The morning after the fight felt wrong.
The city looked the same — the same traffic, same skyline, same distant sounds of people living their ordinary lives — but Rick could feel the difference in the air. It was subtle, like the city itself had started breathing in sync with something ancient and unseen. They’d spent the night in one of Lira’s safehouses — a cramped apartment above an old bookstore that smelled of dust, ink, and faint traces of magic. The blinds were shut, and every window was marked with sigils to keep unwanted eyes away. Rick sat on the couch, staring at his hand. The glowing mark that had burned there during the fight had faded, but not completely. Faint golden lines still traced across his palm, pulsing with a quiet rhythm — like a heartbeat. > “It doesn’t hurt?” Lira asked from across the room. She was at the kitchen counter, her jacket off, sleeves rolled up, writing runes on strips of paper that glowed softly in the dim light. > “No,” Rick said. “It just… hums. Like it’s alive.” > “That’s because it is.” She glanced at him. “The Veil’s essence is tied to life itself. It reacts to your emotions, your focus — your will. You can’t just ignore it.” > “Believe me, I’ve tried.” He gave a half-smile. “Does it come with an off switch?” Marrek snorted from where he leaned against the wall, sharpening a knife. “If it did, half the world wouldn’t be dead right now.” Rick shot him a look. “Comforting as always, thanks.” Lira set down her papers and walked over. “We need to start training you — properly this time. You got lucky last night. That light saved you, but without control, it’ll eat you alive.” Rick raised an eyebrow. “Eat me alive?” > “Magic always demands balance,” she said simply. “You draw power from the Veil, it draws something back from you. Energy, memory, sometimes even time.” > “Wait — you mean it can kill me?” Lira met his eyes. “If you push too hard, yes.” For a long moment, the room was quiet except for the faint ticking of a clock on the wall. Rick exhaled slowly. “Okay. So, lesson one — how do I not blow myself up?” Lira smiled faintly. “Come on. We’ll use the backroom. And maybe try not to destroy my floors.” --- The backroom looked like it used to be a storage space — bare brick walls, concrete floor, a few crates pushed aside. But the moment Lira stepped inside, she pressed her hand to the wall and whispered a rune. The air shimmered, and the space expanded — impossibly wide, like they’d stepped into another world entirely. Rick stared. “You seriously have a pocket dimension behind your bookstore?” > “Every mage needs one,” she said with a shrug. “It’s harder for neighbors to complain when things start glowing.” She drew a circle on the ground with chalk, tracing symbols at each point. “Stand inside.” Rick stepped in. “What’s this supposed to do?” > “Help you focus. The circle stabilizes your link to the Veil. Without it, your energy will scatter.” > “Got it. No scattering.” Lira took a step back. “Now. Close your eyes. Feel the mark in your hand. Don’t force it — listen to it.” Rick tried. At first, he felt nothing but the sound of his own breathing. Then, slowly, the hum returned — faint, like a whisper at the edge of hearing. It grew stronger, pulsing in time with his heartbeat. Warmth spread through his arm, then his chest, then everywhere. Light flickered behind his eyelids. He opened his eyes. Golden lines glowed along his veins, faint but bright enough to illuminate the circle. The air around him vibrated softly. > “Good,” Lira said. “Now shape it. Picture the light as something solid — a barrier, a shield, anything.” He focused. The light wavered, then formed into a shimmering arc before him — a half-sphere of gold. For a moment, it felt effortless. Then pain shot up his arm. The light cracked, flickered, and exploded in a burst of heat that threw him backward. Rick hit the floor hard, gasping. Smoke curled from his fingertips. Lira hurried over. “I said focus, not fight it!” > “You could’ve mentioned it explodes when you lose focus!” he groaned. She smirked slightly. “Now you know.” Marrek’s laugh echoed from the corner. “Looks like he’s a natural.” Rick sat up, flexing his fingers. The pain was fading, replaced by a strange, electric thrill that buzzed under his skin. “That was… actually kind of amazing.” Lira nodded. “You have potential, Rick. But power without control is just chaos. You’ll need weeks of this before you can face the Court again.” Rick looked down at his hand. The golden mark pulsed once more — calm now, steady. “Then we better start right away.” --- That night, when the others had gone quiet, Rick stood by the window, staring out at the city. From this height, Greyhaven looked peaceful. But he knew better. Beneath the lights and glass, the shadows were shifting. Somewhere out there, the Shadow Court was planning their next move. And somewhere deeper, something older was watching — waiting for him to make a mistake. He pressed his hand against the glass. The mark glowed faintly, casting a soft reflection on the window. > “What are you turning me into?” he whispered. There was no answer — only the hum of the city and the faint pulse of magic beneath his skin.Latest Chapter
BOOK 2Chapter 239 – When the City Blinks
