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Chapter Three

Author: Cast
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-04-07 12:00:10

The room had settled into a controlled quiet, the kind that did not come naturally but was instead held in place by careful restraint, as though every person inside understood that even the smallest disruption might undo whatever fragile balance Celeste’s body had finally reached. The faint scent of crushed herbs lingered in the air, subtle but constant, grounding the space in something tangible while everything else remained uncertain. Soft light filtered in through the tall windows, stretching across the floor and climbing partway up the bed where she lay, unmoving, beneath layers of blankets that had been carefully arranged to keep what little warmth her body held from slipping away.

Silas stood beside her for a long moment before finally lowering himself into the chair that had been pulled close to the bed, his movements quiet and deliberate, as if he were adjusting himself to the stillness rather than interrupting it. His hand remained wrapped loosely around hers, not tight enough to disturb her, but steady enough that he could feel the faint warmth of her skin, the subtle proof that she was still here. His gaze stayed fixed on her face, not searching for change, not expecting it, but unwilling to look away.

The medic moved with quiet efficiency at the side of the bed, checking Celeste’s breathing once more before adjusting the placement of the herbs she had prepared, ensuring that the calming scent would remain consistent without becoming overwhelming. She paused only briefly as she observed the slow rise and fall of Celeste’s chest, her focus sharp despite the absence of immediate urgency.

“Her body has stabilized for now,” she said, her voice low but steady, fitting naturally into the quiet of the room rather than breaking it. “The reaction we saw earlier has eased, and her system is no longer fighting itself the way it was.”

Lysandra stood across from Silas, her posture composed, her presence calm in a way that did not feel forced, but deliberate. Her hands rested lightly in front of her, though her attention never strayed from her daughter. “And internally?” she asked, her tone measured, carrying both patience and concern without letting either overpower the other.

The medic exhaled slowly, choosing her words with care. “That’s where the uncertainty remains,” she admitted. “The moonstone disrupted something deeper than the physical wound, and while the well helped prevent further damage, it didn’t restore what was lost. Her body has stopped rejecting itself, which is important, but that doesn’t mean it has fully settled into whatever state it’s in now.”

Cedric stood near the window, his arms folded loosely across his chest, his gaze shifting between Celeste and the space beyond the glass, as though he were balancing his attention between what was in front of him and what might come next. “So we wait,” he said, his voice even, though the weight behind it was clear.

“For now,” the medic confirmed. “Pushing her body further could do more harm than good. She needs time to stabilize without interference.”

Silas remained silent, his focus unwavering as he watched the subtle movements of Celeste’s breathing, holding onto that small rhythm as something steady in the middle of everything that was not. The absence of the bond was something he could not ignore, not because it was overwhelming, but because it was constant, a quiet emptiness that lingered beneath everything else, reminding him that something fundamental had changed in a way he could not yet understand.

Victoria shifted slightly near the foot of the bed, her arms loosely crossed as she leaned back against the wall, her usual ease replaced with something more subdued. “How long are we talking?” she asked, her voice softer than usual, as if she were careful not to disturb the fragile calm in the room.

The medic shook her head faintly. “There’s no clear answer to that,” she said. “It could be hours, it could be days. What matters is that her body is no longer deteriorating. That gives us something to work with.”

Lysandra stepped closer then, her hand lifting gently as she brushed her fingers through Celeste’s darkened hair, the change in color still unfamiliar even as she accepted it without hesitation. “She’s always been strong,” she said quietly. “Stronger than most realize.”

Cedric glanced toward her, something thoughtful passing through his expression before he looked back at Celeste. “Strength alone won’t guide her through this,” he said. “Not if what she’s lost is what defined her.”

Lysandra did not argue, but she did not concede either. “She is more than what defined her,” she replied, her voice calm but certain. “She always has been.”

The room fell quiet again after that, the conversation settling into something unspoken as each of them turned inward, processing what had happened in their own way.

The medic adjusted the herbs once more, then stepped back, her attention shifting between each of them briefly before returning to Celeste. “She needs rest more than anything right now,” she said. “A calm environment will help her body recover without triggering another reaction. Too much noise or pressure could set her back.”

Cedric nodded once, his decision coming easily. “Then we keep it quiet,” he said. “And we limit who stays.”

Calix, who had been standing near the doorway, let out a slow breath, his tension visible even in stillness. “We’re just supposed to leave her like this?” he asked, though his voice remained controlled.

“She’s not alone,” Lysandra said gently, her gaze flickering briefly toward Silas before returning to Celeste. “And she doesn’t need all of us surrounding her to heal.”

Victoria pushed herself away from the wall, her eyes lingering on Celeste for a moment longer before she turned toward the door. “I’ll be nearby,” she said quietly. “If anything changes.”

