward.
Lyra scrambled up.
"We can't fight it the same way!"
Elias rose beside her, breath ragged.
"It's not fully formed."
"It's fear given shape," she said.
The serpent lunged again.
This time, Lyra didn't shield.
She stepped forward.
And opened her magic.
Gold radiated outward-not sharp, not forceful.
Warm.
Steady.
The serpent faltered mid-strike.
Its molten eyes flickered.
"You were bound without understanding," she whispered.
The creature hissed-but not in rage.
In confusion.
Elias felt it too-the instability trembling through the air.
He moved beside her-not ahead.
Silver magic unfurled, weaving carefully around her gold.
Not dominating.
Supporting.
The two energies intertwined, forming a luminous lattice around the serpent.
It writhed-then slowed.
The black veins across the square began to recede.
Dorian's expression darkened.
"Fascinating," he murmured.
The serpent's massive form began to dissolve-not violently, but gradually-like smoke carried on wind.
As it faded, a shard of dark crystal clattered onto the cobblestones.
Elias approached cautiously.
He knelt, examining it.
"Residual containment matrix," he said grimly. "Fragments I failed to retrieve."
Lyra looked at him.
"You didn't just bury grief," she said softly. "You buried pieces of yourself."
His throat tightened.
Dorian stepped forward once more.
"You see?" he said lightly. "Unregulated magic endangers everyone."
Lyra turned sharply.
"And regulated greed doesn't?"
The villagers murmured agreement.
Dorian's jaw flexed.
"You cannot protect them indefinitely," he said quietly. "And when the Heart completes-its allegiance will determine the kingdom's future."
"It already has," Elias replied coldly.
Dorian's eyes flicked between them.
Something unreadable passed through his expression.
Then he smiled faintly.
"Very well. Continue your experiment."
He turned away.
"But know this-when power reshapes fate, it reshapes thrones as well."
With that, he signaled his men to withdraw.
Silence slowly reclaimed the square.
Lyra exhaled shakily.
Elias rose beside her.
"You were reckless," he said quietly.
"You followed me."
"Yes."
She met his gaze.
"And you didn't try to control the magic."
"No."
The admission lingered between them.
The villagers began approaching-gratitude in their eyes.
But Lyra's attention remained on Elias.
"You're changing," she said softly.
He studied her.
"Am I?"
"You didn't try to command it."
"I couldn't."
"Why?"
He hesitated.
Because the truth felt too large.
"Because I trusted you," he said at last.
Her breath caught.
The words were simple.
But profound.
Above them, clouds began to part.
Sunlight filtered through for the first time in days.
The black veins vanished completely from the square.
The air felt lighter.
Not cured.
Not finished.
But healing.
Elias looked toward the distant silhouette of his tower.
"The Heart grows stronger with each fragment reclaimed," he said thoughtfully.
"And so do we," Lyra replied.
Their hands brushed-not accidental this time.
The golden thread between them pulsed.
Alive.
Unbreakable.
And somewhere deep beneath the capital-far below stone and soil-something ancient shifted once more.
Not enraged.
Not bound.
Watching.
Waiting.
The ride back to the capital was quieter than the journey out.
Not because there was nothing to say.
But because too much had changed.
Lyra sat astride the borrowed mare, the wind tangling through her dark hair as the countryside blurred past in muted gold and green. The land felt different now. Lighter in Ashbourne Hollow-yes-but deeper currents stirred beneath the surface. Magic no longer trembled in fear. It pulsed.
Awake.
Beside her, Elias rode in thoughtful silence.
He had not resumed his usual emotional distance. If anything, he seemed more present-more aware of her in a way that made the space between them feel charged.
"You're analyzing something," Lyra said at last.
"I'm recalculating," he replied.
"Those aren't the same."
"They often are."
She smiled faintly.
He glanced at her, and for a moment, the guarded edge in his gaze softened.
"The fragments," he said. "Each one that resurfaces is more coherent than the last."
"Because they're no longer fractured by force," she replied. "You're not suppressing them."
He nodded slowly.
"When I first designed the resonance core, I believed emotion to be volatile contamination. Something to isolate and purify."
"And now?"
He looked at her fully.
"Now I suspect it is the missing architecture."
The wind shifted, carrying the distant scent of rain.
They crested the final hill before the capital.
The Alchemist's Tower rose in the distance-dark stone threaded with faint gold veins that shimmered even from afar.
Lyra felt the tether tighten.
The Heart knew they were near.
"It's stronger," she murmured.
"Yes."
"And not just from the fragments."
He didn't answer.
But he didn't need to.
They both knew the truth.
The Heart was stabilizing because they were.
The tower doors opened before they reached them.
Not as a defense.
As a welcome.
Lyra stepped inside first this time.
The air hummed warmly around her, no longer cold and sterile. The sigils along the walls glowed steady-not reactive, but harmonious.
Elias paused just inside the threshold.
"It's integrating," he observed.
"With us," Lyra replied.
They ascended together to the apex chamber.
The Philosopher's Heart shone brighter than it ever had-no longer skeletal, no longer incomplete. The fragment retrieved from the serpent now rested seamlessly within its central chamber, crystalline veins branching outward like living arteries.
It beat once as they entered.
Deep.
Resonant.
Lyra exhaled softly.
"It feels... aware."
Elias approached cautiously, though there was no fear in him now.
Only reverence.
"The energy flow has equalized," he said, studying the sigils orbiting the construct. "Gold and silver harmonics are balanced."
