Sylraen did not invite William into her trust all at
once.
She invited him into questions.
The first night in the town passed without incident,
though William barely slept. The unfamiliar weight of
civilization pressed against him in a way the cavern
never had—eyes watching, whispers spreading, fear
and curiosity intermingling. He stayed in a small
stone room above a tannery, the scent of treated
hides heavy in the air.
When dawn came, Sylraen was waiting.
She didn’t knock.
She simply appeared in the doorway, arms folded
within the flowing sleeves of her pale robes, eyes
already cataloging him with unnerving precision.
“You didn’t dream,” she said.
William blinked. “What?”
“You didn’t thrash. Didn’t mutter. Didn’t wake in
panic.” Her gaze sharpened. “That is unusual for
someone newly bound to the System—especially one
flagged as you are.”
He sat up slowly. “You watched me sleep?”
This text was taken from Royal Road. Help the author by reading the original version there.
“I observed,” she corrected calmly. “There is a
difference.”
He snorted. “Comforting.”
She turned without comment. “Come. If you intend to
survive beyond novelty, you’ll need control. And I
want to see what happens when you attempt magic.”
That earned her a look. “You assume I can.”
“I assume nothing,” Sylraen replied. “But the System
already has.”
They trained outside the town, beyond the patrol
routes, where broken stone marked the remnants of
something older than the current settlement. Ancient,
half-collapsed arches jutted from the ground like ribs.
Sylraen moved with practiced ease, tracing sigils in
the air with slender fingers. The space before her
warped subtly, frost forming along invisible lines as
she manipulated mana with a surgeon’s precision.
“Ice is not cold,” she said, not looking at him. “It is
stillness. Space is not distance—it is permission.”
William watched, silent, feeling the words settle
somewhere deep.
“Try,” she said.
He hesitated.
Then reached inward.
The sensation was immediate and
overwhelming—mana responding like a tide crashing
against a breakwater, far more than he expected. The
air around him thickened, pressure bending light.
Sylraen’s head snapped up.
“Stop—”
Too late.
The mana surged.
Space folded.
Ice erupted.
Not outward—inward.
The ground imploded with a thunderous crack, frost
exploding in jagged spirals as gravity twisted violently
around a single point.
Sylraen shoved him aside.
Pain followed.
A sharp, breath-stealing sound as her body struck
stone. The distortion collapsed with a concussive
snap, leaving a crater rimed with ice and fractured
earth.
William scrambled up, heart pounding.
“Sylraen!”
She lay still for a moment that felt far too long.
Then she groaned.
Blood stained the pale fabric at her side, dark against
the frost.
William knelt beside her, hands hovering uselessly.
“I— I didn’t mean—”
“I know,” she said through clenched teeth. “That’s the
problem.”
Her breathing was shallow. Controlled—but strained.
Silence stretched between them, broken only by the
wind and her measured breathing.
When the bleeding finally slowed, Sylraen exhaled
and leaned back against the stone.
“You didn’t panic,” she said.
“I did,” William replied. “I just didn’t let it drive.”
Her lips curved slightly. “That may be the most
dangerous thing about you.”
He helped her to her feet.
Their eyes met—closer now, something unspoken
settling into place.
This wasn’t trust.
But it was the beginning of belief.
And somewhere unseen, the System recorded the
incident.
[Anomaly Interaction Logged] [Risk Variable
Increased]
William felt the weight of those invisible eyes again.
And knew—truly knew—that moving forward would
only make things worse.
He didn’t stop.

