The revelation hung in the air like smoke.
Elric stood still, hand resting on the stone throne, the marrow-bound book closed but still pulsing faintly beneath his coat. His bloodline was not just part of the Taran name—it was Varnell. The erased truth. The blood that survived exile and memory-burial.
He was no longer just a healer.
He was the last living thread of two legacies that had once stood on opposite sides of the Pact.
---
Outside: The Dust Stirs
At the edge of the gray valley, Cai stiffened.
"They're coming."
Roran rose from beside the campfire. "Council troops?"
"No," Cai whispered. "Just one."
A rider on a pale horse broke the horizon—slow, deliberate.
The man wore black armor with a red sash. Across his chest: the Council flame seal, burned into leather.
But his face…
Sylas stepped forward and cursed under his breath.
Lira's hand hovered near her blade. "Who is it?"
"Elric's old tutor," Sylas muttered. "Tharan Hesse. The man who taught him anatomy… and then turned him in."
---
The Hollow Spire's Door
The rider dismounted without command.
Thorne Varnell stood calmly at the doorway.
"You've come to kill him?"
"No," Tharan said. "I've come to ask if he remembers why he was exiled."
Inside, Elric heard the voice—and froze.
He turned toward the entrance just as Tharan stepped into the throne chamber.
"You were promising," the man said. "Curious. Brilliant. Dangerous."
Elric's jaw tightened. "You taught me to heal. Then called me a heretic when I healed the wrong people."
"I called you what the Council did."
"Then you're still a coward."
---
The Offer
Tharan reached into his cloak.
Lira moved instantly, but Elric raised a hand. "Wait."
Tharan pulled out a scroll—unsealed.
> An offer of restoration.
> Return to the capital. Pledge your knowledge to the High Council. You will be named Royal Healer. Protected. Respected. Forgotten truths will remain buried.
Elric didn't speak.
Tharan added, "The Root may be wounded. But it can still regrow. If you stop digging."
---
The Answer
Elric reached into his coat.
Pulled out the marrow-bound book.
He placed it on the stone seat of the cracked throne.
"No," he said. "I don't want my name carved in gold. I want the ones they buried to be spoken again."
He stepped back.
"I reject your offer."
Tharan's face twisted—half pity, half disgust.
"You just declared war."
"No," Elric said. "I remembered one."
The book pulsed once.
The room trembled.
And outside, the Hollow Spire lit with soft silver veins—carrying memory through its walls like blood through old bones.
---