LOGINThe Moonwell sat there, still and quiet, the surface of the water undisturbed, reflecting the faint light that filtered in from above in a soft, silver glow. There was no visible source, no stream feeding into it, no movement to suggest where it came from or where it went.
It simply existed.
Unchanging.
Untouched.
The air around it felt different, heavier, but not oppressive, something deeper, something that settled into the space and held it there.
Silas slowed as he approached, his grip tightening slightly around Celeste as if instinct alone recognized that this place mattered, that whatever came next would decide everything.
“What do I do?” he asked, his voice lower now, quieter in a way that matched the space around them.
The medic stepped forward, her gaze fixed on the water. “We don’t force anything,” she said. “We let it react.”
Cedric nodded once. “The well chooses how it responds.”
Silas looked down at Celeste.
Her breathing was still uneven.
**
Silas stepped into the well without hesitation, the water rising around him in complete silence, undisturbed in a way that felt wrong the moment he entered it, because there was no ripple, no shift, not even the faintest acknowledgment that something had broken its surface. It did not behave like water at all. It did not part for him or react to his weight. Instead, it remained perfectly still, like a sheet of glass that simply allowed him through without ever truly changing.
He adjusted Celeste in his arms with careful precision, making sure her body was supported evenly so nothing strained the wound in her chest, his focus entirely fixed on her as if the rest of the cavern had ceased to exist.
“She has to be fully submerged,” the medic said from behind him, her voice quieter now, more controlled, as though even speaking too loudly here might disturb something fragile. “Let the water take her. Don’t force anything.”
Silas gave a small nod, though his eyes never left Celeste.
Then he began to lower her.
His movements were slow and deliberate, guided by instinct more than instruction, because there was no room for error in this moment. The instant the water touched her, it did not break or shift as it should have. There was no splash, no ripple spreading outward. Instead, it accepted her completely, as though she had always belonged within it.
And then the change came.
The water began to glow.
At first it was faint, barely noticeable, but it spread quickly, a soft silver light forming around her body and growing brighter the deeper she sank beneath the surface. The glow filled the cavern, reflecting off the stone walls and casting everything in a muted, almost dreamlike light that felt both calm and unsettling at the same time.
Silas did not let go.
He held her just beneath the surface, his arms steady, his grip firm, anchoring her to something real even as everything about this place felt anything but.
But she didn’t sink.
She didn’t float the way a body should.
Instead, she hovered, suspended in the water as if gravity no longer applied to her at all, as if the well itself had chosen to hold her there rather than allow her to drift. It didn’t look like water was supporting her. It looked like something else entirely.
For a brief moment, it seemed like it was working.
Her breathing steadied, becoming more even than it had been since the seizure had taken hold of her body, and the tension that had been etched into her form began to ease, just slightly, enough for hope to slip into the room.
The dark seepage from her wound slowly disappeared.
Lysandra stepped closer to the edge of the well, her voice quiet, almost afraid to disturb what she was seeing. “It’s helping her…”
But the medic didn’t respond.
Because something wasn’t right.
The glow flickered.
It was subtle at first, just a brief falter in the steady light, but then it happened again, stronger this time, enough to draw immediate attention.
Silas noticed instantly, his focus snapping from Celeste’s face to the shifting light around her. “What’s happening?”
The medic’s expression tightened, her eyes narrowing slightly as she watched. “It shouldn’t be doing this.”
The light flickered again, uneven now, breaking apart in small, unstable pulses that lacked any kind of rhythm or control, and whatever sense of calm had settled over the space began to unravel.
Then Celeste’s markings started to fade.
Slowly at first, almost imperceptible, but unmistakable.
The silver lines beneath her skin dimmed, their glow weakening as if something was draining the life out of them instead of restoring it, and the longer it continued, the more obvious it became that this wasn’t healing.
Cedric stepped forward, his voice low, edged with tension. “This isn’t right.”
The water reacted. Not on the surface, which remained perfectly still, unchanged and unmoving. But beneath it, it began to thrash.
The glow twisted violently around her, no longer soft or controlled but chaotic, unstable, as if something deep within the well was rejecting her presence rather than accepting it. The light surged and broke apart in uneven waves, clashing against itself without any clear pattern.
Victoria’s voice wavered as she stepped forward. “What do we do?”
No one answered, because no one knew.
Silas tightened his hold on Celeste, his grip unyielding as the water churned around her, the force of it pressing against his arms even though the surface above them remained completely still, untouched by the chaos beneath.
