Ch331- Love
Ch331- Love
"Welcome back to the Valley...Bastard."
The Crown's answer came as a howl that tore across the broken temple and sent dust skittering from the stones.
The tree answered without sound. Its light spread. It moved through the ruin in waves, pouring down the trunk, along the roots, into the broken rings of the temple floor. Wherever it reached, the dark stain the Crown had worked into the old stone began to fade. The red threads crawling through the cracks thinned, writhed, and pulled back under the slabs like worms dragged into sunlight.
The Crown saw it happen. That was the first real crack in its composure.
Its head snapped from the tree to the roots and back again, black eyes wide with something close to fury. The gold lines under its skin flared hard enough to sting the eye. Dark vapour bled from the seams in its body and rolled off it in thick streams, trying to spread over the temple again, trying to smother the bright roots where they pushed through the stone.
The light burned it away as fast as it came.
Cassian stepped forward. Bathsheda moved with him, already casting. Her hand rose, fingers cutting through the air, and the silver-white runes around them multiplied. They spun out from her wrist and settled around the front of the ruin like a widening crown of script.
The nearest Keepers felt it and moved.
Nicolas called across the ruin with startling force for an old man who'd looked half a step from collapse ten minutes ago. "Spread out. Do not bunch. Anchor to the roots. Three lines. Nobody goes near the centre without support."
That got them moving.
All of them broke apart and flowed into position. They fanned through the ruin in a broad half-circle behind Cassian and Bathsheda, wands raised, staffs lifted, old charms already gathering in the air around them.
The Crawlers attacked first. The black ones hit the Crown low, all claws and momentum, dragging at its legs, hauling it off the upper platform before it could gather itself for another push. The pale ones came in a beat later. One of them slammed into the Crown's side and nearly drove it into the fractured temple wall. Another caught its arm at the elbow and twisted hard enough that stone cracked under the thing's feet.
The Crown struck back. Its hand shot out and caught a Night Crawler by the throat. Gold fire ran under its skin, then burst from the thing's palm in a jagged line. The Crawler's chest split open in a spray of black ash and pale shards. The body hit the ground in pieces that smoked where they landed.
Bathsheda's runes flared. A ring of silver-white script swept across the broken stones in front of them and caught the next surge of dark vapour spilling off the Crown. The runes held for a second, then bit down hard, forcing the darkness inward until it folded into itself and collapsed like smoke under glass.
Ayda dropped to one knee and planted both palms on the broken ringstone beside him. The old runes in the temple answered. The whole floor gave a low hum. Fractured ward-lines buried under centuries of dust lit up in thin bands and locked into Bathsheda's working as if his hands had reached down through the ruin and grabbed the foundation by the spine.
"You keep sending them, lass," he said without looking up. "I'll stop the floor from breaking further."
Cassian lifted both hands. Every root brightened. The wave of light rushed across the floor and climbed the broken stairs in one go. Three dark curses racing toward the left flank hit it and vanished mid-flight, eaten by a brilliance so old it looked less like a spell and more like the idea of dawn turned practical.
The Crown tore free of the Crawlers with a violence that made the whole slab jump. One white Crawler went flying sideways and crashed into a fallen column hard enough to split it in two. The Crown landed on the lower ring, crouched for barely an instant, then drove one hand into the ground.
The temple answered. The red lines hidden in the stone blazed back to life in a burst. A pulse rolled out from the point of impact and cracked through the ruin in widening rings. The nearest Keepers staggered. One lost his footing entirely and went down to a knee with a curse. Two of Miranda's ward-anchors blew apart at once, shards of blue light whipping back into the air like splinters.
The tree rose higher. The branches spread. Pale leaves shivered in the air overhead, and with them came that clean scent again, rain and bark and cold water over stone.
Nicolas saw an opening and called, "Now."
The Keepers moved as one. Spells lanced from every point of the ruined half-circle. Thick ropes of gold. White-blue bolts. Curses shaped like barbed wire. Spiralling nets of old script. A cloud of tiny mirrored sigils that flashed and split into dozens of razor-bright copies. They went for the Crown from every angle, not to kill, no... they'd all taken one look at the thing and abandoned that lovely fantasy, but to pin it, slow it, force it down under the weight of too many hands and too many old tricks working together.
