Chapter 1626: Story 1626: The Bloom That Spoke in Shadows
The golden flower stood motionless at the crater’s heart—too perfect, too still.
Its petals shimmered with their own pulse, folding and unfolding in slow rhythm like the breathing of some hidden thing.
Zara couldn’t look away. The air around it hummed softly, whispering words she couldn’t quite hear.
“It’s calling,” she said under her breath.
“Not to us,” Damien murmured. “To them.”
The ground trembled again—gentle, like a sigh. All around, the mist began to twist and coil, forming fleeting silhouettes of figures that didn’t belong to this age. Shapes of men and women in tattered armor, their faces hollowed, eyes glowing faintly green. They knelt around the flower as if in ancient worship.
Zara clutched Damien’s arm. “Spirits?”
He shook his head. “No. Remnants. Echoes of the first fall.”
One of the figures turned toward them, its voice leaking through the air like oil through water.
“You unmade the god of bone,” it whispered. “But what grows in its place is no less hungry.”
The petals of the flower trembled, and veins of dark red spread through the golden surface. Light turned to blood.
Zara took a step forward despite Damien’s hand holding her back. “We didn’t destroy it,” she said. “We freed it. Maybe this is its true form.”
The ghostly figure’s jaw opened in something like laughter. “Freedom and hunger are the same thing, child of the Hollow Sun.”
The others began to fade back into the mist, but their laughter lingered, echoing through the valley like a thousand wings unfolding.
Then the flower moved.
Its stem twisted sharply, and the roots below erupted from the soil, spreading across the earth in glowing red lines that looked like veins. The golden glow vanished—replaced by a dim, throbbing crimson.
“Damien,” Zara said, stepping back, “it’s spreading!”
He raised his hand, light flickering weakly at his palm. The connection to the Hollow Sun was dim now—fading more each hour. Still, he forced the glow to life, sending a surge of light into the ground. The vines hissed, retreating slightly before hardening into crystal.
For a moment, the valley stilled. Then came the voice.
Not from the flower. From beneath it.
“You tore the marrow from the world,” it said, deep and resonant, “and planted your guilt in its grave.”
The ground cracked open, and a thin, clawed hand of translucent bone reached upward, grasping at the air.
Zara drew her blade of light, her breath trembling. “No... not again.”
But Damien’s eyes widened—not in fear, but recognition. “That voice... it’s not the god. It’s the world itself.”
The hand sank back into the earth, leaving behind a fissure glowing with molten gold.
Zara knelt beside it. “It’s bleeding.”
Damien touched her shoulder. “Then it’s alive.”
The flower’s red light dimmed, returning slowly to gold. Around them, the mist parted, revealing a trail leading deeper into the newborn forest.
“The world’s speaking,” Damien said quietly. “It wants us to follow.”
And as they stepped into the shimmering path, the golden flower whispered one last word into the wind—
“Return.”