LOGINElvanya's Pov
We worked all day, and Senna showed me every hall, every secret back stair, and all the rules I needed to know. We cleaned the east corridor and dusted the big stone statues, which were scary because they looked like wolves howling at the moon. Later, we went to the High Priest’s library. It was packed with old books, but Eldric wasn’t there, so we quickly left the water and walked away. Senna told me the High Priest always watches things carefully; she said he knew secrets and she didn’t like being near his rooms because he was quiet and quiet meant something bad. Senna didn’t talk much during the day. When she did, it was only about the rules, how to walk, how to stand, and where to hide if a beast happened to come by. She warned me that the King’s sister, Lira, was unpredictable; she might be kind one day but could hurt you the next. When the sun finally went down, Senna told me we were done for the day, and we went back to the laundry room. She gave me a small metal bowl. “Dinner. Eat it fast, get some sleep. We start again before dawn,” she said. The food was thin soup, it tasted like water and salt but I ate it all because I was hungry. I finished quickly and even licked my spoon clean, feeling a little ashamed, but hunger was stronger than pride. After that, Senna led me to the servant quarters, deep in the basement, down many dark stone stairs where the air was cold and damp. The place smelled like old stone and rot like poverty and fear. We stopped at a heavy wooden door that looked just like the one from the night before the door where they left me with the other girls. Senna opened the door, revealing a small room with stone walls and a stone floor. Six thin straw mattresses were laid on the floor. Five girls were already inside, sitting or lying down. As we entered, all of them looked up with tired, empty eyes. They didn’t move their faces, they looked like ghosts. “This is your room, Elvanya,” Senna said, pointing to the last mattress by the door. “Be quiet. Don’t talk after lights out, if you wake the King’s beasts with noise, you will be dead. All of you will be dead.” She said the last part loud so that every girl could hear, it was both a warning and a threat. The girls didn’t move or say a word. They only watched me, they didn’t say hello or offer anything. They were just surviving. Senna left the room, and the door shut heavily behind her. The loud click of the lock felt final, we were locked in. I was trapped. I walked over to the empty mattress, put my little bowl down, and sat on the hard straw. It was scratchy and thin and didn’t give me any warmth. I looked around at the girls. They all looked scared, no one spoke. It was completely silent except for slow breathing, and the fear of six girls felt heavy in the air. One girl, sitting across the room, looked at me and gave me a tiny, nervous smile. She had soft brown hair. She stood up slowly and walked over to me, holding a thin gray wool blanket that looked old. “You must be cold,” she whispered. “A little,” I whispered back. “Take this. The straw is hard, and the nights are very long down here.” She handed me the blanket, which was soft and warmer than the cold air. It felt good in my hands, it was the first kind thing anyone had done for me since I left home. “Thank you,” I said. “That’s kind. I’m grateful.” “I’m Mira.” I remembered her, she was the woman from the pantry who gave me the cleaning rag tip. “I’m Elvanya.” She sat on the floor next to my mattress and kept her voice very low. “You’re the new one for the King’s Hall. The one he bought.” “Yes. I started today.” “The High Hall, that’s bad, very bad.” She moved her hands in her lap and looked down. “Cordelia said you were alone with him and talked to him, and she was very angry.” “Yes. He told me to clean, he told me to get wine. He asked my name, he didn’t let me leave.” Mira shook her head slowly. “The King usually doesn’t talk to humans. He doesn’t see us, he just uses us. If he looks at you, that means something. He’s looking too close, when a beast looks too close, it’s never good.” “He didn’t hurt me,” I said, trying to convince myself this was good. “He didn’t hurt you today,” Mira fixed me. “That’s the best we get, a day without pain, a day we survive but he’s watching you. They all watch the new ones.” “Why do you say that? He is the King and can do anything. Why does he wait?” I needed to understand how he thought. Mira looked up at the ceiling. “He’s cruel. He likes breaking spirits, watching fear grow is a sport for him. Most girls who go up there don’t last six months. That’s the longest time, they die fast or get hurt badly and sent to the stables. The beasts are cruel, but the King is the worst. He’s cold and heartless, he’s the Alpha. Everyone fears him, we’re nothing. Less than dirt.” “How long have you been here, Mira?” “Eight months.” She looked at her hands. “I’m lucky. I work in the pantry, it’s safe. Sometimes it’s warm, i don’t see the King much, only the King’s