Ji moved ahead. He stepped through the broken temple like the pressure had forgotten to touch him, one hand lifting, fingers barely closing. The air above the Crown warped. Gravity folded for half a breath and came down sideways. Broken slabs, ash, shattered metal, all of it tore off the ground and slammed into the thing from three directions at once.
"Keep it low," Ji said. "If it reaches the upper ring again, it will use the height."
The Crown stood in the middle of it and screamed in outrage. Its body blurred.
For one sick second it seemed to divide without moving, its outline slipping sideways into overlapping shapes. Half the incoming spells hit empty air. The rest struck, and where they did, the impact lit the ruin in shards. A black tether snapped round its wrist and burst. A chain of mirrored sigils cut across its chest and left glowing slashes through the gold-veined skin beneath. A Greek binding hook slammed into one shoulder and bit deep.
Edevane was already moving before the light died down. She flashed across the flank in three shifts, robes snapping behind her, and appeared at the Crown's blind side with her wand. Something thin left her hand and carved across the gold seam at the back of its knee. The creature jolted. Edevane vanished again before the return strike could find her.
The Crown barely seemed to notice. It tore the hook out with its other hand and flung it straight back. The thing whistled over the roots and punched through a Keeper's shield so hard the wizard was thrown off his feet. Two others caught him before he could crack his skull on a fallen slab.
Bathsheda stepped forward. The air around her hand filled with runes. They came quicker now, no hesitation in them. Spirals bloomed from her fingers and spread over the ruined centre of the temple floor in layered circles, each one slotting into the next. They rose around the Crown knee-high at first, then waist-high, then taller, silver-white rings spinning over and through one another like the framework of some immense lock.
The Crown's head turned.
Bathsheda's jaw tightened.
"Try it," she said.
The thing did. Darkness poured from it, thick and black and fast. It hit the runic rings head-on. The front ring shattered immediately. The second held long enough to throw the dark back up into the air in a spray of black sparks. The third took the rest and twisted it sideways, feeding it into the roots where the tree burned it clean.
Cassian laughed. "That'll do."
The Crown came straight at them. It crossed the broken centre. The Crawlers hit it again from both sides, black and white together, but still it kept coming.
Cassian raised his hand and snapped, "Down."
The roots answered. Three of them burst from the temple floor in a rush of pale bark and light and wrapped round the Crown's lower body. One took its right leg. Another caught it across the waist. The third went for the arm it had raised toward Bathsheda. The thing roared and twisted against them, gold lines blazing white-hot now, but the roots held. For a second, only a second, it stopped moving.
That was all the Keepers needed.
The second volley hit harder. Coriolanus sent a crackling spear of sun-bright force through the gap between two roots and drove it into the Crown's ribs. Miranda's ward lattice folded into a hard square of blue light around its head and shoulders. Sabine slammed both hands to the floor and sent up a forest of black iron spikes shaped from the temple's own shadow. Dumbledore's spell came a breath later, clean white fire that wrapped itself round the thing's chest and tightened until the gold beneath its skin flickered and sputtered.
The darkness the Crown kept spilling into the stones could no longer spread beyond the roots. It clawed outward, found light waiting, and burned away in strips.
The Crown tore one arm free.
Its hand snapped out toward Cassian.
He felt the spell before he saw it, a jagged pressure that seemed to reach for his mind rather than his body. He slashed one hand across the space in front of him and Lumos Noctis answered. Dark light flowered up from his palm in a narrow crescent, swallowed the incoming force, and bent it sideways into the floor where it burst through a dead section of red-threaded stone and left the temple hissing.
Bathsheda glanced at him. "You're using that now?"
"Seemed rude not to."
"Fair."
The Crown snarled and heaved. One root split. Another groaned. The gold lines under its skin were no longer steady. They pulsed too fast now, surging bright, then dropping, as though whatever had been stitched together too quickly was still fighting itself beneath the surface.
Cassian saw it.
So did Nicolas.
"Keep pressure on the join," the old alchemist shouted. "Do not let it stabilise."
