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THE SILVER LINING CHAPTER 4

작가: MIKS DELOSO
last update 최신 업데이트: 2025-02-26 02:26:36

The pyre roared to life, the flames licking higher as they consumed the wood piled beneath Krishna. The searing heat clawed at her skin, but the fire in her eyes burned brighter still. Her voice, though hoarse, carried a raw power that silenced the jeering crowd for a moment.

"Miyal Rhax," she called, her voice a fractured melody of despair and defiance. Her emerald eyes locked onto him, unyielding even as tears streamed down her face. "By the gods, by the ancestors of this pack, you will pay for this betrayal."

Miyal flinched, a shiver running through his frame. But his back remained turned to her, his hands clenched into fists so tight they trembled. He could feel the weight of her gaze, piercing through the iron of his resolve, but still, he did not look back. He couldn't.

Krishna's voice rose, a haunting chant blending with the crackle of the flames. "You rejected the truth for the lies whispered into your ears. You turned your back on love, on loyalty. You have doomed not only me but yourself and this pack.

Emboldened by Miyal's silence, the crowd continued the chant. "Burn the witch! Burn the witch!" It was drowned into the crackling flames and shrieking winds that howled within the cacophony of hate and fear.

But Krishna would not let this be. For all that strength she could manage, she bellowed her voice into the night air; it held promises that resound deep in hearts that listened.

Mark my words, Miyal! The curse you fear is nothing compared to what you have unleashed this night. The gods will see your treachery. The ancestors will not forgive. Your heart will know no peace, your dreams no solace, and your soul no rest. This fire will not end me. It will birth something you cannot fathom.

Emerald brightness bloomed in the surge of her magic, one last desperate flicker sending shockwaves through the crowd. For a moment, the flames became green and sent eerie shadows across the frightened faces of the pack. The pack gasped and cried in terror, their hatred faltering at the face of the unknown.

Miyal turned, his amber eyes wide with disbelief and something darker—regret, perhaps, or fear. But it was too late. The flames had consumed her, and Krishna was gone.

The crowd fell silent, the fire crackling in the oppressive stillness. The moon hung heavy in the sky, bearing silent witness to the tragedy below. Miyal stood rooted to the spot, his mind a storm of guilt and rage. Having done what he believed was right, what he thought was necessary, he now sat at the dying pyre with a great hollowness inside him.

Perfera stepped beside him, her hand lightly touching his arm. "It had to be done," she whispered, her voice laced with feigned sympathy. "For the good of the pack."

Miyal didn't respond. His gaze remained fixed on the charred remains of the pyre, his mind replaying Krishna's final words. They echoed in his soul, an unshakable curse that chilled him to the bone.

Somewhere in the heart of the forest, far beyond the hunting grounds of the Crescent Silver Moon pack, a glimmer of green light dined in secret, unseen by all. Night held its breath as the wind bore Krishna's final promise into the trees.

She was not lost. Not quite. And she would return.

The forest of Brunschiere lay oddly silent, as if Nature herself held her breath to mourn. Among the towering trees of Brunschiere, a land steeped in ancient magic, a faint green light flickered—a fragile heartbeat in the void. The air shimmered, as if the forest itself recognized the significance of the moment. Moonlight filtered through the dense canopy, casting pale streaks onto the forest floor, where Ignatious West carried Krishna's lifeless body in his arms. Her charred form, once radiant and full of life, was barely recognizable. The acrid smell of burned flesh lingered, and his heart clenched with every laborious step he took. He walked her carefully into the heart of Brunschiere, where trees grew so tall their tops vanished into clouds and their roots pulsed with arcane power, and the air buzzed with life and magic older than time itself. Ignatious stopped at the edge of a shimmering pool whose waters glowed faintly silver under the light of the crescent moon above.

He went down on his knees before the pool and laid Krishna's broken form down on a bed of moss. His hands flexed above her, shaking with the weight of what he had to do now. The runes tattooed along his arms began to glow; their intricate patterns burst across his skin like a wildfire. His voice, deep and resonant, broke the silence as he began to chant.

"I failed you once," he whispered, his voice trembling a little as he brushed sootstreaked hair from her face. "I won't fail you again."

Tears pricked his eyes, blurring his vision, but he pressed on, his steps guided by instinct and the faint glow of the sacred pool ahead. Brunschiere's magic hummed all around him, its ancient power palpable, as if the forest itself recognized the weight of his burden. Ignatious knelt at the water's edge, the soft moss cushioning his knees, and laid Krishna down with trembling hands.

Her face, though reduced to ashes and smoke, held within it reminders of the woman he once loved. The sharp curve of her jaw, the proud line of her brow, were signs of the fierily unyielding spirit which had captivated him years before. Now she was a shadow of herself: broken body and soul on the edge of the void.

Ignatious clasped his hands, and his fingers shuddered, as runes branded into the flesh began glowing in the skin. "You deserve better," he whispered. He spoke barely audible because his voice cracked in emotion. "You gave all to them, Krishna. All. And that is the repayment they send back? With flames? With murder?" His head shook once again, with rage now surging in for his grief. "I'll get you back," he said on a pledge.

As he starts the incantation, the runes brighten. His voice rises and falls to the throbbing beat of the magic that pulsed through the air. His words wash the waters of the pool. They start stirring, waves of light rippling outward. Silver tendrils snake from the water's surface, curling around Krishna's form as if embracing her in soft-glow.

By the crescent moon, Ignatious intoned, his voice steady despite the storm in his heart. By the ancient magic that binds this land, he called upon the forces that governed life and death. Restore her. Heal her. Bring her back to me.

The spell culminated in its crescendo when the forest held its breath. Silver light cloaked Krishna and pulsed, taking on a faint green glow that flickered from deep within her chest. Her body arched, curving her back like a lightning jolt. Then she screamed.

