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Chapter 49 – When It Breaks

last update publish date: 2026-04-05 17:14:20

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The crack spread.

At first it was just a thin line across the surface of the core, barely visible beneath the overwhelming light.

Then it deepened.

Widened.

And everything changed.

Kael felt it in the same instant Rowan did.

The energy wasn’t just unstable anymore.

It was collapsing.

“Rowan,” Kael said, his voice tight, “something’s wrong.”

Rowan let out a strained breath that almost sounded like a laugh.

“Yeah,” he said. “I noticed.”

The light pouring from the crack intensified, spilling through Rowan’s hands, crawling up his arms like something alive. His entire body was rigid now, every muscle locked as he tried to hold it together.

But the core wasn’t holding.

It was breaking apart from the inside.

Darius stepped back again, his composure finally gone.

“Stop,” he said. “You don’t know what you’re doing.”

Kael shot him a look.

“That makes two of us.”

Another crack split across the core.

This one louder.

Sharper.

The sound echoed through the chamber like something snapping under pressure.

The ground beneath them shifted violently.

Chunks of stone broke away, the cracks in the floor widening fast enough to see.

“We need to let go,” Kael said.

Rowan shook his head immediately.

“No.”

“Rowan.”

“If I let go now, it won’t just break,” Rowan said, his voice strained. “It’ll explode.”

Kael’s stomach dropped.

“How do you know that?”

“I don’t,” Rowan admitted. “But it feels like it will.”

That was enough.

Kael tightened his grip on Rowan’s arm.

“Then we don’t let go,” he said.

Rowan glanced at him, something sharp in his expression.

“That’s not a plan.”

“It is right now.”

The core pulsed again.

The crack widened.

Light burst through it in jagged lines, splitting the surface into uneven fragments that still somehow held together.

For now.

But not for long.

Darius’s voice cut through the chaos again.

“You’re going to destroy everything,” he said.

Kael looked at him.

“That was already happening.”

Darius’s expression twisted.

“You don’t understand. If it breaks completely, the backlash will tear through every bond tied to it.”

Kael froze.

“What?”

Rowan’s grip faltered for just a second.

“Say that again,” Kael said.

Darius took another step back, his voice sharper now.

“The core isn’t just a tool,” he said. “It’s a source. It connects everything. Every bond that’s ever been formed through it.”

Kael’s chest tightened.

The courtyard.

The students.

Everyone.

“If it shatters,” Darius continued, “it won’t just hurt you. It’ll hit all of them.”

Silence hit for half a second.

Then the core cracked again.

Louder this time.

More violent.

Kael looked back at Rowan.

“You hear that?”

Rowan nodded once, his jaw tight.

“Yeah.”

“We can’t let it break like this.”

“No,” Rowan said. “We can’t.”

But that didn’t solve anything.

They were already at the breaking point.

The energy surging through Rowan was getting stronger by the second. Kael could feel it now through his grip, like holding onto something that was barely contained.

“What do we do?” Kael asked.

Rowan didn’t answer immediately.

That was never a good sign.

“Rowan.”

“I’m thinking.”

“You don’t have time.”

“I know.”

Another crack split across the core.

This one spread faster, branching out like fractures in glass.

The light flared violently, forcing Kael to turn his head for a second.

When he looked back, Rowan’s grip had tightened even more.

His hands were shaking now.

Not from fear.

From strain.

“You’re not going to hold it much longer,” Kael said.

“I know.”

“Then we need another option.”

Rowan’s breathing was uneven now, but his focus hadn’t broken.

“Listen,” he said. “If it’s a source, then it can’t just be destroyed. It has to go somewhere.”

Kael frowned.

“What does that mean?”

“It means the energy has to be redirected,” Rowan said. “Contained.”

Kael stared at him.

“Contained where?”

Rowan didn’t answer.

He didn’t need to.

Kael’s chest tightened.

“No,” he said immediately.

Rowan finally looked at him.

“That’s the only way.”

“No.”

“If we let it break, everyone pays for it.”

“And if you try that,” Kael shot back, “you might not survive it.”

Rowan held his gaze.

“That’s a risk.”

“That’s not a risk,” Kael said. “That’s a guarantee.”

Another pulse.

Another crack.

The core was barely holding together now, its surface split into multiple fragments that somehow hadn’t fallen apart yet.

Time was gone.

They were out of it.

Kael’s mind raced.

There had to be another way.

There had to be something they were missing.

“You don’t get to make that call alone,” Kael said.

“I’m not,” Rowan replied. “I’m making it because it needs to be made.”

“That’s not the same thing.”

Rowan didn’t argue.

He just looked back at the core.

The light reflected in his eyes, sharp and unsteady.

“Kael,” he said quietly.

Kael’s chest tightened again.

“I don’t like the sound of that.”

Rowan let out a breath.

“If this goes wrong…”

“No.”

“Listen.”

“No.”

“Just listen.”

Kael’s grip on him tightened.

“I said no.”

Rowan’s voice didn’t rise.

It didn’t need to.

“If this goes wrong,” he said, “you don’t come after me.”

Kael stared at him.

“That’s not happening.”

“You stay,” Rowan continued. “You make sure whatever’s left of this doesn’t spread.”

Kael shook his head.

“You’re not doing this.”

Rowan’s expression softened slightly.

Not much.

But enough.

“It’s already happening.”

The core pulsed again.

Harder.

The cracks widened.

A piece of it shifted.

Not fully breaking off.

But close.

Too close.

Kael felt something in his chest twist.

Not the bond.

Something else.

Something worse.

Fear.

Real fear.

“You don’t get to leave me like that,” Kael said.

Rowan’s gaze held his.

“I’m not leaving.”

“Then don’t act like you are.”

For a moment, neither of them spoke.

The chamber shook around them.

The light grew harsher.

The core continued to break.

And still, they stood there.

Holding it together.

Barely.

Then Rowan made a decision.

Kael saw it in the way his shoulders shifted.

The way his grip adjusted.

“Rowan,” Kael said.

But he was already moving.

Not letting go.

Not exactly.

But changing something.

Redirecting.

The energy surged differently.

Instead of bursting outward, it began to pull inward.

Toward him.

Toward Rowan.

“No,” Kael said immediately.

He tried to pull him back.

But the force hit harder this time.

Driving Kael back a step.

Then another.

“Stay back,” Rowan said.

“I’m not doing that.”

“You have to.”

“No.”

Rowan’s voice sharpened.

“Kael.”

Kael froze for a second.

Not because of the tone.

Because of what was behind it.

Finality.

“I said we do this together,” Kael said.

Rowan’s expression didn’t change.

“I know,” he said. “And we are.”

The core pulsed again.

And this time—

It started to collapse inward.

The light folding into itself.

The cracks pulling tighter.

Everything compressing toward a single point.

Rowan at the center of it.

Kael’s chest tightened.

“Rowan…”

Rowan didn’t look away.

“Stay,” he said.

Kael shook his head.

“I’m not losing you.”

Rowan’s voice dropped.

“Then don’t.”

And then—

The core broke.

Not outward.

Inward.

The light vanished in a single violent instant.

The force collapsed.

The chamber went silent.

Completely.

Kael stood there, breathing hard, staring at the space where Rowan had been.

Empty.

---

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