"On it," Ayda snapped. His hands spread wider over the stone. New lines appeared beneath the Crown's feet, old wards dragged back into place by brute memory and will. Every time the thing tried to settle into itself, the temple bit down.
That changed the whole shape of the fight.
This stopped being about beating it down and became, instead, a race to keep it from settling fully into itself. The Keepers adjusted quickly. They began striking the same points again and again, the gold-fissured places where body and soul looked least in agreement. The shoulder. The sternum. The throat. The old collar fused into the bone. Every hit there drew a sharper reaction. Every hit there made the gold underneath flare wild and uneven.
The Crown realised what they were doing. Its fury became colder.
It stopped throwing force in great wasteful sweeps and began picking targets with dreadful care. A black pulse lashed from its hand and clipped the right flank. One Keeper dropped where he stood, his wand falling from numb fingers. Another spell, thinner and meaner, went for Perenelle at the back. Dumbledore cut it out of the air before it reached her, but the redirected force carved a smoking trench through the broken floor beside him.
The Crown looked at Cassian. It had taken enough punishment to flatten a castle and still the malice kept pouring off it, seeping through the cracks in its skin, smoking out through its mouth, gathering under its feet.
Its stare fixed on him and sharpened.
Cassian's mouth twitched. "Here we go."
The Crown spread its hands a little, as though it were presenting the whole ruin to him.
The pressure in the temple, which had been straining against the tree and the roots and the Keepers' wards, suddenly shifted its weight. It stopped hammering at the stone and started drawing from the people around it. Not enough to drop them dead where they stood. Worse than that. It pulled at their hearts. A greedy intake through the whole ruin, dragging at fear, shock, awe, every wild thought still kicking round in the heads of the dozens who had just arrived to witness an old god climb back into its skin.
Several Keepers staggered. One of the younger ones gasped and clutched his chest as though something had reached in and pinched his heart between two fingers.
The gold cracks under the Crown's skin brightened.
"Steady!" Nicolas shouted.
"Trying," Bagshot muttered, then straightened more than her ribs probably appreciated. "If that thing's feeding on fear, stop gawping at it like undergraduates at a cursed manuscript and keep casting."
The Crown smiled then, ugly and pleased.
Black force surged off it in a fresh wave, rolling over the broken stone. The roots burned through it where they could, but there was too much of it now, too many minds in the ruin giving the thing something to drink.
The light above dimmed a shade. Then the sky answered.
Heads snapped upward.
Shapes were dropping out of the air beyond the broken roof. Birds, great dark-winged things from the surrounding cliffs, smaller magical creatures too, a pair of shrieking wind-hawks, a knot of pale cave-bats, even two mountain beasts with hooked beaks and ragged tails that ought to have been nowhere near the temple. They came in wild from every direction, circling once over the ruin before the darkness got hold of them. It ran over feather and fur and hide like oil finding cracks in old stone. Eyes went black. Wings twisted hard. Every one of them turned as one and dropped toward the gathered Keepers.
"Oh, you absolute bastard," Cassian muttered.
The first wave hit the outer line. One hawk slammed into a Keeper's shield and burst apart in a spray of blackened feathers. Three more got through. A bat latched onto a woman's face and she screamed before a white Crawler leapt and tore it off her. One of the hooked-beak beasts came down on Miranda's flank and nearly bowled two people over before Sabine drove a curse through its spine.
The ruin dissolved into fresh chaos.
"Hold the line!" Coriolanus barked.
A sharp lance of white light cracked out from the tree above and took a knot of dark birds through the centre. They vanished in sparks. Two more replaced them at once.
Bathsheda swore under her breath. Her hand went to the rune on her arm.
"Ash," she said.
The mark lit. Flame tore out of the rune and burst upward over the temple. Ash erupted into the ruin with a deafening roar, far larger than the hatchling they had first bound all those years ago, wings unfurling in a blaze of copper-red and dark gold.
Half the possessed creatures faltered in the air. The other half didn't get the chance. Ash hit them.
She tore through the first wave with fire and teeth, one wing clipping a dark hawk so hard it burst against a fallen slab, then twisted mid-air and bathed the second cluster in white-hot flame. Blackness boiled off them before their bodies dropped.