“Stay with me,” he said quietly, his voice steady despite everything shifting around them. “Celeste, stay with me.”
Her body didn’t respond.
The markings continued to fade, breaking apart piece by piece until only faint traces remained beneath her skin, flickering weakly as if they were struggling to hold on.
The glow flickered harder. The water surged again and instinct took over.
Silas tried to pull her up. His arms tightened as he shifted his weight, trying to lift her from where she hovered beneath the surface, his muscles tensing as he put force behind the movement, but she didn’t move. Not even slightly.
His grip didn’t slip. He was still holding her. But it felt like something else was holding her too.
Something stronger.
“I can’t… I can’t move her,” he yelled out, strain finally breaking into his voice.
The words landed heavily in the silence.
Silas tried again, adjusting his stance, pulling harder this time, putting everything he had into lifting her out of the well.
Nothing.
She remained exactly where she was, suspended in place as though she had been anchored there by something unseen, something that refused to let her go.
“What do you mean you can’t move her?” Calix demanded from behind them, tension bleeding into his voice.
Silas’s jaw tightened. “I’m holding her, but it’s like something's got a hold of her.”
The water surged again beneath her, violent and erratic, the glow twisting around her form as though it were fighting against itself, and yet the surface above remained perfectly still, untouched, unchanged, as if none of it was happening.
Cedric’s expression darkened. “The well is rejecting her…”
The words barely had time to settle before everything shifted again.
The glow flickered wildly…
Then vanished.
Completely.
The thrashing beneath the water stopped just as suddenly, the violent movement cutting off in an instant, leaving nothing behind.
The well returned to stillness. Absolute, unnatural stillness. As if nothing had ever happened at all.
And Celeste’s markings. Gone.
Every last trace of silver erased from her skin as though they had never existed.
Silas froze, his grip still firm around her, his breath catching as the weight of what he was seeing settled in.
And then… Her hair began to change.
It didn’t happen all at once, and it wasn’t dramatic. There was no flash of light, no surge of power. It was quieter than that, more unsettling. The silver strands that had always defined her, always marked her as something other, something chosen, began to darken, the color draining out of them just as it had from the markings beneath her skin.
It started at the roots.
Faint at first, barely noticeable beneath the dim light of the cavern, but it spread quickly, the pale silver shifting into a muted gray before deepening into something darker, something heavier, until strand by strand, her hair lost its glow entirely.
Black.
Not a soft shade, not something that caught the light the way it once had.
Just black.
As though the last visible piece of what she had been was gone.
Silas stared down at her, his grip tightening slightly as if he could hold onto something that was already slipping away.
Then suddenly she moved. Not because of him. Not because he had finally managed to pull her free. But because whatever had been holding her there… was gone.
The resistance disappeared completely, and her body became weightless in his arms again, no longer suspended, no longer anchored, just… there.
But everything else… Was gone with it.
No glow. No reaction. No sign the well had ever responded to her at all.
Just silence.
Heavy and suffocating in its finality.
Silas looked down at her, his voice quieter now, stripped of everything but disbelief.
“Celeste…”
**
Silas stood there for a moment longer, unmoving, as if his body had not yet caught up to what had just happened, his arms still wrapped around her. The water behind him had already returned to its unnatural stillness, the same quiet, untouched surface that had greeted them when they first arrived, as if it had erased its own reaction, leaving no trace behind to prove it had ever tried to help her at all.
Slowly, carefully, he stepped away from the well, carrying Celeste out of the water and onto solid ground, the soaked fabric of his clothes clinging to him as droplets fell in quiet, steady rhythms against the stone. She felt lighter than before, not in a physical way, but in something deeper, something that made his chest tighten as he adjusted his hold on her, as if whatever had once grounded her in this world had been stripped away, leaving behind something fragile.
No one spoke at first.
There was nothing to say.
Lysandra moved closer, her hand lifting instinctively before settling gently against Celeste’s cheek, brushing away damp strands of now-dark hair with a care that bordered on reverence, her expression composed but tight with restrained emotion.
“She’s cold,” she said softly.
The medic was already moving, her focus sharp and unwavering as she checked Celeste’s pulse, her fingers pressing lightly at her neck, then her wrist, measuring each beat with practiced precision.
“It’s faint, but steady,” she said. “She’s still here.”
