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The Realm of Wonders
The Realm of Wonders
Author: Grep-pens
Chapter 1: The Boy with No Spark
Author: Grep-pens
last update2025-06-13 00:04:25

The village of Liora always smelled like burning pine and wet stone. Nestled between low hills and encroaching forest, it was the kind of place the world forgot where the wind carried tales of distant kingdoms, but never returned with proof they were real.

Alan Smith stood alone at the edge of the Awakening Circle, his bare feet cold against the dew-slick grass. The other initiates were gathered in a tight semicircle behind him, their eyes burning with excitement or disdain.

“Maybe this time you'll finally burst into flames and save us the trouble,” someone muttered.

Laughter followed. Alan said nothing. He was used to this.

Every year, when the children of Liora turned sixteen, they were brought to the circle to awaken their spirit root, a mystical connection to the elemental forces of Aetherion. Fire, Water, Earth, Wind, or, in the rarest of cases, Lightning. A few manifested dual affinities, or unlocked martial qi instead, becoming future warriors and sect candidates. Alan had stepped into this circle twice already. Twice, nothing had happened.

"Begin!" roared Elder Thorne, the towering man in ceremonial crimson robes, leaning on a staff etched with runes. His voice cracked through the morning like thunder.

One by one, the initiates stepped forward, placing their hands on the crystal spire embedded in the circle’s center. It shimmered as each teen awakened a faint glow, blue for water, red for fire, green for wind. The spire dimmed between each one, but never failed to respond.

When his turn came, silence fell. Even the birds seemed to pause their song. Alan stepped forward, ignoring the heat of everyone's eyes boring into him. He laid his hands gently on the spire. Nothing happened. No glow. No flicker. No pulse. “Still nothing,” Elder Thorne said, voice flat. A few chuckles. Some outright laughed.

“Three years, and still no spirit root. Must be a defect,” someone whispered.

Alan stood still for a moment longer. Not because he hoped. Not anymore. But because for a fleeting second… something had happened. A tremor. Deep inside his chest. Like a flutter behind his ribs. Then it was gone. He removed his hands, turned, and walked back through the circle of scorn.

Elder Thorne’s words followed him like a death sentence: “Alan Smith, you are hereby declared rootless. You shall not be permitted to train in the path of cultivation. Your name shall be struck from the village register.”

The laughter now was open, vicious. Alan didn’t cry. He didn’t argue. He just walked.

Through the fields. Past the temple. Up the hill to the abandoned house where he lived alone. The same house his parents had left behind when they vanished seven years ago.

He pushed open the door. The boards creaked. Inside, it was cold, dark, and still smelled faintly of lavender and ash. He sank into a stool by the empty hearth. Stared into the dust.

“Defect,” he murmured to himself. “Useless.” The words rang hollow. He had heard them too often to care anymore. But the flutter in his chest remained.

That night, he dreamt of fire and stone. Of a voice, not male or female, whispering:

“Beneath your blood lies a buried star.”

Alan awoke with a jolt. Sweat clung to his brow. His chest burned, not painfully, but like something was stirring. He stumbled to the hearth. Looked around. Then his eyes landed on the old floorboard, just beneath the empty fireplace. It had always been loose. Always ignored.

He pulled it up. Beneath it: a box. Wooden. Blackened. Carved with symbols he didn’t understand, glowing faintly like dying embers.

He touched it, and the box shuddered. A pulse. A flash. A ripple through the air that made the candles flicker and the windows rattle. The lid slid open.

Inside was a strange object: a medallion shaped like an eye, forged from stone and metal. At its center swirled something alive, a tiny storm, crackling with lightning, fire, and something darker.

The moment his fingers brushed it, pain tore through his palm like fire meeting ice. He screamed. And then, His vision exploded into light. Alan saw a battlefield of titans. Towers shattering. Seas splitting. A god laughing. He saw a man,his father? placing the medallion inside the box. And he heard the voice again:

"Your root is not absent. It is sealed. Your bloodline is not broken. It is hidden. You, Alan Smith, are not meant to awaken. You are meant to erupt."

The vision vanished. Alan collapsed to the floor, breathing hard. And in the silence that followed, he didn’t notice the flickering glow now dancing around his fingertips, fiery red and stormy silver.

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