The Crown's eyes lifted to the dragon, and its expression darkened.
"Yeah," Cassian said under his breath. "My girls bite."
The thing didn't answer him. It lifted one hand instead.
The air split. Not the way Bathsheda opened space. This looked like the world had been hooked open with a rusted blade. A jagged wound tore itself into being a few feet to the Crown's right, black at the edges and glowing red through the centre.
Cassian felt his stomach drop before anything even stepped through. Bathsheda went rigid beside him.
From the split came a familiar figure in layered dark cloth, tall and wrong and smiling with all the charm of a grave opened politely.
The Djinn stepped into the ruin and knelt to the Crown.
Bathsheda's voice came tight. "No."
Cassian gritted his teeth. This cursed thing again. The buried chamber. The pit. The voice. The grin. The thing that had offered wishes and fed on greed while pretending to be generous.
The Djinn straightened and turned its head. Its eyes found Cassian straight away.
The grin widened.
"Ah. We finally met," it said. "I saw you years ago. The little curious spy."
A cold shiver went through him. "I was hoping we'd leave that where it was."
The Crown turned its head toward the Djinn.
That made the Djinn pause. It looked down at one hand, then back up.
"...It is."
The Crown's gaze sharpened.
The Djinn went very still. "...That isn't possible."
It looked at its hands. 'I was tricked?'
Its eyes moved from the Crown to Cassian, then to Bathsheda.
The Crown's mouth curved.
The Djinn's expression changed.
Cassian huffed through his nose. "Brilliant."
Bathsheda didn't take her eyes off it. "Can it fight?"
"No, but it can cause a spectacular amount of trouble," Cassian said.
That answer came just before one of the Keepers shouted, "Bind it!"
The spell never went where he meant it to go. The words left his mouth, and the magic bent with them. The Djinn twisted the words. The binding curse snapped sideways and slammed into the ward-line on the left flank instead. Blue light burst apart. Three Keepers were thrown back with it.
The whole ruin froze.
The Djinn smiled again, and this time there was no warmth in it at all.
"Yes," it said softly. "That will do."
Another witch on the far side tried a Stunning Spell and hit her own shield so hard it buckled into the man beside her. A cutting curse went wild a heartbeat later and carved a bright groove through broken stone inches from its caster's own boots. Every spoken spell had become a loaded trap. The moment someone gave their magic words, the Djinn treated them like wishes, caught them, and handed them back.
Panic flashed through the line.
Cassian shouted. "Don't speak. Silent casting only."
Mouths shut. Wands rose. The defence changed, weaker all of a sudden. Half the Keepers had spent a lifetime building rhythm through breath and incantation, and now all of that had been ripped away in one go.
The Djinn stepped neatly aside, perfectly content to leave the killing to the Crown while it poisoned every word they tried to use against it.
The line wavered. Silent casting worked if you'd had years to make it second nature. Most of the Keepers had the skill for it, of course they did, but skill and comfort weren't the same thing, and comfort was what held a defence together when an ancient horror was trying to pull your throat out through your sternum.
Now every wand-arm in the ruin had to move without making a peep. That half-beat of hesitation was all the Crown needed. It came off the broken steps like a curse given legs.
The first Keeper in its path got his shield up in time. Good, clean work too. The Crown hit it anyway. The shield folded inward with a sound like glass dragged across iron, and the man went over backwards hard enough to snap stone under his spine. The next blow caught the witch beside him across the chest and sent her skidding through one of the tree's roots. She didn't get back up.
Ash dropped from the sky, flame pouring from her jaws in a white-hot stream that washed across the Crown's shoulder and back. The thing staggered, skin cracking along one side, gold lines flaring through the blackened damage. One of the white Crawlers used the opening and went for the throat.
The Crown caught it one-handed.
For a moment it looked almost ridiculous, the pale beast twisting and clawing in a grip that shouldn't have been able to hold it. Then the Crown drove it into the ground. Again and again. On the third strike, the temple floor gave way under the impact and the Crawler stopped moving.