Cedric exhaled slowly, though the tension in his posture did not ease. “The well didn’t heal her.”
“It did, but only on the outside,” the medic replied quietly. “But it stopped her from slipping further. That’s what matters right now.”
Silas didn’t respond. He couldn’t. Because the absence was louder than anything else. The bond was gone. There was no trace of it left inside him, no echo, no thread to follow, nothing that connected him to her the way it always had, and yet he held her just as tightly, as if refusing to acknowledge that loss would somehow keep it from being real.
“We need to move her,” the medic said after a moment, already stepping back to gather what she needed. “She needs warmth, stability, and rest. Whatever happened in there… her body is still trying to process it.”
Silas nodded once.
Without waiting for further instruction, he adjusted his hold on Celeste and began moving toward the exit, his steps steady despite the weight of everything pressing down around him. The others followed quickly, the heavy doors of the chamber closing behind them with a low, final sound that echoed through the corridor like something sealing itself away once more.
The walk back through the castle felt longer than before.
Quieter.
Cedric led the way again, clearing the path ahead, his voice low and controlled as he directed guards aside, while Lysandra stayed close to Silas’s side, her hand occasionally brushing against Celeste’s arm as if to reassure herself that she was still there.
The medic disappeared briefly down a separate corridor, returning moments later with a small bundle of herbs and supplies gathered hastily but with purpose, her movements efficient as she rejoined them without breaking stride.
Silas pushed the door open to the room him and Celeste had shared, stepping inside and moving straight toward the bed, lowering Celeste onto it with the same care he had shown since the moment he picked her up. He adjusted her position, so she lay comfortably, ensuring no pressure pulled at the wound, his hand lingering briefly at her side before he finally stepped back just enough to give the medic room to work.
“Blankets,” the medic said, already moving.
Leo was quick to respond, pulling them from the side and layering them over Celeste carefully, tucking them in around her to trap what little warmth her body still held.
The medic set her supplies down and began working without pause, crushing the herbs together in a small dish, releasing a faint, calming scent into the air as she mixed them with practiced ease.
“This will help stabilize her breathing and keep her body from reacting too sharply if anything shifts again,” she explained, her voice steady. “It won’t fix everything, but it will give her a better chance to rest without her system fighting itself.”
Calix watched closely, his arms folded lightly in front of him as he stayed near the bedside, his gaze never leaving Celeste.
“What do you need from us?” he asked.
“Keep the room calm,” the medic said. “No sudden noise, no overwhelming her if she wakes. Her body is fragile right now, even if the wound has stopped worsening.”
Silas stepped closer again, his attention fixed entirely on Celeste as the medic finished preparing the mixture, placing it near her so the scent could reach her gradually, the faint aroma settling into the space without overpowering it.
Celeste lay still beneath the blankets, her breathing uneven but steady enough to hold onto, her darkened hair resting against the pillow in stark contrast to what it had been before, a silent reminder of everything that had been taken from her.
Silas reached for her hand again without thinking, his fingers wrapping gently around hers, grounding himself in the simple fact that she was still here, even if everything else had changed.
“We’ll figure it out,” he said quietly, though it sounded more like a promise than a statement. “Whatever this is… we’ll figure it out.”