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  • THE SILVER LINING   THE SILVER LINING CHAPTER 53

    The phrases echoed in Ignatius's head like the chime of a divine bell—sonorous, conclusive, irreversible.He wrapped Krishna more firmly in his arms as the wall at his back split with a deafening boom, cracks radiating like shattered crystal. Wind shrieked in from the forest rim, heavy with ash and the sickly reek of the plague-beasts screaming with famine. He still did not turn.Krishna's body was heating up, her skin slick with sweat, her lips pale and hardly moving. The magic had drained too much from her. She had given everything she had left into the shield—given absolutely everything—and now she was more ember than flame.But alive.And as long as her heart remained alive, so did his purpose.He sprinted rapidly over Brunschière's battered courtyard, boots pounding against stone, avoiding the frantic townspeople and sentinels rushing to answer the breach. Children wailed. Bells rang out. Arrows flew overhead. The walls would not stand.Not without her.A commander cried, "We hav

  • THE SILVER LINING   THE SILVER LINING CHAPTER 52

    Krishna was panting, every breath a shiver of exhaustion. Her chest heaved and deflated, blood still spilling from the gash she had created, her hand throbbing with the rebound of outlaw magic. Her fire had coiled around the beast like paper—concluding and consuming it, black ash—that would not hold its shape, but at a cost.Her legs were shaking.She fell back, her eyes shaking. The cosmos spun around her, black edges curling around the edges.The light that surrounded her pulsed with the power of the breaking barrier, but it was falling, crumbling from the edges. The abominations outside didn't let up, teeth and claws crashing against the wards she had laid. They never would let up. They would penetrate. And when they did, Brunschière would be dead."Ignatius." She was hardly more than a breath, the words whispered over the din. "I can't. Can't continue. much longer."Ignatius scooped her up almost as soon as she had spoken, his massive hands pushed on either side of her shoulders,

  • THE SILVER LINING   THE SILVER LINING CHAPTER 51

    Meanwhile, at Brunschière —The wind howled more angrily than tonight.Not like wind at all.It was moist, as if it had been brought through lungs that should not breathe, scraping against the stone windows like claws rather than air. The light from the sanctuary flickered, casting long shadows that trembled against the vaulted ceilings.Krishna paced at the balcony that faced the forest abutting the Brunschière Sanctuary. The moon was full, but even its silver light could not cut through the seeping blackness closing in on them from the southern perimeter.She sensed it before she saw it.A pulse in the ground. As a heartbeat — ill and unnatural.Ignatius burst into the chamber, his steam-hissing fire-lit cloak still aglow with the heat of his reconnaissance."They're coming," he snarled, eyes burning like a dying fire. "The plague's broken the outer rim."Krishna spun around. "What of the wards?""They held… for awhile," Ignatius ground out, jaw taut. "But the disease isn't just gna

  • THE SILVER LINING   THE SILVER LINING CHAPTER 50

    A small boy cringed beneath a broken cart, his face pale and trembling, fists clapped over his ears."Mommy…?" he cried. "Don't leave me here…"His mother's hand was still on his shirt—torn, stiff, fingers locked in readiness even in death.In a cellar not far off, an old priest clutched the last silver moonstone, muttering frantic prayers."May the moon guard—may the—moon—Krishna, have mercy on us—"The moonstone cracked. Then shattered.The charm Krishna had cast so many years before to shield Yureth was gone.Unbound.Black ichor bubbled up from the darkest places in the ground, cracking the earth like corrupted veins. It moved up walls, wrapped around doorways, dragging entire houses down into the darkness with a low, hungry groan.The earth itself howled, living and furious."IT'S MOVING—THE GODDAMNED GROUND IS MOVING!" a farmer screamed before the street collapsed under him and engulfed him.A boy tried to dash across the square—but the well had changed.It bubbled with black wa

  • THE SILVER LINING   THE SILVER LINING CHAPTER 49

    The soldiers looked around at one another now, fear blooming."We have moldy silos of grain," said another man, stepping forward. "Our saltwater is black. We drag bodies of fish out of the river now. Bodies with runes carved on their chests."One of the elders pounded his cane on the ground. "We are cursed! And we know why! This began the night Luna Krishna was judged!"Perfera's words pierced the air, honey and steel. "She was a witch. She claimed it. You all saw what she became.""And what have we become, Perfera?" spat the old priestess.The hall was silent.Miyal clutched the arms of his throne. His breathing was harder now. Something in his chest shifted—memories like ice compressing. Krishna's green eyes. Her shriek in the flames. Her voice wailing out his name, again and again, until the fire consumed it.But the spell tightened tighter.Perfera leaned in, brushing a kiss against the back of his ear. "Don't listen to them, my love. You did what you had to do. You are stronger w

  • THE SILVER LINING   THE SILVER LINING CHAPTER 48

    The flame had burned down, its light now smoldering embers nestled in ash.Krishna sat cross-legged on the wooden floorboards, arms around herself, her cheek pressed against her knees. Dark curls spilled over her face like a veil as the tears silently streamed down.Opposite her, Ignatius knelt beside the fire, piling fuel into it with slow, methodical actions—anything to keep his hands occupied, his heart level."Whatsoever she did," Krishna breathed, the sound raw in her throat. "But I felt him… I felt him leave. Like a door in his head just shut. Like he's gone."Ignatius's expression hardened to a hard line. He didn't look at her."Please, Krishna," he said finally. His voice was low and insistent. "Miyal doesn't deserve your love. Forget him."She flinched—not because the words hurt, but because they were true.Ignatius turned to her now, face shadowed by candlelight and old anguish. "Recall what he did to you. He permitted them to curse you. He let them burn you and did nothing.

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