Cassian's teeth clicked together. He sent the roots at it again, thick bands of living white wood punching up from the stone to catch the thing at the knees and waist. The Crown turned and tore one apart with both hands, bark exploding in a spray of pale splinters and light. The second held longer. The rest didn't quite reach before a pulse of black force hit it and turned it to ash halfway through the climb.
Around him the Keepers kept firing. Silent bolts flashed from every angle, some white, some gold, some with stranger colours in them, cursework old enough to smell of tomb dust and sea-salt and old gods no one admitted to worshipping anymore. The Crown's body was no longer whole in any comfortable sense. Too many fissures now. Too many cuts shining with that ugly gold beneath the skin.
Every time it tried to turn cleanly, Edevane was there first. A cut at the elbow. A flick at the throat. A curse threaded into the gap between one movement and the next. She never stayed long enough to be caught. Clean strike and bolt.
Yet, the creature still kept moving. The Djinn watched with its head tilted, almost curious. Whenever a spell came too close, it leaned aside and let it pass, all grace and malice, like this was some performance it had paid good money to attend.
Then someone broke. A younger Keeper near Miranda's flank took a step back as two black birds hit his shield and burst into smoke. He lost the rhythm of his hands, panic got in first, and the word flew out before thought could catch it.
"Protego!"
The Djinn smiled.
The shield did rise. It rose inward.
Silver-blue light folded around the man like a closing fist, crushed him clean off his feet, and tightened until there was a wet cracking sound in the middle of it. The globe of force hung there for a beat with his body bent wrong inside it, then burst apart in a rain of magic and blood.
Nobody shouted.
Several people made the mistake of looking.
The Crown used it. It drove straight through the left flank before the gap could close, one arm sweeping low, the other striking high. A woman in dark green got half a curse off in silence and nearly took its eye. Nearly. The Crown's hand hit her face and the top half of her skull simply wasn't there anymore.
"Lira-"
Someone called in pain, cut short as the next strike came in.
The man beside her went for a binding chain. The thing caught his wrist, pulled him in, and put its other hand through his ribs.
Cassian moved before the body hit the floor.
He cut the air and called the tree harder through the roots. Light surged under the stone and burst up beneath the Crown's feet in a column thick as a pillar. It drove the creature up and back, gold cracks blazing open across its torso.
Bathsheda was already there with him, her hand carving through the air so fast the runes around her wrist blurred into a spinning ring. They struck the thing in layers, one on the throat, one over the breastbone, three more slamming into the gold seams down its side.
The Crown ripped the first ring of Bathsheda's runes apart. Two more held, silver-white script spinning across its chest and shoulder. It tore at them with blackened fingers.
Then the floor beneath Miranda's side burst open. A hand of dark stone and gold came up from the old temple crack like the ruin itself had decided to fight for the bastard in the middle of it. It caught one Keeper at the ankle and dragged him under before anyone could catch him. The second one went backward trying to help and vanished with him in a spray of broken slabs.
The gap snapped shut again. Miranda looked at the stone in utter disbelief, then fury.
Cassian pointed at her, and the floor around the wound in the temple lit with pale roots and locking runes. She got the message and hammered down a ward-net over the whole ring, blue lattice flashing in squares across the broken ground. When the next hand came up, it met the net and blasted apart into fragments before it could take anyone else.
Ash wheeled above them and screamed. More creatures were coming. Two long-bodied cliff things, all wing and teeth and hooked talons, tore in through the broken upper arches trailing black vapour from their mouths. One went for the outer line. The other folded its wings and dropped straight toward Nicolas.
Perenelle split from Nicolas. Quick as a curse and meaner than one. She caught the thing side-on with a silent slash of silver fire that split one wing open to the bone. It still kept coming. Nicolas barely had time to raise his wand before a white Crawler launched itself across the broken slab and took the creature out of the air, both of them crashing together into a fallen ringstone.
The old alchemist didn't even blink. He drew a sigil in the air with two fingers and sent it slicing through the dark at the Crown's neck like a blade made of hammered sunlight.
It hit. The thing reeled.
The roots erupted everywhere. They came up around the Crown in a cage of pale wood and living bark, thick enough to block sight for a second, twisting through the old temple and hauling whole sections of broken floor upward with them. One root punched through the slab at the creature's left side. Another caught it across the spine. A third wrapped the throat.
