LOGINPOV: Kairos“Everyone stay back,” I said quietly.But the words felt thinner than I intended—like control stretched too far across something I didn’t understand.Because standing at the edge of the Hollow…Was me.Not a resemblance. Not an echo. Not something Eon had shaped from observation.This was *formed*.Complete.Aware in a way that felt older than the moment it appeared.---The other me smiled.Not wide. Not exaggerated.Just enough.The kind of smile I used when I already knew the answer before asking the question.That realization hit harder than anything else.Because it meant this wasn’t just a reflection.It was a version.And versions come from divergence.---“You shouldn’t exist,” I said again, steadier this time.The other me tilted his head slightly, mirroring the exact angle I knew I used when I was measuring a situation.“And yet,” he replied calmly, “here I am.”His voice matched mine perfectly.Same tone. Same cadence.But there was something beneath it.Somethi
POV: DariusI don’t trust it.There.Simple.Clear.Honest.And judging by the way Kael’s jaw was still set and Lyra hadn’t fully relaxed her stance, I wasn’t the only one.But unlike the others, I wasn’t trying to soften it with hope.Or curiosity.Or whatever fragile belief Aria and Seren were building around this thing.Eon.Even the name felt… too easy.Too accepting.Too fast.---“I don’t trust it,” I said out loud this time.No one reacted immediately.Which meant they already knew.Lyra glanced at me briefly.“Trust isn’t the point.”“It should be,” I replied. “If we’re going to let it exist here.”Kairos exhaled slowly.“We’re past the point of ‘letting’ anything. It already exists.”“Then we control it,” I said.Aria shook her head immediately.“No.”Kael didn’t agree with her.But he didn’t agree with me either.That told me everything.We were in the gray now.And I hate gray.---Eon turned toward me.Of course it did.It always reacted to tension.To conflict.To edges i
POV: Seren“I can still feel it,” I said quietly.Lyra glanced at me. “Eon?”I shook my head slowly. “Not just Eon… everything.”They all looked at me then—really looked.Because they knew I didn’t speak like that unless something deeper was happening.I pressed my palm more firmly against my arm, grounding myself, trying to separate the sensations.“The Hollow isn’t fractured anymore,” I continued. “But it’s not stable the way the old system was either. It’s… open. Like it’s listening.”Kairos’s brows drew together slightly. “Listening to what?”I swallowed.“To us,” I said. “To Eon. To whatever we do next.”Silence followed.Not disbelief.Recognition.Because we had all felt it in different ways—the way the ground responded without force, the way energy no longer demanded structure but adapted to it.We didn’t rebuild a system.We created something that *learned*.---Eon stood at the center, unmoving for a long moment.But it wasn’t still.Not really.Its presence shifted subtly,
POV: Lyra“It feels… calmer,” Seren said.Her voice wasn’t just observation—it was *sensitivity*. Seren had always felt what others couldn’t name, the subtle shifts beneath power, beneath intention. And right now, she was right.The Hollow wasn’t unstable anymore.Not in the way it had been.It wasn’t fractured chaos.It was… open.I stepped forward, just enough to feel the difference myself.The ground beneath my feet didn’t resist. It didn’t pulse erratically. It responded—lightly, like it was aware of my presence but not threatened by it.“That’s because nothing is forcing it into shape anymore,” I said.Darius folded his arms, still wary.“Or because something new is shaping it instead.”His gaze flicked to Eon.Fair.Too fair.---Eon remained still at the center.Not rigid.Not passive.Present.Its form had shifted again—subtly but noticeably. Where before it was undefined, flickering between possibilities, now it held a clearer outline.Still not human.Still not wolf.But clo
POV: KaelEon.The name didn’t just settle into the air—it *anchored*.I felt it.Not like the old system. Not like dominance or hierarchy.But like something had… taken its place.Not above us.Not beneath us.Within.My instincts didn’t know how to respond to that.And that alone made every muscle in my body stay tense.The figure—Eon—stood in the center of the Hollow, no longer flickering, no longer collapsing into itself.Defined.Not completely.But enough that the mind could recognize it as *something*.Something real.Something present.Something… aware.Its form wasn’t fixed. It shifted subtly, like it hadn’t decided what shape suited it yet. Edges softened, then sharpened again. Height adjusted slightly. Presence deepened with every passing second.Adapting.Always adapting.And that made it dangerous.---“Kael.”Aria’s voice pulled me slightly from my focus.I didn’t take my eyes off Eon.“Yes?”“What are you feeling?”I exhaled slowly.“Nothing I understand.”That earned a
POV: SerenThe silence wasn’t absence.It was *pressure*.Seren felt it immediately—like the world had been wrapped in something airtight and every breath now had to be negotiated.“Kairos?” she tried again.This time, her voice didn’t echo.It didn’t travel.It simply… vanished the moment it left her lips.Her chest tightened.Something was wrong with sound itself.Not broken.Reassigned.Kairos stood a few steps away, frozen in a posture she had never seen on him before—completely still, yet not calm. His eyes were fixed on something she couldn’t see, something beyond the room’s physical limits.Then he moved.Slowly.Carefully.Like any sudden motion might fracture whatever thin layer of reality they were standing on.“Don’t speak,” he said.But the words didn’t reach her ears.They appeared instead.Directly in her mind.Seren stumbled back.No.No, that wasn’t possible.Kairos took another step, and with it, the room *shifted*.The wooden walls of the lodge blurred—not dissolving
Kairos POV“Then he’s coming here.”The certainty hit my tongue before doubt could touch it.Seren didn’t argue.She felt it too.The forest tightened.Not physically.Anticipation.Silas swallowed. “You mean… he can cross?”“He already did,” Seren said quietly. “We saw the bleed.”Mael hugged her
Seren POV“Count.”The word tore out of me.Kairos reacted first. “One.”“Two,” Silas said.“Three,” Mael whispered.I finished. “Four.”We stood in the circle. All present. All breathing.But my skin crawled.“Again,” I ordered.Kairos nodded. “One.”Silas followed. “Two.”Mael said, “Three.”I sa
Seren POV“Don’t move.”The words came out steady, even though my pulse was sprinting.The ground answered with a low groan.Not loud.Deep.Like the earth was tired of holding itself together.Kairos froze beside me. “That’s not normal collapse.”“No,” I said. “It’s structural.”The circle at our
Kairos POV“Don’t answer.”The command left my mouth before Seren could move.Her shoulders locked. Good.The voice came again from the trees.“Seren… please.”Soft. Frayed. Familiar.Silas flinched. “That’s her mother.”Seren’s breath hitched.I saw it land. The sound went straight through her gua







