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Chapter 4: Into The Silence

Author: zeh_nyx
last update publish date: 2026-06-07 19:22:45

Pearl woke before dawn and immediately blamed the bed.

It was entirely too comfortable.

Years spent in the Citadel had trained her to sleep wherever circumstances demanded—stone floors, cramped wagons, questionable inns, and once, memorably, a tree. The guest chambers of the North seemed determined to undo all that hard-earned resilience. The mattress was soft, the blankets warm, and the fire in the hearth still glowed faintly from the night before.

It was difficult to remain suspicious of a kingdom that provided such excellent sleeping arrangements.

Which only made Pearl more suspicious.

She dressed quickly and crossed to the window. Beyond the glass, snow drifted lazily across rooftops and towers while the first pale light of morning touched the mountains. The fortress was only beginning to stir. Guards paced the walls. Servants crossed the courtyards below carrying baskets and supplies. Thin trails of smoke rose from chimneys as kitchens prepared for the day ahead.

From this height, everything looked peaceful.

The knock came a moment later.

Pearl didn't bother answering.

The door opened anyway.

Astrid stepped inside carrying two mugs and the expression of someone who had somehow found a reason to be cheerful before sunrise.

Pearl frowned immediately.

"I dislike how awake you are."

Astrid handed her a mug.

"You say that every morning."

"Because every morning it remains true."

The coffee was excellent.

Pearl found that deeply unfair.

Astrid settled into the nearest chair and stretched her legs toward the fire.

"Everyone's gathering in the lower courtyard. Apparently we're leaving soon."

"Wonderful."

"That didn't sound convincing."

"It wasn't meant to."

Astrid laughed into her coffee.

Pearl tolerated it because caffeine was involved.

The expedition assembled shortly after sunrise.

Horses waited near the gates while servants secured supplies and scouts reviewed routes one final time. The relaxed atmosphere of the previous evening had disappeared completely. Conversations were brief. Smiles appeared less often. Even the servants seemed quieter.

The ruins had a way of reminding everyone why they were here.

Pearl stood beside her horse while Rowan Blackthorn studied a map with growing hostility. After several minutes, he folded it with the expression of a man who had been personally betrayed.

"Something wrong?" she asked.

"The map is wrong."

Lucien glanced over from where he was checking supplies.

"The map isn't wrong."

"It absolutely is."

"You've said that three times."

"And I've been correct every time."

Lucien sighed.

Rowan looked satisfied.

Pearl watched the exchange with reluctant amusement. Stories about the North always focused on legendary kings, great battles, and ancient victories. Nobody ever mentioned future Betas arguing with princes over folded pieces of paper.

The reality was proving considerably more entertaining.

The gates opened not long afterward, and the expedition finally departed.

The fortress remained visible for hours, looming over the mountains behind them, but eventually even those massive black towers vanished from sight. The deeper they traveled into the wilderness, the fewer signs of civilization remained. Villages became scarce. Roads narrowed into trails. Forests stretched farther between the scattered signs of life.

By midday, even the landscape felt different.

The trees grew taller here.

Older.

Their branches stretched high overhead, filtering sunlight into pale fragments that barely reached the ground. Snow lay untouched between the trunks, smooth and pristine except for the narrow trail winding through it.

The deeper they traveled, the less Pearl liked it.

The reports remained fresh in her mind.

Five missing Wardens.

Ancient ruins.

Symbols nobody recognized.

Every answer seemed to produce two new questions.

None of them were comforting.

They stopped briefly beside a frozen stream during the afternoon.

Most of the expedition welcomed the opportunity to rest, but Pearl wandered a short distance away from the group instead. The forest had been bothering her for hours now, though she couldn't quite explain why.

At first she thought it was the quiet.

Then she realized the forest wasn't quiet at all.

It was empty.

There were no birds hidden among the branches. No distant movement between the trees. No rustling from small animals buried beneath the snow.

Nothing.

A wilderness this large should have been alive with sound.

Instead, it felt abandoned.

The realization settled uneasily in her stomach.

When they resumed traveling, she found herself listening more carefully.

The silence followed them.

As evening approached, others began noticing it too.

Conversations grew shorter.

People glanced more often toward the trees.

Even the horses seemed uneasy, their ears constantly turning toward sounds that never came.

Nobody mentioned it directly.

Nobody needed to.

The forest was speaking clearly enough through its silence.

Camp was established shortly before sunset in a clearing surrounded by towering pines.

