LOGINIn the shifter city of Ancnix, strength is law, loyalty is survival, and every young warrior is taught that their soul belongs to the moon. Seventeen-year-old Elora Jardine has spent her life mastering control—of her shifting, of her temper, and of the secrets she keeps hidden behind a composed smile. Born into a respected warrior house yet trapped beneath her father’s cruelty, Elora’s only anchors are her younger brother, Micah, and her closest friend, Kailee Blackstone. But on the eve of her graduation, a violent confrontation awakens a power inside Elora that no Shifter should possess. When the city’s future king, Gregory Forstfang, moves to claim her under the guise of duty, Elora’s world collapses into fear, fractured trust, and a destiny she never asked for. Forced to flee Ancnix, Elora’s escape leads her deep into the untamed Outer Wilds, where she encounters two strangers whose paths intertwine with her own: Briar Vale, a gentle but powerful Strega guided by visions she doesn’t yet understand, and Declan Eldritch, a Farisee whose calm presence stirs ancient magic in the world around him. Each carries secrets. Each carries a purpose. And each seems mysteriously drawn to Elora’s growing, unstable power. Together, the unlikely trio must navigate haunted forests, forgotten ruins, and a rising darkness spreading across Nethara. As Elora’s abilities intensify beyond her control, the three uncover whispers of an old prophecy—a legend hinting that the fate of their world may rest in the hands of a girl who never wanted to be anything more than free.
View More“In the beginning, there was nothing — and in that nothing, love.”
From the void walked two gods, hand in hand through silence: Acacia, Goddess of Light and Magic, and Finvarra, God of Nature and Renewal. Their love was the first spark — the breath that stirred creation. When their fingers entwined, the darkness trembled, and from that touch was born Nethara, a world of breath and stone and dream.
Their laughter became the wind. Their tears became the rivers. Where they kissed, forests bloomed like sighs from sleeping earth. When they danced, stars fell across the sky to watch.
For a time, there was only harmony.
From the clay of their joy, the Terrans came — mortals of flesh and spirit, the first children of Nethara. They lived by the divine laws, honoring the balance between light and life, creation and decay. The gods watched in peace, content.
But creation begets longing.
Acacia, ever the dreamer, looked upon the Terrans and saw potential — hearts yearning for magic, for the divine spark she carried. In love, she bound herself to a circle of mortal women and gifted them her essence.
Thus were born the Strega, the first Sorceresses — beings of light and grace, charged to heal and guide, to preserve harmony between mortal and divine. Their voices calmed storms, their hands mended what war or sorrow had broken.
Yet Acacia’s heart burned with creation still, and from that fire came another gift — unbridled, wild, and fierce. From the raw pulse of her magic were born the Witches, beings of pure, untamed power, forged to defend what light could not save. They were the shield and the blade of Acacia’s will — warriors of radiant flame who stood where mercy ended.
Together, Sorceress and Witch became Acacia’s twin reflections — compassion and fury, dawn and flame — and through them, her magic walked among mortals.
Finvarra, seeing his beloved’s gift, wished to honor the mortal men who tended his forests with reverence. He breathed nature into their veins, fusing their souls with earth and sky. Thus came the Farisee, guardians of the Green Law — beings of living essence and beauty, who walked between worlds cloaked in Cantrip glamour.
For an age, light and life thrived together — until love birthed another.
From the union of Acacia and Finvarra came their son, Mahina, the God of Strength and Loyalty. Inheriting his mother’s brilliance and his father’s soul, he loved the Terrans as fiercely as his parents had. Wishing to grant them his own blessing, he sought those who honored the hunt, who took life with reverence. To them he bestowed his power — binding their souls to beasts.
Thus were born the Shifters, mortals who could share their form and spirit with an animal kin. They were the bridge between instinct and intellect, bound forever to Mahina’s moon.
But in the echo of his creation, the balance trembled.
Three divine gifts — Magic, Nature, and Strength — had reshaped Nethara. None foresaw the shadow such beauty would cast.
For in the void still lingered Viduus, twin to Acacia — the God of Death and Darkness, the uninvited witness to creation. He had watched from the edge of eternity, silent, sorrowful, unseen. Though no realm bore his name, his essence lingered — for even light casts shadow.
It was mortals who first reached for him.
A sect of Terran mages, hungry for power, learned to draw upon the dormant energy of Viduus. They twisted his essence into blood and fire, remaking it in their image. Their hands brought ruin to the forests, corruption to rivers, and death to the gods’ children.
Thus began the First Great War.
Farisee and Sorceresses fought to preserve the world, while Witches and Shifters burned to defend it. Terrans divided — some standing for creation, others for dominion. The earth screamed beneath their feet, and the skies darkened with smoke.
When the rivers turned red and the sun bled gold upon the thorns of the burned forests, Finvarra wept. In his grief, he drew his faithful into a sanctuary of living earth, a city hidden within roots and vines. This city became Aether, the green heart of the world.
Acacia, her light dimmed by sorrow, gathered her daughters — Sorceresses, Witches, and mortals who still believed in her grace — and raised the radiant city of Astarte, veiled in crystal and magic wards.
