Reincarnated as an Elf Prince-Chapter 225: Final Meeting

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Chapter 225: Final Meeting

Lindarion stood at the edge of the map. ƒreewebηoveℓ.com

The mountain wind scraped softly across the outcrop, dragging cold over stone. The sun hadn’t cleared the ridge yet. Shadows still ruled the slope. But everyone was awake.

Erebus leaned against a broken column at the side of the circle. His blade rested sheathed, but his posture said it might not stay that way.

Lira sat opposite him, elbows on knees, eyes unmoving. No tension. But no trust, either.

Sylric stood just left of the map with arms crossed and an expression that read more like a hangover than concern.

The mercs were spaced in a semi-circle, Velna, Rythe, Derran, Mekir, Kael, Stitch. A few new faces from Sylric’s silent summons stood further back, watching Lindarion like he was either about to impress them or get them killed.

Luneth was last to arrive.

She didn’t speak. Just took her place beside Lira and didn’t blink.

Lindarion tapped the edge of the map with one gloved finger.

"This is what we know," he said.

"Three days east, in the hollow spine of the second ridge, there’s a chamber carved with an ancient rune. It’s complete. Sealed. But not inert. It’s responded—passively—to direct affinity contact."

"Void?" Rythe asked.

"Yes."

Stitch frowned. "No magical resonance. No leak."

"Correct."

"Then why haven’t we cracked it open yet?"

Lindarion glanced at him. "Because it doesn’t want to open."

"And you’re sure it can?"

"Yes."

He didn’t explain how he knew.

No one pushed for it.

He tapped a circle on the map, a dark mark surrounded by sketched topography.

"This is the central node. We believe it’s one of several along a buried construct. Size unknown. Age unknown."

Velna scratched her chin. "A structure?"

"Possibly. Or a system."

Kael exhaled. "Wonderful."

Sylric stepped forward.

"We’ve established perimeter runs. Mekir and Rythe are point on recon. No light sources. Passive signals only."

"Entry team is Lira, Luneth, Stitch, and me," Lindarion said.

Stitch blinked. "Me?"

"You’re the only one who knows what mana will do if we force it."

"...Fair."

"I’ll go with you," Erebus said.

Every head turned slightly.

Lira didn’t flinch.

Luneth’s posture didn’t change.

Sylric looked away.

Lindarion didn’t pause. "You’ll take forward shadow."

Erebus tilted his head. "You’re giving me leash?"

"I’m giving you a job," Lindarion said. "If it makes you feel nostalgic, pretend we’re hunting."

Erebus’s smile didn’t touch anything behind his eyes.

He nodded once.

"Understood."

Lindarion turned back to the map. "The rest of you—outer ring. Three layers. If the chamber activates, you hold your line. No one crosses inward until we pull out or the structure stabilizes."

Velna grunted. "And if it doesn’t stabilize?"

Lindarion met her gaze. "Then you run."

She didn’t ask what from.

No one did.

Lindarion rolled the map up.

"We move at noon."

No one objected.

They didn’t need to.

This wasn’t a mission anymore.

It was containment.

And every one of them could feel it under their skin now.

The shape of something waiting to be named.

The others were getting ready.

Gear being checked, straps adjusted, final warnings spoken like rituals. Everyone had a habit before battle. Lira cleaned her blades in silence. Stitch muttered to his tonic bottles.

Erebus stood perfectly still, arms crossed, watching the wind move through the cliff trees like it was counting seconds.

Lindarion stepped back from them all.

Just enough.

He didn’t like being surrounded right before something important. It always made his mana coil tighter. Like it expected a knife from somewhere too close.

He leaned against a low wall of fractured stone. The surface was cold. It helped.

He watched the edge of the ridge, the trail that dipped between two broken pines where the descent began. That path would take them to the rune again. This time, something would happen.

Because this time, he’d let it.

He closed his eyes for a moment.

The pressure behind them still throbbed, low and distant, but always there.

It hadn’t gone away since the first time he stood inside the seal. Even sleep hadn’t dulled it. It waited in his breath, in his pulse. Familiar now. Like a second rhythm grafted beneath his own.

Footsteps.

He opened his eyes.

Luneth was there.

She didn’t speak. Just stepped beside him and leaned on the same stone, shoulders barely touching his.

She didn’t look at him.

Neither did he.

They stood like that for a while.

The air was cold, but not sharp. It had settled. Like the wind had finally tired of trying to warn them.

"You’re sure it’s today," she said finally.

He nodded. "I can feel it."

"So can I."

That quiet lingered. Not awkward. Just cautious.

Then she said, "It’s been growing louder since we got here."

He glanced at her.

Her eyes were on the ridge. But her hands were fidgeting slightly, thumb brushing the inside of her glove like she needed to confirm her skin was still there.

"Your affinity?"

"No," she said. "Something else. It doesn’t speak in spells. It presses. Like weight behind my ribs."

Lindarion nodded. "Same."

She didn’t say she was scared.

She didn’t need to.

Neither of them had flinched yet.

But both of them had felt it. Whatever was behind that seal wasn’t just old. It was awake.

And watching.

"You don’t have to come in with me," he said.

Her eyes cut toward him now.

He met them. Didn’t flinch.

She stared for a few seconds, and then said, flatly, "You know that’s not true."

"I mean it," he said. "If something happens, you’ll be outside the radius. You’ll have time to pull them out. Or take control. Or run."

"I’m not running."

"I know."

"Then stop trying to push me out."

He looked away again.

Toward the sky this time.

The clouds were moving low. Slow.

Everything in this place moved like it was waiting.

Luneth stepped a little closer.

Still didn’t touch him.

But the space between them shrank.

"You never said how you knew Erebus."

He didn’t answer immediately.

She didn’t rush him.

He finally said, "He taught me what people look like before they die."

She blinked once.

Not surprise.

Just realization.

"That’s the kind of teacher you had?"

"He thought it was necessary," Lindarion said. "I did too. For a while."

"And now?"

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