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Chapter 5 :- Into the Silence

Author: zeh_nyx
last update publish date: 2026-06-25 19:30:40

The following morning arrived beneath a sky heavy with clouds. Snow drifted steadily beyond the fortress walls, softening the mountains until they looked like pale shadows against the horizon. By the time Pearl stepped into the main courtyard, the fortress was already awake. Servants hurried between wagons carrying crates of supplies while soldiers moved through the gathering expedition performing final inspections. Horses stamped impatiently against the cold, their breath rising in pale clouds before vanishing into the winter air.

The expedition would leave within the hour, which suited Pearl perfectly. The longer people waited, the more time they had to speculate, and she had already heard enough theories about the ruins to last several lifetimes. Five experienced Wardens had vanished without leaving behind bodies, evidence, or answers. Every explanation she encountered seemed to create more questions than it solved.

Astrid found her standing near the supply wagons and handed her a cup of coffee without a word. Pearl accepted it immediately.

"You look disappointed," Astrid observed.

Pearl took a long drink before answering. "I'm holding coffee."

"Exactly."

Pearl lowered the cup and gave her a flat stare.

Astrid grinned.

Some people simply enjoyed being irritating before sunrise.

Before Pearl could think of an appropriate response, movement near the gates drew attention across the courtyard. Three riders entered accompanied by guards bearing the crest of House Valerian. The first woman dismounted before her horse had fully stopped moving, landing lightly on the snow-covered ground as though patience had never been one of her virtues.

Pearl recognized her immediately.

Rosalie Valerian.

The stories had somehow failed to capture the full effect.

Confidence seemed to follow Rosalie wherever she went. It wasn't arrogance, exactly. More like an unwavering certainty that the world would eventually cooperate with her whether it wanted to or not. Golden hair spilled over one shoulder as she handed her reins to a stablehand and immediately began speaking to three different people at once.

Pearl distrusted anyone capable of that much energy before breakfast.

The second rider climbed down more quietly.

At first glance, Raven looked almost identical to her twin, but the resemblance faded the longer Pearl watched. Where Rosalie seemed to pull attention toward herself without effort, Raven appeared perfectly comfortable allowing attention to pass her by. Her gaze moved calmly across the courtyard, observing everything and revealing nothing.

Something about her immediately caught Pearl's attention.

Not because she stood out.

Because she didn't.

Experience had taught Pearl that the quietest people in a room were often the ones worth watching.

Rosalie spotted Evren across the courtyard and changed direction immediately. The reaction that followed told Pearl more than any introduction could have. Several soldiers exchanged knowing looks. Lucien looked tired already. Evren looked as though he had just noticed an incoming storm.

"Good morning," Rosalie called brightly.

Evren closed his eyes for a brief moment.

"It's too early."

Rosalie placed a hand over her heart. "What a terrible thing to say."

"It's too early for whatever you're planning."

"I haven't planned anything."

"That concerns me more."

Laughter spread through the nearby soldiers.

Rosalie pointed triumphantly. "See? They support me."

"They fear you," Lucien said as he approached.

"That's basically the same thing."

"No. It really isn't."

Rosalie ignored him so completely that Pearl almost admired it.

The expedition departed shortly afterward. Snow-covered trails wound through the mountains while towering pines stretched endlessly across the landscape. The fortress gradually disappeared behind them until only wilderness remained, and for a while the journey settled into a comfortable rhythm. Hooves crunched through snow, conversation drifted between riders, and the world seemed content to remain ordinary.

Pearl spent much of the morning observing the people around her.

It was a habit she had developed years ago.

Monsters were easier to understand than people. Monsters usually wanted something simple. Food. Territory. Survival. People were far more complicated. They lied. They hid things. They surprised you.

Rosalie spent the entire morning ruining Pearl's assumptions.

She had expected someone spoiled by privilege and protected by reputation. Instead, Rosalie repaired a damaged pack strap when one of the younger scouts struggled with it, volunteered to ride beside nervous members of the expedition whenever the trail became difficult, and somehow learned half the group's names before midday.

None of it matched the image Pearl had formed.

That annoyed her more than she cared to admit.

Nearby, Lucien seemed equally conflicted. At one point Rosalie simply reached over and stole a book directly from his hands. The argument that followed lasted nearly twenty minutes and ended with Rosalie keeping the book, Lucien losing the debate, and Astrid laughing so hard she nearly slid from her horse.

Pearl refused to admit she found the situation amusing.

The mood remained light until the forest began to change.