For a heartbeat, Cassian thought they had it.
Then the Djinn laughed. Delighted.
The sound alone made the hairs on his arms rise.
One of the older Keepers on the right, bleeding heavily from one side and running on the sort of stubbornness that killed men more often than it saved them, chose exactly that moment to gamble on speed.
"Confringo!"
The word struck the Djinn like a gift.
It tilted its head and the blasting curse changed shape in the air. The glowing red bolt widened, flattened, and folded back on itself. Instead of hitting the trapped Crown, it burst under the Keeper who'd cast it.
The explosion took his legs off at the knee.
It also took the two witches beside him, one dead before she landed, the other screaming and trying to hold her own stomach in with both hands as smoke curled off the stones around her.
"You wish... is my command." The Djinn laughed.
The right flank broke.
Cassian looked at the Djinn and said, "For fuck's sake."
He cut one hand through the air. Thin threads of light tore free from every open mouth in the ruin.
It came out in startled streams from Keepers, from wounded people on the stones, from the ones halfway through gasping warnings or choking on pain. All of them yanked loose in one sweep and dragged across the temple toward Cassian's hand.
The whole battlefield went mute.
The Djinn's grin slipped.
Cassian flicked his wrist again.
The stolen lights rose in a spiral and vanished into the pale leaves overhead. The tree took them greedily. Leaves flashed white-gold.
All around him, mouths were still moving. Nothing came out.
The Djinn stared. Then, very softly, with none of its earlier delight left, it said, "Using my spell against me?"
Cassian looked at it and grinned.
"Borrowing," he said. "You've made a career of it."
The Djinn's eyes narrowed.
Good. Let it be offended. Let it stand there and stew in the lovely new fact that the one thing it'd brought to the field, twisted words, stolen intent, every spoken spell turned inside out, had just been ripped clean out of everyone's reach.
Now there were no spoken curses to catch. No shouted bindings to twist. No panicked fool to bark the wrong thing and explode himself for the entertainment value.
The Crown ignored the Djinn and burst through the roots.
Pale bark flew in all directions. One huge section of living wood spun past Cassian's head and smashed into a column hard enough to bring half of it down.
The Crown looked at Cassian through the flying splinters of pale bark, and its ruined mouth curved.
The words slid through the ruin and into every listening mind. It wanted everyone to hear it this time. Keepers felt despair.
The pressure came down with that last word. It came down over the temple so hard the air seemed to thicken. The blackness pouring off the Crown deepened and spread, rolling through the broken rings and over the dead like floodwater finding every hollow. The roots of the tree still shone, but now the dark pushed against them, trying to drown the light under sheer force.
One Keeper dropped first.
Then three more.
Someone on Sabine's side went down to both knees with his wand slipping out of numb fingers. Two witches near the rear line bent double, gasping, one of them pressing a hand to the floor as if the stone itself was trying to shove her through it. Even Coriolanus staggered and caught himself on a cracked slab with a mouthed curse.
Master Ji stayed on his feet through sheer stubbornness, then one leg gave under him and he hit the ground hard enough to bite his tongue bloody.
Bathsheda swayed beside Cassian. He caught her hand and held on. He could feel the crushing weight pressing in through thought and magic alike, trying to force both of them down with everyone else.
Cassian was still standing, but only just. The pressure was obscene now, heavier than anything the Crown had thrown at them so far. It carried hunger with it. Triumph. The ugly absolute of a thing that had waited too long and believed the world had finally rolled over for it.
The Crown watched them all sink.
Then Cassian laughed.
The sound reverberated through the choking weight of the temple, and the Crown's black eyes narrowed.
Cassian lifted his head. There was blood at one corner of his mouth where he'd bitten his cheek. He wiped it with the back of his hand, grinned, and looked at the thing as if it had made the stupidest mistake of its long and miserable existence.
"You really haven't noticed, have you?"
The Crown's fingers curled.
The pressure slammed harder into him, black force cracking across the floor at his feet and splashing up the roots in hissing waves. Cassian's coat snapped back by the sheer of it. Bathsheda's shoulder hit his for balance, and he tightened his grip on her hand.