The city didn’t feel different.That was the problem.Rick stood on the roof of a half-abandoned parking structure, staring down at flickering streetlights and slow-moving traffic. Horns blared. A train rattled somewhere underground. Neon signs buzzed like tired insects.Normal.Too normal.Behind him, Kaela adjusted her jacket, trying—and failing—to blend in. The city didn’t suit her. The Veilborn forest had sharp edges and honest danger. This place hid its teeth.“You feel it too, don’t you?” she asked.Rick nodded. “The Veil’s thinner here.”Kaela frowned. “Cities should be loud to it. Crowds. Belief. Fear.”Rick exhaled slowly. “Something’s dampening it.”As if summoned by his words, the hairs on his arms rose.The air blinked.Not shifted. Not tore.Just… blinked.Rick’s shadow jerked sideways, lagging half a second behind him.Kaela swore under her breath. “That’s not natural.”“No,” Rick agreed. “That’s deliberate.”A low hum rolled across the rooftops, barely audible, like a s
BOOK 2Chapter 238 – The Price of Being Known
Rick didn’t sleep.Not because he couldn’t close his eyes—but because every time he tried, the Veil pushed back.He sat against the base of a twisted tree near their temporary camp, elbows on his knees, watching the slow drift of glowing spores through the air. The forest hummed softly now, like a distant engine idling.Kaela slept a few steps away, one hand resting on the hilt of her curved blade. Even unconscious, she looked ready to fight.Rick envied that.His shadow stretched long across the roots, darker than it should have been. It twitched once, then stilled.“You’re not subtle,” Rick muttered.The shadow didn’t answer—but it leaned closer.Rick swallowed. “Yeah. Thought so.”He flexed his fingers. The silver-and-black sensation stirred under his skin, restrained but alert, like a coiled wire. Ever since the Memory Well, something had shifted. Not power—clarity.He understood now why the Veil watched him.Why it whispered.Why it waited.Footsteps crunched softly through leave
BOOK 2Chapter 237 – What the Veil Remembers
The forest didn’t return to normal.Not fully.Even after the Shadowbound withdrew, the air stayed tight, like the world was holding its breath. Leaves glowed dimmer now, their light pulsing in slow, uneven rhythms. Somewhere far off, branches cracked—too heavy to be wind.Rick stood where the ash had settled, staring at the dark smear soaking into the roots.“You felt that, didn’t you?” he said.Kaela nodded. “The Veil recorded it.”Rick frowned. “Recorded?”“Everything that matters leaves an echo,” she said. “Especially choices.”Rick exhaled slowly. “So now the forest knows I can kill Shadowbound.”Kaela looked at him. “No. Now it knows how you kill them.”That didn’t make him feel better.They moved again, deeper this time. The path Kaela chose wound downward, sloping into a shallow ravine where the trees grew close and tangled, their roots clawing out of the soil like exposed bones.Rick’s shadow stayed close now. Too close.It moved half a second slower than he did, like it was
BOOK 2Chapter 236 – Lines in the Bark
They didn’t run.That was the first thing Rick noticed about himself as they moved deeper into the forest. His legs worked, his heart raced, but there was no panic driving him forward anymore. Just purpose—and a tight, coiled awareness that something would break soon.Kaela led them along a narrow path where the glowing leaves thinned and the air grew cooler. The Domain changed here. The trees were older, thicker, their bark carved with faint symbols that looked less like writing and more like scars.Rick slowed. “These markings… they’re not natural, are they?”Kaela shook her head. “No. They’re boundary lines.”“Between what?”“Between those who hunt,” she said, “and those who are hunted.”Rick exhaled. “Great. And we’re standing where?”Kaela didn’t answer right away. She stopped near a massive tree whose trunk split into three twisting columns. Pressing her palm to the bark, she whispered something Rick didn’t recognize.The tree responded.The symbols lit up, crawling across the b
BOOK 2Chapter 235 – The Weight of Being Seen
The forest exhaled.Rick felt it—deep in his chest, like the world itself had just finished holding its breath. The silver glow dimmed slightly, shadows settling back into their natural places, but the pressure didn’t leave.If anything, it grew heavier.Kaela straightened slowly, eyes scanning the trees. “Do you feel that?”Rick nodded. “Yeah. Like… everything’s watching again. Just quieter about it.”“That’s worse,” she muttered.They moved out of the clearing carefully. Each step Rick took felt different now, as if the ground recognized him. Roots shifted subtly beneath his boots, never tripping him, never blocking his path.“Okay,” Rick said, trying to keep his voice light. “That’s new. And unsettling.”Kaela didn’t smile. “The Domain responds to status. Before, you were an anomaly. Now you’re… acknowledged.”“By everything,” Rick guessed.She glanced at him. “By things we don’t even have names for.”They hadn’t gone far when Rick’s mark began to itch.Not burn.Not pulse.Itched.
BOOK 2 Chapter 234 – The One Who Returned
Light didn’t fade.It pressed.Rick felt it crush against him from every side—hot, cold, sharp, and numb all at once. His body twisted as if being pulled through a narrow opening that refused to fit him.Then—He slammed into the ground.Air rushed violently back into his lungs. Rick coughed, rolling onto his side, hands clawing at soil instead of bone, heat instead of cold.Grass.Real grass.The scent of earth and rain hit him so hard he almost laughed.Rick pushed himself up, heart hammering. He was kneeling in a wide clearing beneath a dim, silver-lit sky. Towering trees ringed the area, their leaves glowing faintly like frost-touched glass.The Veilborn Domain.But something was different.The forest was silent.No whispers.No moving shadows.No watching eyes.Too silent.“Rick.”He turned.Kaela stood several feet away, her swords lowered but ready. Her face was pale, eyes wide—fixed on him like she wasn’t sure he was real.“Hey,” Rick croaked. “You look like you just saw a gho
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