Lyra tilted her head.
"You're speaking like it's mathematics."
"It is," he replied.
"And it's not."
That earned the faintest curve of his lips.
He reached toward the Heart-but stopped just short of contact.
Lyra stepped beside him.
Together, without speaking, they placed their hands upon its surface.
This time, there was no violent surge.
No explosion.
Only warmth.
The Heart responded-not by drawing from them, but by synchronizing.
Their pulses aligned.
Gold and silver light intertwined, spiraling inward rather than outward.
For a brief, breathless moment, Lyra felt something else-beyond Elias, beyond herself.
A presence.
Ancient.
Curious.
Watching through the lattice of magic.
She inhaled sharply.
"Do you feel that?"
"Yes," Elias whispered.
The presence did not threaten.
It observed.
Then-
A vision unfurled between them.
Not forced.
Invited.
They stood within a vast hall of shifting light. Not the tower. Not the forest.
Something older.
Golden pillars stretched endlessly upward, carved with runes predating any kingdom. At the center of the hall floated a luminous core-vast and radiant.
A primordial Heart.
Lyra's breath caught.
"This isn't ours," she murmured.
"No," Elias agreed quietly. "It's the origin."
The presence moved through the hall like a current of wind.
A voice-not spoken, but understood-echoed through the space.
Creation requires balance.
Power without compassion fractures.
Compassion without structure dissolves.
Together, they endure.
The vision rippled.
Lyra felt Elias's hand tighten slightly against hers.
"This is what you were trying to replicate," she said.
"Yes."
"But you were building it alone."
The presence shifted-focusing on them now.
On their intertwined magic.
On the tether that bound them.
The hall began to fade.
One final pulse reverberated through them both.
Guard what you awaken.
Then the vision collapsed.
They stood once more in the apex chamber.
The Heart glowed brighter than ever.
Elias stepped back slowly, breath unsteady.
"That was not a hallucination."
"No," Lyra said softly. "It was recognition."
He ran a hand through his hair, composure cracking at the edges.
"The Heart is not merely an artifact," he murmured. "It is a conduit."
"For something larger."
"Yes."
A heavy silence followed.
If Dorian believed he was pursuing political dominance, he had no idea what he was truly circling.
Lyra moved toward the balcony.
Storm clouds gathered once more over the capital-but they felt different this time.
Charged.
Anticipatory.
"You said reshaping fate would change thrones," she said quietly.
"It would."
"And if the throne isn't meant to stand?"
Elias joined her at the railing.
"Then the kingdom will resist."
Below, movement stirred in the streets.
Red banners.
More than before.
Lyra's stomach tightened.
"Dorian isn't retreating."
"No," Elias agreed. "He's consolidating."
As if summoned by their awareness, a sudden pulse of dark energy rippled through the city.
The Heart flared in response.
Not defensive.
Alert.
Lyra turned sharply.
"What did he do?"
Elias's gaze darkened.
"He's forcing instability."
The tower trembled.
Far across the capital, a spire cracked.
A surge of shadow magic erupted upward like a spear piercing the sky.
Screams echoed faintly on the wind.
Lyra's pulse pounded.
"He's tearing the ley lines," she realized.
"Yes."
"To force the Heart to react."
The chamber filled with golden light.
The Heart beat faster-responding to the rupture in magical balance.
Elias faced it.
"If we intervene directly, it will amplify us."
"And if we don't?"
"It may destabilize."
They locked eyes.
No more hesitation.
No more calculation.
Only choice.
Lyra stepped forward first.
"I trust you," she said quietly.
The words hit him harder than any accusation ever had.
He stepped beside her.
"And I you."
They placed their hands against the Heart once more.
This time, they did not brace.
They opened.
Gold surged through Lyra like sunlight through roots.
Silver coiled through Elias like lightning harnessed to will.
The Heart expanded-not physically, but energetically.
Its pulse radiated outward across the capital in a wave of luminous equilibrium.
Where shadow magic tore through the ley lines, golden threads wove over it.
Not crushing.
Balancing.
The cracked spire stabilized.
The dark spear of energy dissolved into harmless mist.
In his manor, Dorian staggered as his ritual circle shattered beneath him.
"What-" he hissed.
The scrying orb before him burst into harmless shards of glass.
Back in the tower, Lyra felt the city's magic settle into alignment.
The wave receded.
The Heart slowed.
The chamber fell quiet.
She exhaled shakily.
Elias caught her shoulders to steady her.
"You held the expansion," he murmured.
"So did you."
They stood close-closer than ever before.
Not out of necessity.
Out of gravity.
"I was wrong," he said softly.
"About what?"
"Emotion is not volatility."
Her breath caught.
"It's resonance."
The word lingered between them like a promise.
Below, the capital steadied.
The red banners still hung.
Dorian still plotted.
But something had shifted irrevocably.
The people would feel it.
Balance restored.
Power shared.
Lyra glanced at the Heart one more time.
It glowed with quiet certainty.
Not weapon.
Not ambition.
Guardianship.
"We've awakened something ancient," she whispered.
Elias nodded.
"And now," he said, gaze turning toward the horizon where Dorian's manor stood silhouetted against gathering dusk, "we must protect it."
The wind rose again-stronger this time.
Not foreboding.
Resolute.
And far beyond the borders of the kingdom, deep within lands untouched by crown or tower, a faint answering pulse stirred in response.
The Golden Heart of Ashborne was no longer an experiment.
It was a beacon.
And the world had begun to notice.