Tents appeared quickly. Horses were secured. Guards organized watches while the rest of the group gathered around the growing fire.

From a distance, everything looked normal.

Up close, the tension was impossible to miss.

People stayed nearer to one another.

Laughter came less easily.

Nobody wandered far beyond the firelight.

Even the flames seemed smaller than they should have.

Pearl sat near one of the fallen logs with scout reports spread across her lap. She read them again despite already knowing every line by heart.

Across the clearing, Lucien and Astrid had disappeared into another discussion involving history, books, and entirely too much enthusiasm.

Nearby, Rowan continued his personal war against maps.

The familiar sight should have been comforting.

Instead, it only emphasized how strange everything else felt.

Darkness arrived quickly beneath the trees.

By the time the last traces of sunlight vanished, the forest beyond the camp had become a wall of shadows.

Eventually Pearl closed the reports and stood.

Fresh air, she told herself.

The excuse made very little sense considering she was already outside, but she accepted it anyway.

Snow crunched softly beneath her boots as she moved toward the edge of the clearing.

The sounds of camp faded behind her.

Ahead stretched only darkness, ancient trees, and that same unnatural stillness.

She stopped near the edge of the firelight and studied the forest.

Nothing moved.

Nothing made a sound.

Yet the feeling remained.

It wasn't fear exactly.

Pearl knew fear.

Fear had reasons.

Fear had shape.

This feeling was far more frustrating because she couldn't explain it.

It felt like standing in a room moments before someone opened a door.

A quiet anticipation.

A warning she couldn't hear but somehow understood.

Footsteps approached from behind.

Pearl glanced over her shoulder and found Rowan heading toward her.

He stopped beside her without speaking immediately.

His attention remained fixed on the forest.

For several moments neither said anything.

Then Rowan exhaled slowly.

"You feel it too."

It wasn't a question.

Pearl nodded.

Rowan remained silent for another moment before speaking again.

"I grew up in these mountains."

Something in his voice made her look at him.

He still hadn't taken his eyes off the trees.

"I've hunted here. Traveled here. Gotten lost here often enough that my father stopped being surprised."

A faint smile almost appeared.

Almost.

"And?"

For the first time that day, unease crept into his expression.

"And I've never seen it like this."

The answer settled heavily between them.

Somehow hearing it from Rowan made everything worse.

Snow drifted lazily from the branches overhead.

The forest remained perfectly still.

Then a sharp crack echoed somewhere in the darkness.

Both reacted instantly.

Rowan's hand dropped to the hilt of his sword.

Pearl's fingers found her blade.

The sound had come from deeper within the woods.

They waited.

Seconds passed.

Then a minute.

Nothing followed.

No movement.

No second sound.

Just silence.

The forest swallowed the disturbance as though it had never happened.

Eventually they returned to camp.

Neither felt any better for it.

The night passed slowly.

Too slowly.

And sometime after midnight, a scream shattered the darkness.

Pearl was moving before she fully woke.

Around her, camp exploded into motion.

Guards reached for weapons. Horses panicked against their restraints. Voices rose through the clearing as people rushed toward the source of the commotion.

By the time Pearl arrived, a crowd had already gathered.

One glance told her something was wrong.

She counted the horses automatically.

Then counted again.

One stall stood empty.

The rope that had secured the animal dangled from the post in shredded strands.

A cold knot formed in her stomach.

The horse hadn't escaped.

Something had taken it.

Nobody spoke at first.

The realization spread through the camp in heavy silence.

The fire crackled nearby while darkness pressed against the clearing from every side.

Rowan crouched beside the disturbed snow and examined the tracks leading into the forest.

His expression hardened almost immediately.

"What is it?" Lucien asked.

Rowan didn't answer right away.

When he finally looked up, the unease on his face was impossible to miss.

"I've never seen prints like these."

A chill moved through the camp.

Not from the cold.

From what those words meant.

Whatever had dragged away a full-grown horse had done so silently.

Quickly.

Confidently.

As though it had nothing to fear from the dozens of armed people sleeping only yards away.

No one volunteered to follow the tracks.

No one suggested searching the forest.

The darkness beyond the fire seemed to swallow every brave idea before it could be spoken.

Somewhere out there, hidden among the ancient trees, something had approached their camp, taken a horse, and vanished without leaving so much as a sound behind.

And tomorrow they intended to walk deeper into whatever had done it.

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