Leaving Mahina, their son, driven by loneliness, raged against Viduus. He exiled the God of Death to the edge of creation, sealing him in darkness. Then, taking his Shifters and the remaining Terrans, he founded Ancnix, a city of strength and silence, ruled by loyalty above all else.
Thus, Nethara was broken into three.
Light, Life, and Strength — each isolated, each mourning what was lost.But even in exile, Viduus did not curse them. He pitied them. For he had seen the truth his fellow Gods could not — that life cannot thrive without death, that shadow is the only mirror that gives meaning to light.
Bound in his prison of night, he whispered a final prophecy into the heart of creation:
When the sun bleeds gold upon the thorn,
and the moon drowns pale in rivers torn,When threefold flame lies cold as stone,and gods have turned from their own,Then shall she rise — child of twilight’s breath,
Bound by falsehood, shadow, death.Her heart divided, her bond untrue,Her soul the mirror of what light withdrew.Through pain, the fracture mends anew,
Through loss, the dawn learns what it slew.For love once broken, still remembers flame —and through her will, shall bear its name.When the beast bows to the tree, and the tree drinks from the star,
When moonlight crowns the flame of war,Three hands shall clasp in ash and bloom,and wake the gods from their silent tomb.The words became legend, then myth — carried through generations by priests and dreamers.
Until the dawn of the Age of Magitech.
When magic fused with metal and faith became invention, the prophecy stirred again.
And under Mahina’s moon, a child was born — her cry fierce enough to rattle the stars, her blood a whisper of dusk and dawn entwined.
She was born of wolf and shadow, of blood and mercy, and the gods turned their gaze upon her.
For through her, the flame that could restore them — or end them — had come again.
Her name was Elora Jardine.
There was a beat before anyone moved.The Concord Temple held them in that pause, light settling along the carved veins of stone as though the structure itself were listening, weighing breath and presence before allowing the moment to pass. Sound softened beneath the vaulted ceiling. Footsteps slowed. Even the air felt rooted, ancient in a way that resisted urgency.Declan’s fingers tightened around Elora’s hand.The shift in him was immediate—not a shedding of responsibility, but the loosening of something he had carried too tightly for too long. He drew her forward with him, his steps quickening as the familiar resonance of life and blood pulled at his awareness. Elora stayed close, her shoulder brushing his arm, her thumb tracing slow, grounding arcs against his knuckles, a quiet reminder that he did not cross this space alone.His parents stood near the inner curve of the chamber, unadorned by crown or ceremonial mantle, yet unmistakable all the same. King Thalen Eldritch’s postur
They knew what the Triad Temple was supposed to look like.Elora carried the memory of it as she walked, not as an image but as a sensation that lived beneath the skin. She remembered stone fractured by age and neglect, remembered pillars that no longer quite held themselves upright, remembered the way the courtyard had opened at its center to reveal bare earth where the floor had split, the break left exposed as though the land itself had been wounded and never fully mended. Behind the great brazier that once held the Concord Flame, they had placed the seed there with care, pressing it into soil that had not felt a living root in generations. The flame had burned low that day, steady but lonely, its light thin against the ruin, and the air had carried the weight of something sacred left unfinished.They had left it that way.As the war closed in around them, Elora had spoken of the temple to Kailee and Zayden in quiet moments when the future felt too uncertain to name. She had told t
The letter came with the sunrise, unfolding from light rather than shadow.Elora stood in the courtyard beside Declan when the air warmed and thinned, a thread of silver-gold weaving itself slowly into parchment before them. Briar inhaled softly at her side, recognition blooming across her features before the sigil had even sealed — crystal sun bound by crescent, the mark of the Astarte High Council.There was no tension in the moment. No tightening of hands toward weapons. The war had ended. The world had not shattered. This felt like what had always been promised.Elora broke the seal.The script shimmered, elegant and unhurried, the voice of the Council unmistakable in its balance.By decree of the Astarte High Council and in accordance with the promise made upon the settling of war, a gathering of sovereigns and heirs is called. Let the leaders of Nethara convene in two days’ time at the restored grounds of the Triad Temple — not as rulers divided by city, but as stewards of a sh
Ancnix did not wake whole again all at once.It healed the way living things always did—slowly, imperfectly, with visible scars and stubborn determination.The shattered stones of the city were lifted and reset by hands that had once carried weapons. Burned timbers were replaced with fresh beams cut from the high forests beyond the walls, hauled back by Fenraen and volunteers alike. Where homes had fallen, foundations were traced again in chalk and hope. Where shops had burned, new signs appeared—simpler than before, but proudly painted.Elora watched it all from the steps of the central square, the scent of mortar and sawdust carried on the breeze, the sounds of hammers and voices weaving together into something almost like music.She had learned, in the weeks since the war, that rebuilding was not a single act. It was a thousand small choices to keep going.She and Declan took no formal titles in Ancnix, but their presence was constant all the same. They stood beside Zayden and Kail






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