sister sometimes and the Gamma Jaxian. The cooks are mostly human, it’s dirty work, but better than the High Hall, it's less dangerous.” “Jaxian, the Gamma,” I whispered. “Do you know a girl named Lily?” Mira looked around fast, her eyes darting over the sleeping girls. She leaned in close. “Shh, no names. We don’t talk about those who are gone. It’s too dangerous. If you’re caught asking about a girl taken by a high beast, they might think you’re planning something. They might think you’re a rebel spy.” “Is she safe?” I asked again. I needed to know something about Lily. “If a high beast claimed her, she’s used. Don’t think about her, you must only think about yourself, you must survive. We can’t help them, we can barely help ourselves. We have to focus on the next breath.” “Do you think I’ll last six months?” I asked. Mira looked at my silver hair and face. “You’re quiet, you listen. You look pale and weak, maybe that’s why he didn’t hurt you. He thinks you’ll break fast, you have to be strong inside. Don’t let him see you breaking, or he’ll enjoy it. You have to be granite.” She stood. “You should sleep now. We need strength for tomorrow, work starts early. We can’t afford to be tired, tired humans make mistakes, and mistakes mean death here.” She went to her mattress and lay down. The room fell silent again, the fear making it so. I lay down on the straw and pulled the thin blanket over me. It didn’t do much against the cold. The stone floor was hard beneath me, and the room felt like a cold stone box. I curled up small. I closed my eyes and tried to sleep. But I could not. Hours passed. It was the middle of the night, the darkest time. I heard nothing but the slow, even breathing of the girls asleep around me. I was the only one awake. I listened to the stillness. Then I heard something from the corridor. Very quiet, very slow footsteps. They were heavy, not the light steps of a human servant, but the heavy steps of a beast, a big beast. The sound was solid on the stone floor. I held my breath. The footsteps came closer to our door and then stopped right outside. I could feel the cold, sharp air even through the stone. A sudden dread filled me. I was terrified but didn’t move. I listened, i waited and didn’t even dare breathe. There was a tiny crack in the door, a line of darkness where the wood didn’t meet the frame exactly. I rolled over slowly and moved my head just a little. I had to see. I had to know who was there, I was risking everything to look, but I couldn’t stop. I put my eye to the crack. The corridor was dark, the torches were out, and only faint light came from somewhere far away. I saw a figure move past. Tall, very tall, broad shoulder and Ash-black hair. It was the King Kael. He walked slowly, pacing. He wore black pants but no shirt. I could see his wide back. He looked powerful, walking like he owned the dark, like he was part of it. As he passed the crack, I saw his profile. He looked straight ahead, his face hard. Angry or worried, I couldn’t tell. He looked lost, even though he was the King. And then I saw his eyes. In the total darkness of the corridor, his eyes were glowing.Kael's PovAren spread the full assessment on the table the morning after the three seal points stabilized.Seventeen locations. Three now with active maintenance connections. Fourteen remaining."Walk me through the fourteen," I told them.Aren pointed to the top of the ranked list."The next three are manageable," they explained. "No settlement complications. No diplomatic clearance required. The connected descendants are locatable and the seal point locations are accessible. We can move on those within the next two weeks.""What does manageable mean exactly," Aldred pressed."It means we find the descendants, explain the situation, bring them to their seal points, and begin the maintenance process," Aren replied. "No significant obstacles beyond the conversation itself.""The conversation is never simple," I said."No," Aren agreed. "But it is the only obstacle. Which makes those three the easiest cases on the list.""The ones after that," I said.Aren moved down the list."Three d
Tomas's PovCael stood up from the table when Eldric finished.He did not raise his voice. He was not the kind of person who raised his voice when he was genuinely angry rather than performatively so. He walked to the window and stood there with his back to the room for a moment, looking at the courtyard outside, and then he turned around."I have been used without my knowledge for years. By a system I did not know existed and could not have agreed to participate in because no one told me it was there."Nobody argued with that. There was nothing to argue. It was accurate."Years," he continued. "Every morning I woke up carrying something I did not choose to carry. I had names for it. Military strain. Physical cost. The accumulation of years of demanding work. I thought I understood where it came from." He looked at Eldric steadily. "It was not that.""No," Eldric replied."It was a structure built by people who died centuries ago drawing on my energy without asking. Without a mechanis