"You've been spreading that ugly little influence all over the world," he said. "Creatures, wards, ruins, weak minds, frightened crowds. Fair enough. You do love a cheap route in. But there's something missing, isn't there?"
The Crown said nothing. Its stare sharpened.
Cassian's grin widened.
"Most of the world's population," he said. "Bit odd, that. Whole countries going silent. Cities dimmer than they ought to be. Forests are quiet. Not much terror for a rising apocalypse."
The gold under the Crown's skin flared. It drove more force into the temple. Several of the Keepers cried out in silence. One of the younger ones pitched forward and had to be dragged back by the scruff of his robes before the spreading dark could swallow him.
Cassian lifted his free hand and turned it outward. The air around the temple split into thousands of floating panes. They opened in every direction, tall as doors, small as mirrors, some no wider than a book and some broad enough to fill half the broken sky. Sheets of pale light shimmered into being above the ruins, between the shattered columns, over the heads of the fallen Keepers, across the roots of the tree.
And inside every pane... People. Animals. Magical creatures. Sleeping.
Children tucked under blankets in warded caverns deep below the earth. Families lying side by side in halls lined with protective sigils. Entire groups of Muggles asleep in converted stations, shelters, underground chambers, hidden churches, old tunnels, school basements, bunker-complexes charmed warm and dry. Wizards. Witches. Animals. Goblins. Centaurs. Merfolk in shielded flooded caverns lit by gentle blue spellwork. Owls tucked under their wings on enchanted beams. Kneazles curled into one another in warm nests. Dragons dozing in ward-netted mountain hollows. Magical creatures scattered through protected sanctuaries all across the world, sleeping under soft enchantments while golden illusions drifted above them like remembered dreams.
And in those dreams, the Valley. The white tree. Sunlight through pale leaves. Water over stone. Fields without rot. A world held in balance.
The whole temple froze. The Crown stared.
Every Keeper who could still lift their head looked up into the glowing panels and saw it. The sleeping thousands. The peaceful faces. The creatures at rest.
Cassian looked back at the Crown.
"You grow from fear," he said. "Awe too, when it tilts the wrong way. Despair, grief, panic, all the usual filth. But the Valley grows stronger from the other side of it. Hope. Love. Peace. Trust. Rest." He gave a small shrug. "I've been showing them the Valley all along."
The Crown lurched forward a step.
The roar tore through the temple and made half the floating panes shiver, though none of them broke.
Cassian chuckled.
"Good Night is my spell," he said. "My creation. Puts the world to sleep, moves them somewhere safer, and lets me fill their heads with something worth holding while the worst of the dark passes overhead. You thought the world was going quiet because it had started to kneel."
His smile sharpened. "It was sleeping through your grand return. They don't even know you exist."
The dark around the Crown surged wildly now, but its shape had changed. It no longer looked like expanding dominion. It was pure rage. The pressure still came down hard, but it no longer had the same weight. Not with the panes hanging open all round the ruin. Not with thousands upon thousands of sleeping minds feeding a steadier current back into the roots and branches of the tree.
The pale leaves overhead brightened. The roots deep in the broken stone spread wider.
White Crawlers lifted their heads. Night Crawlers shifted. Staring at the tree.
Cassian took a step forward. Then another. He didn't let go of Bathsheda's hand.
The Crown saw him coming and straightened, fury boiling through every cracked line of its body. Darkness bled outward off, gathering around its feet, rising along its arms, coiling upward like living smoke.
Bathsheda's shoulders squared. The silver-white marks round her fingers spun faster, answering the tree above them and the light panels all across the temple.
The Crown spread both hands.
The dark rushed at him. It came with teeth this time. Claws. Pressure sharpened into attack. A flood of black force tearing straight toward Cassian's chest, enough to shred a shield and strip a mind raw in the same breath.
Cassian kept walking.
"Tenebrae Aboleo."
Not a Spoiler, Just an image! ↓
Spoiler
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Author Rant ↓
Spoiler
What a magnificent age of literacy. Everyone can read, nobody can be questioned afterward.
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