Morning arrived colder than the day before.The fire had burned low sometime during the night, leaving behind more ash than warmth while frost gathered faintly along the edges of nearby stone. Snow still covered the mountains beyond camp in smooth layers untouched by movement, pale morning light stretching quietly between the trees while colder wind moved softly through the ridge above them.Celeste woke slowly.For a moment, she stayed where she was beneath the blanket, staring toward the gray light filtering through the trees while the memory from the night before settled uneasily at the edge of her thoughts.White fur.Moonlight.A howl that had felt familiar in ways she still could not explain.She still wasn’t entirely sure if she had imagined it.The mountains did strange things to silence. Shadows stretched differently here. Distance played tricks. Maybe exhaustion had simply caught up with her.Still…The image lingered.Too clear to fully dismiss.Movement nearby pulled her a
The rest of the afternoon moved differently after the ridge collapsed.No one said much about it at first, though the shift lingered quietly beneath everything. Nobody looked frightened exactly, but everyone had noticed the same thing.Celeste had known.The path narrowed again as they moved higher through the mountains, snow crunching steadily beneath careful steps while wind carried colder air through the trees. Conversation stayed quieter than before until Leo eventually broke the silence like he physically could not tolerate it any longer.“To be fair,” he said, glancing back toward Celeste, “your instincts in snow were always annoyingly good.”Celeste looked up slightly, “What does that mean?”Leo shrugged, “It means winter was your thing.”“That sounded weird,” Victoria muttered.“You know what I mean,” He looked back toward Celeste again, “You used to disappear during storms all the time."Victoria blinked, “I’ll never understand leaving the warmth of a building.”Leo ignored h
Morning settled slowly over the mountains, pale light stretching across the cave entrance while the last traces of last night’s storm drifted quietly from snow-heavy branches outside. The wind had softened sometime before sunrise, though cold still lingered in the air strongly enough that stepping too close to the cave opening reminded them winter had not gone anywhere. Beyond the shelter of stone, the world remained covered in untouched white, smooth enough that yesterday’s trail had disappeared entirely beneath fresh snowfall.Celeste woke to silence.For several long moments, she simply lay there beneath the blanket, staring absently toward the uneven cave ceiling while sleep slowly settled away. Somewhere nearby, dying embers cracked softly beneath ash. Water shifted faintly inside one of the medic’s pots. Someone farther back breathed deeply enough that they were still asleep.And for the first time in days, there was nothing else.No whisper.The absence unsettled her more than
By the time the sun had started sinking behind the mountains, the weather had turned worse.Snow came down harder now, thick enough that visibility had started disappearing with every passing hour while the narrow mountain paths became harder to follow beneath fresh layers of white. The wind had sharpened too, cutting harder through the trees until even the wolves slowed slightly against it.Celeste had stopped trying to guess how much time had passed.The mountains stretched endlessly around them, one ridge blending into another beneath snow heavy enough to make the world feel smaller somehow. Everything beyond the path ahead blurred into white, the cold growing harsher the higher they climbed.Or at least it seemed harsher for everyone else.The medic had wrapped herself tighter into heavier layers hours ago while Victoria had spent the better part of the afternoon loudly regretting every decision that led her here.“I just think,” Victoria said from somewhere behind them, her voice
Celeste barely slept.Every time she drifted close to sleep, the whisper found its way back to her, quiet enough that she almost convinced herself she had imagined it the first time.Don’t go.Sometimes it sounded distant, soft enough to blend with the wind moving outside the balcony doors. Other times it felt closer, quieter in a way that unsettled her more, as if someone stood just beyond reach waiting patiently for her to listen.By the time pale morning light spilled through the windows, she had stopped trying to sleep altogether.The room remained quiet around her. The fire had burned low sometime during the night, leaving only soft warmth behind while snow drifted steadily across the mountains outside. Somewhere deeper inside the castle, the day had already started moving, footsteps faint through distant halls and muffled voices carrying just enough to remind her the world had not stopped simply because everything inside her felt uncertain.Silas still slept.Or at least, he loo
The room stayed quiet for a moment after Victoria’s words settled.Someone who might actually know what the moonstone did to her.Hope had become complicated lately. Every time they thought they had found something useful, it led nowhere, leaving everyone more exhausted than before. Even now, no one looked relieved exactly. Careful, maybe. Hesitant. Like they were afraid to trust anything too quickly in case it disappeared again.Silas crossed his arms loosely as he looked between Cedric and Victoria. “Start from the beginning.”Victoria stepped further into the room, setting the heavy book down on the table near the fire. Dust shifted lightly into the air from the worn cover.“His name is Elias Thornridge,” she said. “Apparently he spent years studying relics. Real relics. Not stories or theories, actual records.”Cedric nodded once. “Moonstone, Sunstone, celestial artifacts. Anything tied to old magic.”At the mention of the second name, Celeste looked up slightly.“Sunstone?” she as
The air outside felt different. Celeste noticed it the moment she stepped beyond the doors, her pace slowing slightly as if her body needed a second to adjust to something it should have already understood. The garden stretched out in front of her, wide and carefully taken care of. The paths wind
The world outside was waking up, but inside the room, everything still felt suspended, like time had decided to slow down and sit still for a while.Celeste hadn’t moved.She lay exactly where they had left her, blankets pulled up around her, dark hair spread across the pillow in a
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
"Who are you?"Celeste’s gaze moved over them with a quiet, unsettling slowness, as though she were seeing each face for the first time and trying to decide what, if anything, they meant to her, and in that lingering silence it became painfully clear that nothing in the room reached her in the way i