At first the transformation was subtle. The trees grew larger with every passing mile, their massive trunks rising from the earth like pillars supporting a forgotten cathedral. Dense branches stretched overhead and swallowed much of the daylight, leaving the forest beneath wrapped in a dim twilight despite the early hour. Snow lay untouched between the trees, smooth and pristine, while shadows gathered in places sunlight could no longer reach.

The deeper they traveled, the quieter the world became.

Pearl didn't notice it immediately. The realization crept in slowly, settling somewhere at the edge of her awareness before finally demanding attention.

There were no birds.

No distant animal calls.

No rustling movement hidden among the trees.

Nothing.

A forest this large should have been alive with sound. Instead, it felt as though life itself had retreated from the place long ago.

Others began noticing it too.

Conversations faded naturally. Riders drifted closer together without discussing it. Even the horses grew restless, their ears flicking constantly toward shadows that remained empty.

The silence wasn't peaceful.

It felt wrong.

Pearl glanced toward Raven and immediately understood she wasn't the only one sensing it. The young woman had gone noticeably pale. Her attention remained fixed on the forest surrounding them, but she wasn't watching it.

She was listening.

Several times she turned toward stretches of empty woodland with a faint frown, as though trying to hear a voice buried beneath the silence.

Pearl considered asking if she was alright.

The opportunity never came.

One of the horses stopped abruptly.

The animal planted its hooves and refused to move. A second horse followed moments later, then a third. Within seconds the entire expedition had ground to a halt.

Confused murmurs spread through the group as scouts moved forward to calm the increasingly nervous animals.

"What is it?" Lucien asked.

No one answered.

Because no one knew.

Pearl scanned the forest carefully. Nothing moved between the trees. Nothing appeared among the shadows. Yet every instinct she possessed screamed that something was there.

Watching.

Waiting.

Nearby, Evren had become unusually still.

The easy humor she had seen since arriving in the North had vanished completely. His attention remained fixed on the darkness beyond the trail, every instinct focused outward. For the first time, Pearl understood why warriors followed him so willingly. The charm was still there somewhere beneath the surface, but it no longer defined him.

Whatever hid among those trees had his complete attention.

And he clearly didn't like what he sensed.

The moment stretched uncomfortably before finally passing. The horses settled. The tension eased. Not completely, but enough for the expedition to continue.

No one relaxed afterward.

Hours later, the forest finally began to thin.

Ancient stone appeared between the trees.

A broken pillar rose from the snow. Then another. Fragments of walls emerged beneath layers of ice and frost, worn down by centuries but not erased entirely. The sight silenced what little conversation remained.

Everyone understood what they were looking at.

The ruins.

The closer they traveled, the more impossible the place became. Crumbling roads appeared beneath the snow. Collapsed archways stood among the trees like the bones of giants. Weathered statues stared sightlessly across the wilderness, their faces worn away by time.

Then the forest ended.

The transition happened so suddenly that Pearl nearly missed a step.

One moment ancient trees surrounded them.

The next, the world opened.

The entire expedition came to a halt.

Before them stretched a vast frozen valley dominated by the remains of a city unlike anything Pearl had ever seen. Ancient black stone covered the landscape. Massive structures rose from the snow in various states of collapse while enormous archways cast long shadows across the frozen ground. Towers pierced the sky despite centuries of ruin. Roads disappeared into the distance beneath ice and drifting snow.

The city felt impossibly old.

Older than the Citadel.

Older than the North.

Older than any kingdom recorded in history.

A strange sensation settled over Pearl as she stared across the valley. It wasn't fear. It wasn't awe. It was the unsettling feeling of standing somewhere she wasn't meant to be. As though the city belonged to another age entirely and had no interest in being rediscovered.

No one spoke.

Even Rosalie remained silent.

Beside her, Raven stared at the ruins with an expression Pearl couldn't decipher. Fear lingered there. So did disbelief. Beneath both, however, was something far more unsettling.

Recognition.

The wind moved softly through the broken city.

For one impossible moment, Pearl had the strange impression that the ruins were watching them back.

Waiting.

Far below the valley, hidden beneath layers of stone untouched by sunlight for thousands of years, silver symbols flickered awake one after another. Their light spread through forgotten corridors and buried chambers, illuminating walls that had not seen light since kingdoms were young.

One symbol awakened.

Then another.

Then hundreds more.

Deep within the sleeping heart of the city, something stirred in the darkness.

And for the first time in an age, it knew it was no longer alone.

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