The weight of that question dropped over Leo like the crumbling ruins above him — cold, suffocating, and impossibly real. It wasn't just fear anymore. It was something deeper. A fracture in the very foundation of what he believed to be real.
For a moment, everything fell silent.
Even the wind seemed to pause.
Then Mira, still standing beside him, began to walk.
Leo followed without speaking, their footsteps barely disturbing the dew-kissed grass. The field they wandered into was vast, stretching out in every direction. The grass swayed gently — but not with the wind. No breeze passed through, and yet the blades moved, as if whispering to one another in a tongue no human could understand.
A dense mist rolled across the plain like a living thing, curling around their legs and swallowing the horizon. Shadows loomed in the distance, their shapes twisted and ancient — remnants of the broken palace walls, now half-consumed by time and ivy. There was something unnatural here. Not threatening exactly... but watching.
Leo's steps slowed.
Was the mist glowing?
He blinked, trying to focus. A faint shimmer hovered just above the grass — not light from the sun or stars, but something else. Something alive. The air itself felt thick, not with heat, but with presence. Every breath buzzed faintly in his chest, like the world was holding a secret and daring him to ask.
Then came the hum.
Soft, melodic, and old. It didn't come from the wind, or the earth, or the ruins. It came from Mira.
She was humming — low, steady, and in a language Leo couldn't place. The moment the sound left her lips, the air responded. It shimmered, just slightly, and Leo could feel it: the pressure rising, the world bending. The grass around them shifted in rhythm to her voice, and even the shadows from the ruins seemed to stretch closer.
He watched, spellbound, as Mira lifted her hand.
Her fingers moved slowly, like she was reaching through water. Then, without warning, she clenched her fist — and reality shattered.
There was no explosion. No loud sound.
Just a crack — like glass breaking in another room — and suddenly, the space in front of them split open. A thin fracture in the air widened into a swirling tunnel, a passage made of light, mist, and colors Leo couldn't name. It pulsed softly, like a heartbeat from another world.
And it called to them.
He glanced once more at the ruins, now almost completely swallowed by the fog. They felt distant now. Like a memory fading too fast.
Then, hand in hand, they stepped through the portal.
The transition was instant.
One breath, they were in the mist-filled field of echoes.
The next...
Warm air.
The scent of fresh bread and wood smoke.
Laughter.
Leo blinked. They were standing in the middle of a stone path that wound through a town glowing in the soft orange of streetlamps and lanterns. People walked by casually, chatting, carrying groceries, or heading home. Someone leaned against the door of a bar, laughing at something too loudly. Music drifted faintly from somewhere — soft and unhurried.
Mawrech.
His hometown.
But it wasn't the same Mawrech he remembered from long ago. It felt brighter, warmer — alive in a way the ruins never could be.
Children dashed across cobblestones, chasing a hoop. A group of elders sat on a bench under a tree, murmuring in low voices. A baker was closing up shop, brushing flour from his apron. There was a gentle clinking of glasses from a nearby tavern, where people shared stories like old friends.
And no one...
No one noticed that two strangers had just stepped out of thin air.
Not a single head turned.
No one screamed or questioned where they came from. To everyone else, Mira and Leo were just part of the flow — as natural as the breeze drifting through the alleyways.
Leo stood still for a moment.
It felt surreal.
The ruins had pressed on him like a forgotten weight, ancient and cold. But here... here, the world embraced him even if it didn't recognize him.
He began to walk, eyes wide, taking everything in.
The houses were crafted with care — stone foundations, carved wood beams, flowering vines curling up the sides. Each window glowed softly with warm light, flickering from oil lamps and candles. The cobbled roads were uneven, worn down by time and countless footsteps. And the people — they smiled. They laughed. They lived.
It was... normal.
Too normal.
Like the kind of life you read about but never quite believe could exist after walking through the ruins of a dead kingdom.
The contrast struck him deeply.
That place... and this one...
One forgotten by time, drowning in echoes and shadows.
The other bursting with color, laughter, and life.
It felt impossible that they could be connected — and yet they were. By Mira. By whatever power she had used. By whatever had brought him here.
And yet...
Something gnawed at the edge of his thoughts.
Did the people of Mawrech really not know what lay just beyond the veil? Just a few steps, a few breaths, and they could stand on the bones of forgotten kings. They could feel the hum of a power that whispered to the very soul.
But no one looked up.
No one wondered.
They didn't know.
And maybe... they weren't supposed to.
Leo glanced at Mira.
She was smiling slightly — not at him, not at anything in particular, just existing in the space. As if this moment were enough.
He let out a breath.
Maybe, for now, it was.
And yet...
As the stars began to blink into view above Mawrech, Leo couldn't shake the feeling that this was only the beginning.
Somewhere out there, in the silence of the ruins and the echoes of that other world... something waited.
Something that had not yet finished with him.
And in the heart of the vibrant town, surrounded by people who laughed and lived without ever knowing what lurked just beyond the mist, Leo walked a little slower.
Watching.
Listening.
Wondering...
Why him?
Why now?
And most of all...
What comes next?
The world had gone quiet around Leo and Mira as they stepped through the field. The air held its breath. Time didn't stop—but it certainly felt like it wanted to.