Leo followed her without hesitation, though his expression remained tight with concern as he glanced back once before stepping out. Calix hesitated the longest, his gaze fixed on Celeste in a way that suggested he didn’t trust leaving, but even he eventually gave a small nod before turning away, his footsteps slower as he exited the room.

Cedric remained where he was for a moment longer, his attention shifting toward Silas. “If anything changes,” he said, his voice steady, “you come for me immediately.”

Silas nodded once in acknowledgment, his grip on Celeste’s hand tightening slightly before easing again.

Lysandra was the last to move, her hand resting briefly over Celeste’s before she stepped back. “She’s not alone,” she said softly, though whether she was reminding Silas or herself was unclear. “None of us are going anywhere.”

Then she left, the door closing behind her with a soft, controlled sound that seemed louder than it should have in the quiet that followed.

Silas remained seated beside the bed, the room settling into stillness once more as the absence of movement became something familiar rather than unsettling. The faint scent of the herbs continued to fill the air, steady and grounding, while the soft light from the windows shifted slowly across the floor, marking the passage of time in a way that felt distant and unimportant.

He adjusted his position slightly, leaning forward just enough to rest his forearms against his knees while still keeping hold of her hand, his gaze never straying far from her face. The change in her was undeniable, not just in the loss of the markings or the shift in her hair, but in something less visible, something that could not be named but was felt all the same.

“You don’t have to wake up yet,” he said quietly, his voice low but steady, fitting naturally into the silence rather than breaking it. “Take whatever time you need.”

There was no response, but he hadn’t expected one.

The room remained quiet, the only sound the faint rhythm of her breathing and the distant, muffled movement of life continuing beyond the walls. Time passed without announcement, measured only by the shifting light and the gradual cooling of the air as the day moved forward.

At some point, the medic returned briefly, her steps soft as she reentered the room with additional herbs and a small cup of water, her presence careful and unobtrusive. She checked Celeste’s pulse again, then adjusted the placement of the herbs before stepping back.

“No change,” she said quietly. “But no decline either.”

Silas nodded, his focus never leaving Celeste.

“That’s good,” he said.

The medic studied him for a moment, as if weighing whether to say more, before simply nodding and stepping back again. “Call if anything shifts,” she said, then left as quietly as she had entered.

The silence returned, deeper this time, but no longer heavy.

Just still.

Silas leaned back slightly in the chair, his grip on her hand loosening just enough to shift his thumb over her knuckles in a slow, absent motion, grounding himself in something physical as the hours stretched quietly forward.

Outside, the light began to change, softening as the day edged toward evening, the shadows in the room growing longer and deeper, stretching across the floor and climbing the walls in slow, steady movement.

**

At some point during the night, exhaustion had finally caught up to Silas in a way that even he could not resist, his body giving in gradually rather than all at once, the tension in his shoulders easing as his posture shifted in the chair beside the bed. His hand had never left Celeste’s, even as sleep took him, his grip loosening just enough to remain gentle without breaking contact, as if some part of him refused to let go even in rest.

The room had remained undisturbed for hours.

The herbs continued to release their soft, steady scent into the air, keeping everything calm and grounded, while the lamps burned low, casting a muted glow that softened the edges of the room. Outside, the darkness of night had slowly given way to the faintest suggestion of morning, pale light beginning to creep through the curtains in thin, quiet lines.

The door opened carefully.

The medic stepped inside with practiced ease, her movements silent and deliberate as she carried a fresh bundle of herbs and a small tray of supplies meant for her morning check. She paused just inside the doorway for a moment, her eyes adjusting to the dim light as she took in the room.

Silas was still in the chair.

Asleep.

That alone was enough to tell her how long the night had been.

She moved forward quietly, setting her supplies down on the nearby table without making a sound, her attention shifting toward the bed as she prepared to begin her assessment.

And then she stopped.

The bed was empty.

For a moment, her mind refused to process it, as if the sight in front of her did not align with what she knew should be there. The blankets had been disturbed, pulled back just enough to show where Celeste had been lying, but she was no longer there.

The air shifted.

Not physically, but in a way that settled immediately into the medic’s awareness, something subtle but wrong, something that made her instincts sharpen in an instant.

Her gaze moved towards the balcony.

The doors stood open, the curtains stirring faintly with the early morning breeze, and just beyond them… Celeste.

She was sitting on the railing. Not perched carefully, not balanced in a way that suggested control, but seated in a way that felt too still, too quiet, her body angled toward the open air as if the drop below did not exist.

The medic’s breath slowed, her entire posture shifting as she took a careful step forward, her voice calm when she finally spoke.

“Celeste…” No reaction.

She remained exactly where she was, her posture unchanged, her hands resting loosely at her sides as she stared out into the distance, the early light catching faintly along the dark strands of her hair.