Eldric’s PovDara came to me the morning after the maintenance visits with her oldest texts.She set them on the table and she sat down across from me and looked at me with the expression she wore when she had found something that required a second mind to fully understand."I need your help with something.""Tell me.""I need to go through these with someone who understands resonance theory from the mechanics side rather than the historical side. I know the boundary builder texts. I know what they say and how to read the language they were written in. But you understand aspect resonance in a way I do not. What I found in the readings last night requires both."We spent three days on it.Not three days of easy reading. Three days of going through materials that were old enough to be difficult in their phrasing and precise enough in their content to require slow, careful movement through every passage. Dara knew which sections to look for and what to prioritize. I knew how to translate
Luna's PovWe split into three groups on the same morning.Cael went to his seal point with Dara. Tomas went to the Eastern Isles with Kieran. Petra went to the Western Mountains with Storm. I stayed at the base camp with Eldric and tracked the readings as each group reported back.Cael went first.The water flow had been restored the previous week. The settlement's new irrigation system was already in place and Bessa's people were satisfied with it. The old channels were running again under the ground, carrying water through paths they had not traveled in forty years, finding their way back to the formations that had been waiting for them.Dara sent me a report that evening.Cael had stood on the seal point for most of the day. Dara had guided him through the process. She had explained what the connection was and what letting it run fully meant in practical terms, not in theory, and she had stood beside him while he did it. She wrote that he was methodical about it the way soldiers w
Kael's PovI went to the settlement the next morning.Not with a delegation. Not with a formal arrival that would require ceremony and standing and the particular performance of authority that makes practical people defensive before you have said a word. Aldred came with me because Aldred knew the territorial resource laws better than anyone in my court and I needed someone who could answer technical questions without hesitation or misdirection. Cael came because they were his people and his presence would open the conversation in a way mine alone could not. A king arriving on your doorstep is an event. A king arriving with someone you grew up with is a conversation.The settlement was a good piece of land. I could see immediately why people had built here forty years ago. Flat ground with good sight lines to the hills. The modified water system running through the fields in clean channels that someone had maintained carefully. The crops were healthy and well-spaced. The houses were s
Elvanya's PovCael sat with the information for the rest of that day.He did not leave the building. He sat in the courtyard in the late afternoon light and he looked at the far wall and he worked through it the way I had watched soldiers work through hard information before. Not avoiding it. Not rushing to a conclusion. Moving through it methodically, the way you move through a tactical problem you cannot shoot your way out of.I watched him from the window for a while and then I went outside and sat nearby.He did not look at me."My parents live there," he said."I know.""My brothers. My brothers' children. My youngest nephew is seven years old and he has been walking on that ground his whole life and the ground has been signaling through my blood since before he was born.""Yes.""And the ground under their house is one of the most critical seal points in the boundary network. And it has been degrading for forty years and nobody told any of them. Nobody could tell them because no
Elvanya's PovI opened my eyes and everything looked different.The world was sharper and brighter and more clear than it had ever been.Colors I had never seen before filled my vision.I could see the life force in every living thing.
Elvanya's PovThe energy wave held everyone in place like statues.They could not move their bodies but their eyes still worked.I could see them watching me with fear and wonder and confusion.Time itself seemed to slow down.Eve
Elvanya's PovI stood on shaky legs and Eldric helped me remove my outer robe.Underneath I wore only a thin white dress that felt too light for what was coming."What do I do now" I asked."Nothing" Eldric said "just stand there and let the ritua
Kael's PovI watched helplessly as Elvanya's body lifted higher off the ground.She floated in the center of the ritual circle at least ten feet in the air.Silver light surrounded her so bright I could barely look at it.Her screams echoed throug