The grass swayed gently under their feet, brushed by the night breeze. Fireflies blinked and danced above the paddy fields like falling stars frozen midair. Each step they took disturbed nothing, as if the land itself welcomed them. In the far distance, a hill rose gently, crowned with dark trees. The moon, heavy and full, poured silver light down onto the earth, casting soft shadows that stretched and vanished with every motion.
The fields stretched endlessly to their right, glowing in waves under the moonlight. Every stalk of paddy shimmered like threads of silver silk. On the left, old wooden fences framed small vegetable gardens, and beyond them, lanterns flickered warmly in the windows of scattered village homes. Crickets sang in harmony with the quiet rustle of trees, and the occasional soft hoot of an owl echoed in the distance.
The village lay nestled at the base of a small slope, with cobblestone paths winding between cozy homes built of dark timber and smooth stone. Vines climbed up walls, flowers peeked from garden pots, and smoke drifted lazily from a few chimneys. Yet despite the presence of life, it was calm—almost sacred.
Mira and Leo walked in silence, side by side, the warmth of her presence grounding him more than she realized.
Their house stood slightly apart from the others, at the edge of the village, close to the field. A two-story home with curved tiles on the roof, an old wind chime gently singing at the entrance. It looked untouched by time, like a memory carved into wood and stone.
Mira stopped in front of the door and turned to him. Her face was softened by the moonlight, and her eyes, bright and steady, reflected something ancient and warm.
"Go and rest, Leo," she said gently, voice carrying a family tenderness that made his chest ache. "I have to leave again tonight. It's my turn at the base—we're heading to the Outer Realm ruins at dawn."
Leo blinked, confused. "Ruins? Realm?"
She smiled at his reaction. "I'll explain later. You need time to adjust. Just... trust me, okay?"
Then her expression changed. More focused now.
Mira raised her hand and grabbed the air—just like before. The space shimmered and cracked, folding like broken glass until a glowing slit formed in the air. A familiar portal. Behind it, stars flickered and swirled in an endless, shifting tunnel.
She looked back at him, hesitating. "Stay safe. I'll be back soon."
And just like that, she stepped through. The portal snapped shut behind her with a whisper.
Leo stood there for a moment, unsure if he had just imagined it all. The night wind passed through his hair. The fireflies continued to blink. The world carried on, but everything inside him had shifted.
Ruins? Realms? What the hell is this place? What kind of world have I fallen into?
He walked forward, pushing open the wooden door with a slow creak. The scent hit him first—warmth, spices, old books, woodsmoke, something faintly floral. The kind of smell that made you feel like you were exactly where you were supposed to be. And yet...
Why does it feel like I've been here before?
The house was quiet. Wooden floors creaked beneath his feet. To his left, a small living room opened up. A table with two cups still set, a sofa that looked perfectly worn in, and soft curtains that swayed like they'd remembered countless summer breezes.
His eyes were drawn to the wall.
Photos.
Not modern ones—but painted, sketched. A small gallery of moments caught in time.
A boy with messy brown hair and curious eyes. A girl—Mira—smiling, younger, holding a book too big for her arms. An older man with kind eyes. A woman in a garden, holding a basket of flowers.
These are... my memories. Aren't they?
His heart stuttered. The boy in the pictures... That's me.
He backed away slightly, breath catching, then turned and walked down the hallway. His hand grazed the wooden banister as he climbed the stairs. At the top, instinct guided him—right turn, second door.
He opened it slowly.
The room was small but inviting. A bed with dark blue sheets, a desk covered in scraps of parchment and half-drawn maps. Shelves lined with odd little relics—crystals, trinkets, feathers. A cracked mirror rested against the wall.
This is my room. Somehow, I know it is.
He stepped inside and sat on the bed. His legs gave out slightly—not from pain, but from weight. A weight he hadn't realized he was carrying.
Through the open window, the view stretched across the village.
From here, he saw it all, fireflies weaving through the air like living embers, children laughing and chasing them below. The paddy fields beyond shimmered like a silver ocean, gently rippling under the moon's watchful eye. Trees rustled in the breeze, whispering things he couldn't yet understand.
It was too quiet. Too peaceful for the storm in his chest.
Why me? Why now? What comes next?
The same questions echoed again. Louder now. Deeper.
And still, no answers.
But something in the silence comforted him. The night didn't demand anything. It simply was. And for the first time since awakening in this strange world, Leo allowed himself to breathe.
Tomorrow, he'd chase answers.
But tonight, he'd sleep in the home that felt both foreign and familiar.
And outside, the village dreamed quietly under the firefly-filled sky.
Outside, the village dreamed quietly under a sky woven with stars and drifting fireflies. Moonlight shimmered across the paddy fields like silver water, and the wind carried the soft scent of earth and distant blossoms.
Then—
A creak.
The front door shifted ever so slightly. Leo froze.
That wasn't the wind...
A faint whisper bled through the crack. Low. Broken. Wrong.
"You... weren't supposed to come back."
The voice didn't echo—it coiled.
And then—
A hand gripped the edge of the door.
Long. Twisted. Fingers too thin, too sharp. Skin like dried paper.
It shouldn't be there.
It pulled.
The door groaned open.
Leo took a step back, breath caught in his throat.
And from the shadows beyond the doorway... something began to step through.