A Unison of Souls
Garik stands motionless, a stark contrast to the brash, bold figure everyone expects him to be. Confidence, his ever-present companion, has abandoned him. In its place lingers something unfamiliar—a strange mixture of reverence and disbelief that settles deep in his chest. His breaths come slow, measured, caught between awe and unease. The air is thick, oppressive, pressing in on him like the weight of centuries. It hums with forgotten memories, the scent of damp earth and decaying stone wrapping around him like a shroud. The ruins—this place—it feels alive. A thing long dormant, now stirring, exhaling in slow, reluctant sighs.
This was never meant to be a place for the living.
And yet, here he stands, caught between time and history. The Coalition of Guilds had entrusted him with this excavation—a responsibility he had accepted with the steady assurance of a man who understood his place. He had come here as an expert, confident, unmoved by the ghosts of the past. But standing now in the presence of something so ancient, so untouched, a whisper of doubt snakes through him. His resolve, once ironclad, suddenly feels thin. Fragile. Like parchment too brittle to survive the creeping touch of time.
His gaze falls upon the sword.
It lies undisturbed. A relic of a world long forgotten, unbloodied yet dulled by silence. Its hilt is wrapped in delicate strands of time itself, whispers of lost stories clinging to the worn leather. It should not be here—not in a place so forsaken, so hollow. And yet, it waits.
Garik exhales, slow and deliberate, his breath heavy in the unmoving air. His lips are dry, cracked, each inhale a struggle against the suffocating stillness. He reaches out, hesitates, fingers hovering over the hilt as if touching it would sever some unseen thread binding it to the past.
“The show must go on... I guess,” he mutters. The words are softer than he intends, swallowed by the weight of the ruins, the silence thick enough to drown even his own voice.
Then—footsteps.
Faint but steady.
The Gnarly Roses. Rin. Roaka. Nia. Ula. He had called for them, their names heavy with reputation and skill. Yet there is no grand entrance, no dramatic flair. Only the quiet clink of armor, the murmur of voices preparing, bodies moving with practiced efficiency. The air between them and him is thick with anticipation, a silent acknowledgment of the unknown.
Tibbins and Gru, the last of the Relic Hunters, slip into the edges of lamplight like ghosts, their movements precise, deliberate. Veterans of ruins like this, they know better than to disturb the silence with unnecessary words. Their presence alone is a warning—danger lingers here, unseen but felt, waiting for those who do not tread carefully.
The flaps of the warehouse tent groan as they part, fabric brushing against itself like a hesitant whisper. More figures emerge through the archways, dark silhouettes framed against the flickering glow of torches. Shadows stretch long and restless along the walls, twisting, writhing, like things half-alive. The ruins breathe around them, watchful. Waiting.
Every scrape of boot against stone, every hushed command, is devoured by the oppressive quiet of a place abandoned, yet never truly at rest. The air is thick with secrets—secrets that refuse to stay buried.
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And Garik knows, in the marrow of his bones, that something is about to be unearthed.
Elara stands at the eye of a storm that does not
howl but hums—a low, thrumming resonance that coils through the air, threading
itself into the very fabric of reality. It seeps into her bones, settling deep,
filling the quiet spaces between heartbeats.
The sword in her right hand is more than steel
and age. It is a memory, a whisper from the past that lingers in her grasp, as
if it remembers the touch of those long gone. The hilt is warm, unnervingly so,
as though it has been waiting—not just for any wielder, but for her.
In her left hand, the hand cannon shudders with
barely contained force. Its metal is not cold, not lifeless. It breathes,
thrumming beneath her fingertips like a beast waiting to be unleashed. The
weight is unfamiliar yet eerily right, a perfect fit, as though she had been
shaped for this moment, for these relics.
Lyra and Selene grip her shoulders, fingers
digging into the thick weave of her cloak. Their hold is tight—not out of fear,
but as if bracing against an unseen tide. The air presses in, thick with
something raw, something ancient. Power drips from the relics, pooling in the
dim torchlight, turning shadows into restless things, making them shift and
flicker as if alive.
The sword crackles. Sparks slither along its
blade like phantom serpents, flickering and vanishing, hungry for substance.
The hand cannon pulses, slow and deliberate, the heartbeat of something not
quite mechanical, not quite alive.
The tent walls ripple. The canvas shudders,
stirred by forces unseen. The scent of old parchment and machine oil thickens,
undercut by something sharper—ozone, the charged breath of a storm held taut,
waiting to break.
Elara swallows. The magic hums louder, pressing
at the edges of her mind, whispering in a language she does not know but
somehow understands. It calls to her, not as a demand, but an invitation. A
song without words. A tide begging surrender.
A single breath. Shallow. Unsteady.
And still, the power lingers.
A strange lightness settles over Elara, as if the
earth itself has released her. The weight of the world, the pull of
gravity—both feel distant, unanchored. She is adrift, carried by an invisible
current, something ancient and unknowable. Her legs no longer register solid
ground beneath them. For a fleeting moment, she wonders if she could float
forever in this space where time bends and stretches, where magic weaves unseen
threads into patterns too intricate to name.
A hum vibrates at the base of her skull, low and
steady. It is not just sound but sensation, a pulse of energy rippling through
the air, stirring the fabric of reality itself.
She lifts her gaze—and her breath catches.
Garik, Rin, Roaka, Ula, and Nia stare, their eyes
wide, their lips parted in silent disbelief. The shock in their expressions is
undeniable, yet even that pales against the spectacle before them.
The three sisters hover above the ground, gravity
forsaking them as if even natural law bows before their presence. Their forms
shimmer, flickering like heat waves, neither fully solid nor fully intangible.
They exist in a space between worlds, where the rules of nature are mere
whispers rather than laws. The air around them trembles, heavy with Soul Magic,
their very essence pulsing in a rhythm too perfect to be coincidence.
Light radiates from them, weaving through the
shadows, casting long, twisting silhouettes that writhe and shift as if alive.
Their silent connection hums in the air, thick enough to feel—an unbreakable
thread binding them together, a perfect harmony that exists only in the
presence of absolute balance. It is like a song without words, a force of
nature in its purest form.
Elara’s pulse quickens, her heart falling into
the rhythm of the magic, drawn in, captivated. A breathless moment stretches
between them, her thoughts scattering like wind-tossed leaves. The world below
seems distant, insignificant, as though she is watching something not meant for
mortal eyes—a vision from a forgotten dream.
She feels it then, the warmth of their power
surrounding her. It is alive, sentient, wrapping around her like unseen
arms—comforting and dangerous all at once. It beckons, whispering promises of
something greater, something just beyond reach.
She is not afraid to listen.