The stillness in the cave was brittle. The pool's mirrored surface had calmed again, reflecting the flicker of their torches and the outlines of their faces—wary, confused, and strangely… expectant.
Lilu, ever curious, ever childlike, was the first to break the trance. "Oooh… this water's too clean to waste," she giggled, skipping a little as she filled a small crystal vessel from her pack.
"Lilu, don't—" Riven began, but stopped. What was the point?
She twirled on her heels and poured the water gently over the thick, gnarled spike that jutted from the rocky mound. The moment the water touched it—everything changed.
A pulse. A sudden flash of blinding white erupted from the mound like lightning striking in reverse — from the earth, up. The dark cave exploded in radiance, forcing them to shield their eyes.
The dirt around the spike peeled away, floating upward like ash in the air, swirling around them, glowing. Beneath the stone and soil, revealed inch by inch, was a sword.
Not just any sword. A blade that seemed woven from light itself.
It floated above the mound now, hovering silently, humming like a silent whisper across dimensions. Its hilt was obsidian, adorned with nine small holes, each surrounded by ancient runes. The blade was smooth, clear—like silver melted into glass—and it burned softly in the light of their torches.
"What... the hell..." Kael muttered, stepping back. "It's beautiful," Lilu said, wide-eyed.
"Too beautiful," Riven snapped. "Don't touch it." Lilu blinked, stepping closer anyway.
"But it's just a sword, right?"
"No. No, it's not just anything," Riven said, firmly. "Things like that don't hide in caves. Things like that are hidden for a reason." She reached out again. Riven grabbed her wrist.
"I said don't."
"Ow! Let go!" They glared at each other—child and soldier.
"You always think you know everything," she mumbled, pulling back. "Maybe it wants to be found."
"Or maybe it wants to kill you," Kael offered, arms crossed. Zayn stepped forward. "Everyone calm down."
He looked at the sword, then at the mound, then at Nyra—who had said nothing since they entered the cave. She stood near the far side, her eyes dark, watching the blade like a wolf watches a lone deer caught in the snow.
She didn't speak. She moved.
In one silent motion, Nyra walked to the mound, ignoring the others, and reached out to the sword. "Nyra, wait!" Zayn said. But it was too late. She lifted it.
No resistance. No struggle. The blade slid into her hands like it had been waiting for her, for centuries, patient and still. The light it once carried now dimmed instantly, fading into dull grey steel. The once radiant weapon looked… old. Rusted. Dying.
Yet, in her grip, it hummed again. Faintly. Not with brilliance, but with memory.
The group stood frozen. Even Kael said nothing.
"Why would a weapon hide its light?" Zayn murmured.
"Because it's not finished," Riven said, eyes narrowed.
Nyra turned the blade slowly in her hands. There was something etched just below the hilt. Not words… not entirely. A symbol—fluid and jagged, like something carved into the air.
Zayn stepped closer. "That's Spirit language."
"Can you read it?" Lilu asked, now cautious. "No," he whispered. "But… I've seen it before."
They all stared. The nine holes in the blade glimmered faintly, almost as if they were waiting for something — like empty sockets craving completion.
Kael finally spoke. "That thing… it's a key. Or a lock."
"Or both," Riven added.
Nyra, still silent, held the blade at her side. Her eyes glowed faintly in the torchlight, not with magic… but with purpose. Something in her posture had changed — she wasn't just holding the sword.
She was wearing it. The moment hovered, heavy and breathless.
The water rippled again. Behind them, the wind through the cave grew colder