The medic took another step, slower this time.

“You shouldn’t be out there,” she said gently, her tone steady, measured in a way that avoided startling her. “Come down from the railing.”

Still nothing.

Silas stirred behind her.

At first, it was subtle, the shift of movement that came with waking, but something in the air had already changed, something that reached him before full awareness did. His hand moved instinctively, searching for hers where it had been, only to find empty space.

That was enough.

His eyes opened.

The moment he registered the bed…

Empty.

He was on his feet before the thought had fully formed, the chair scraping softly against the floor as he turned sharply, his gaze snapping toward the balcony.

And then he saw her.

For a single second, everything in him locked.

The sudden, overwhelming awareness of how close she was to the edge, how little separated her from the fall below, and how still she was in a way that didn’t feel natural.

“Celeste,” he said, his voice low but firm as he stepped forward, careful, controlled.

The medic lifted a hand slightly, a quiet signal for him to slow down.

“She hasn’t responded,” she murmured. “Don’t rush her.”

Silas exhaled slowly, forcing himself to steady his movement as he stepped closer, his eyes never leaving her.

“Hey…” he said, softer now. “Come down from there.”

For a moment, nothing changed.

Then Celeste moved after a moment. Slowly, deliberately, as if the motion itself required effort.

Her head turned. Her gaze landed on them. And something about it was wrong. Her eyes were open, but they didn’t focus the way they should have; the usual clarity absent, replaced with something distant, something unfixed, as though she were looking at them without truly seeing them.

The medic’s expression tightened slightly.

“Celeste,” she said again, a little firmer this time, though her tone remained calm. “Can you hear me?”

Celeste blinked once, slowly; it seemed delayed. Her head tilted just slightly, a small, almost imperceptible shift that suggested awareness without understanding.

Silas took another step forward, his voice steady despite the tension coiling beneath it. “You need to come back inside.”

There was a pause.

Then, just as slowly as she had turned toward them, Celeste shifted her weight.

For a brief moment, it looked like she might lean forward instead.

The medic’s breath stilled.

Silas’s body tensed.

But instead of falling, she moved back. Carefully.

Her feet found the edge of the balcony floor again, her movements slow, uncoordinated in a way that suggested she wasn’t fully present in them.

Silas closed the distance between them the moment she was within reach, his hand coming up to steady her arm, his grip firm but controlled as if afraid that too much force might break whatever fragile state she was in.

“I’ve got you,” he said quietly.

She didn’t pull away.

Didn’t react.

Her gaze drifted slightly, unfocused as it moved past him rather than settling on him, her expression empty in a way that felt wrong.

The medic stepped closer, her attention fixed entirely on Celeste now as she studied her carefully. “She’s not fully aware,” she said under her breath. “This isn’t normal waking.”

Silas’s jaw tightened slightly. “Sleepwalking?”

“Maybe,” the medic said, though there was hesitation in her voice. “Or it could be another effect of the moonstone. We don’t know enough yet to say for certain.”

Celeste swayed slightly where she stood.

Silas’s grip tightened just enough to keep her steady, his other hand coming up instinctively as he guided her gently back toward the bed.

“Easy,” he murmured. “Just stay with me.”

She didn’t resist.

But she didn’t help either.

Each step was slow, uncertain, her movements lacking the natural coordination they should have had, as if her body was following direction without understanding it.

The air around her felt different. Heavier. It felt like a pressure that clung to her, and once you got closer you could feel the weight of it too.

They reached the bed.

The medic moved quickly but carefully, pulling the blankets back as Silas helped lower Celeste down, guiding her gently onto the mattress, ensuring she was fully supported before easing his grip.

The moment her body settled, she went still again. Her breathing remained steady, but whatever awareness had flickered moments before seemed to fade just as quickly, her eyes slipping closed as if whatever had drawn her from sleep had released her just as easily.

The medic stepped in immediately, checking her pulse, her breathing, her reaction.

“She’s gone asleep,” she said quietly.

Silas didn’t move away.

His gaze remained fixed on her, his expression tight with something he didn’t try to hide.

“That wasn’t normal,” he said.

“No,” the medic agreed. “It wasn’t.”

She adjusted the blankets again, then reached for the herbs, replacing the ones from the night before with a fresh mixture, her movements more deliberate now, more cautious.

“We’ll need to monitor her more closely,” she continued. “If this is a side effect, we don’t know how often it will happen, or how severe it could become.”

Silas nodded faintly, though his focus never left Celeste.

“She was going to jump,” he said quietly.

The medic didn’t answer right away. Because she couldn’t be sure. And that uncertainty was worse than any clear answer.

Silas’s hand found Celeste’s again, his grip steady, but something about her felt different now; it felt darker and heavier.

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