ログインDear Readers,And now, this truly is goodbye.When I wrote the first chapter of this story, I never imagined how far the journey would go. What began as the story of a girl struggling against the darkness within her became a story about friendship, sacrifice, love, hope, and the courage to keep moving forward even when the future seems uncertain.Over the course of this novel, we watched Lyra grow from someone afraid of what she might become into someone strong enough to choose her own path. We watched Kaelen remain her anchor through every storm. We watched friendships form, kingdoms change, truths emerge, and wounds slowly heal.Most importantly, we watched these characters earn their future.That future was always the real goal. Not victory, power or destiny. Simply the chance to live. The chance to laugh with friends, build a family, find peace, and choose who they wanted to be.As writers, we spend a long time with our characters. We watch them struggle, fail, grow, and succeed.
Lyra's POVFour Years After the WarThe storm outside had finally passed, leaving the academy grounds buried in a deep, unbroken silence. Through the frosted windowpanes, the moonlight cast long, cool silver lines across the wooden floorboards of their quarters, cutting through the heavy amber glow of the dying fire. The late-night strategy meetings in the council chambers were over. The endless stack of academy rebuilding plans had been pushed aside.The room was perfectly still, completely insulated from the rest of the world.Kaelen stood near the foot of the bed, slowly unbuckling his heavy leather forearm guards and setting them on the side table with a soft clatter. He wore only a simple black tunic, the collar loose and unlaced. When he looked up, his dark eyes caught the reflection of the embers, burning with a quiet, focused gravity that stripped away all the exhaustion of the day.Lyra sat at the edge of the mattress, her fingers lightly tracing the hem of her shift. She did
Lyra's POVTen Years LaterThe laughter reached her before the children did—a familiar warning one Lyra had learned never to ignore. She looked up from the garden immediately, just in time. Two small figures came racing around the corner of the house. The older one was leading and the younger one was chasing; both were moving far too quickly, both were laughing, and neither was paying attention. Which explained why the younger child immediately crashed into a flower bed. The flowers lost, spectacularly."Mama!" The accusation arrived instantly, as though Lyra had personally arranged the collision.She bit back a smile. "What happened?"The younger child pointed dramatically at the older one. "She cheated.""I did not.""You did.""I won.""You cheated and won." An important distinction, apparently.Lyra looked toward her daughter, then toward her son, then back again. Neither appeared remotely concerned—a familiar trait inherited from entirely the wrong people."Did anyone get hurt?"
Lyra's POVFive Years After the WarThe academy bell rang across the grounds, and students immediately ignored it. Some traditions never changed.Lyra smiled from her office window as dozens of first-year students rushed across the courtyard. Several were late, one dropped an entire stack of books, and another ran directly into a statue. The statue won, decisively. Life at the academy remained wonderfully predictable.A knock sounded at her door, but before she could answer, it burst open. A teenager stumbled inside, followed by three others. All four looked absolutely horrified—a familiar sight.Lyra immediately knew what had happened. "What did Cassian tell you?"The students froze, caught completely red-handed. The tallest finally raised a hand. "How did you know?"Lyra sighed. Experience. Painful experience. Years of experience. "He told you something ridiculous."The students exchanged very guilty looks before one of them finally spoke. "He said you once defeated a dragon using o
Tarek's POVTwo Years After the WarTarek's day had been perfectly normal, which, in hindsight, should have worried him. Normal days rarely stayed normal when Elsa was involved.The realization arrived precisely when she kicked open the library door—not opened, kicked. The difference mattered. Several students jumped, one nearly dropped an entire stack of books, and the librarian looked personally offended. Tarek wasn't surprised."You're late."Elsa walked directly toward him. "I am not.""You are.""I'm exactly on time.""You were supposed to be here ten minutes ago."Elsa dropped into the chair across from him. "That's still on time.""No.""Agree to disagree."Tarek sighed—a familiar sigh perfected through years of friendship, the sigh of a man who knew arguing was pointless. Elsa smiled, victorious as usual.They left the library shortly afterward. The original plan had been simple: review historical records, deliver reports, and return to the academy. It was a boring, peaceful a
Lyra's POVThree Years LaterSnow fell softly across the academy, covering the rooftops, the gardens, the pathways, and even the training grounds in white. Everything looked peaceful, still, and beautiful.Lyra stood near her window watching the snowfall, a mug of hot chocolate warming her hands. Outside, students hurried through the cold. Most failed to navigate the ice; several slipped, and one fell directly into a snowbank. Lyra laughed. The student immediately stood and pretended nothing had happened—a noble but entirely failed effort.A knock sounded at her door. She didn't need to guess who it was. "Come in."The door opened and Kaelen entered, carrying another mug. "Elsa sent this."Lyra accepted it suspiciously. "Why?""Because apparently your hot chocolate wasn't good enough."She laughed. That sounded exactly like Elsa. "Did she actually say that?""Word for word.""Fair."Kaelen sat beside her, and the room immediately felt warmer—not because of the fire or the drinks, but
Lyra's POV The academy didn’t relax. It adjusted. That was worse. By the next day, the tension hadn’t faded—it had settled into something sharper. Controlled movements. Measured conversations. Every glance lasting just a second too long. No one trusted silence anymore. And yet— that wa
Lyra's POV I knew the moment I woke that something had changed. Not in the obvious way. The academy still breathed the same—stone corridors humming with magic, students moving through routines, instructors watching with quiet authority. But beneath it all… something felt tighter. Controlled. Lik
Lyra's POV Sleep didn’t come easily—but at some point, it must have found me. The first thing I noticed when I woke was the light. Soft. Pale. Filtering through a window that wasn’t mine. For a moment, I didn’t move. Didn’t think. Just lay there, caught in that quiet space between sleep
Lyra's POV Morning felt… wrong. Not because anything had happened—but because nothing had. No alarms. No whispers of danger creeping through the halls. No tension thick enough to choke on. Just the usual rhythm of the academy waking up—students talking, footsteps echoing through corridors, dis







