Ficool

Chapter 1 - Volume 1: Where Light Begins

Arc 1:The First Spark

Chapter 1:Where It All Begins

In the world of Elarion, Ether is everywhere.

It glows in the lamps along the streets, warms the baker's ovens at dawn, and hums in the wind that carries travelers from town to town.

Some people use Ether for small comforts—lighting stoves, mending tools, warming their homes on cold nights.

But others devote their lives to mastering it.

Those people are called wizards... and among them stand the guilds.

Guilds that took on requests from every corner of the land.

Guilds that protected towns, escorted caravans, cleared monsters, and sometimes caused as much trouble as they solved.

But our story doesn't begin with the great guilds spoken of across the continent...

It begins far from crowded cities and tall spires, in a quiet harbor town on the coast.

Today... our story begins in Marinveil, where two young mages from the AetherBound Guild walk side by side on Aria's very first quest.

The narration fades like a voice carried away on sea breeze.

Marinveil Harbor — Morning

The world was brighter than Aria expected.

She had seen drawings of Marinveil in the guild library—little sketches of a crescent-shaped bay and the ring of buildings hugging the docks—but books couldn't capture the way sunlight scattered over the waves, or the way the air tasted faintly of salt and fresh bread at the same time.

Seagulls cried overhead, swooping low and bold. Fishermen shouted prices across the pier. Nets hung to dry between posts, dripping faintly into the water below. Wooden planks thudded under carts and hurried footsteps, the whole harbor moving with an easy, noisy rhythm.

Aria walked a little closer to the edge of the street to look at the water again.

The morning sun spread a path of light across the bay, shimmering each time the waves rose and broke against the hulls of docked ships.

...It really is pretty.

She had to stop herself from slowing down. The small delivery parcel in her hands felt almost too light for something called a "quest," but the AetherBound emblem on the back of her left hand made it feel more real. This was her job—her first official guild task.

"Hey, you're gonna fall in if you stare too hard," Ryoto said beside her.

Aria blinked and pulled herself away from the edge. "I—I'm not going to fall."

Ryoto walked with his hands linked behind his head, long legs relaxed, as if they weren't technically on a mission at all. His short crimson-orange hair caught the light every time they passed a patch of open sky. Compared to her, he moved like he'd done this a thousand times.

Which, she reminded herself, he probably had.

"I'm serious," he added, grinning as a gull swooped low. "The sea loves distracted mages. Next thing you know—splash. Aria stew."

She let out a small laugh. "That's not funny."

"Kind of is," he said. "I'd jump in and save you though. I'm cool like that."

"You can't even swim that well," she murmured.

"I can float aggressively," he corrected. "It counts."

It didn't. But Aria smiled anyway.

They turned off the busy main pier onto a narrower cobbled street lined with small shops.

A woman swept her doorstep. Two kids ran by carrying a basket, the smell of warm bread trailing behind. Somewhere, a bell chimed the hour.

Aria looked down at the wrapped parcel—a sturdy, tied-up package about the size of a book.

"I still feel a little bad," she said softly. "Making you come with me on something so small."

"Hey, hey," Ryoto said, leaning forward to see her face. "Don't say that like I'm suffering."

"You're B-Rank already," she reminded him. "You're used to real missions. Monsters. Bandits. Dangerous things. This is just... returning something."

"'Just returning something,' she says."

Ryoto sighed dramatically, letting his arms swing. "Listen, Aria. Every quest is real. Even the little ones. If people could do everything themselves, they wouldn't ask a guild, right?"

She considered it. "That's true..."

"And besides," he added, grin returning, "an easy morning walk in a pretty harbor town with a cute partner? I'd be an idiot to say no."

Her cheeks warmed. "R-Ryoto..."

"What? It's true."

He reached out and lightly rested his hand on her head for a second—tilting down, since she was much shorter. "You're braver than you think just by taking a mission at all."

His hand ruffled a bit of her navy-blue hair before he pulled back again.

Aria's heart fluttered unexpectedly.

"I..." She looked ahead quickly so he wouldn't see her blush. "Thank you."

He shrugged like it was nothing. "No problem. But you know, you could've picked one of my quests instead."

Here it comes, Aria thought.

"Imagine it," he continued, already hyping himself up. "We could be fighting a horned boar right now. Or chasing bandits. Flames everywhere. Me punching a giant monster—"

"Scaring the villagers," she said gently.

"—saving the villagers," he corrected, thumb to his chest.

"And accidentally burning half the field."

Ryoto looked betrayed. "Okay, that was one time. And the field grew back greener."

"Because Master Seraphine personally regrew it," Aria reminded him.

"...Details," he muttered, but he smiled.

She shook her head, amused.

Then exhaled softly.

"I wanted to start with something my rank can handle," she said. "And I don't really like fighting people... unless I have to. Helping with deliveries feels... nicer."

She pictured the AetherBound Guild hall—the warm light, wood walls, the sound of members sharing meals. Compared to that, Marinveil felt bigger and louder, but the warmth was similar. People living. Working. Laughing.

If she could keep that safe by doing even small things... that felt like enough.

"Yeah," Ryoto said. "That sounds like you."

There was no judgment in his tone. Just understanding.

They walked in comfortable silence.

Then a gull screeched behind them.

Ryoto flinched so hard he almost tripped.

Aria turned. "Are you okay?"

"I'm fine," he said quickly. "It just... yelled in my ear. Rude bird."

Her lips curved. "You almost fell."

"I was testing the street's durability," he declared. "For safety. For you."

"Of course," she said flatly.

He shot her a look—then laughed.

They reached a small shop with a painted sign of a gear and quill crossed over a crate. The windows were open; the smell of oil and ink drifted out.

A man hurried to the door the moment he saw the parcel.

"You must be from AetherBound," he said, bowing. "Thank you, truly. That ledger is important."

Aria bowed slightly as she handed it over. "Here you go. We were asked to deliver it safely."

"You did just that," he said, relieved. "I was worried it was lost."

Ryoto waved. "No worries. Lost stuff, found stuff. That's us."

"Please tell your guild I'm grateful."

"We will," Aria said.

They stepped back outside. The harbor was busier now. A distant ship horn echoed across the water.

"My first quest is complete," Aria murmured.

"See?" Ryoto stretched. "Easy. You did great."

"I only walked and handed something over."

"Yeah, and you didn't trip once," he said proudly. "Achievement unlocked."

She bumped his arm lightly, still smiling—

—and then a scream ripped through the air.

Sharp. Frightened. Echoing off stone.

Aria froze.

Ryoto's expression hardened instantly.

"Aria—"

"Right," she said, already turning toward the alley.

Her heart pounded.

She didn't like fighting.

But she didn't like the idea of someone being hurt even less.

They ran.

The scream led them into a narrow side alley, where two tall warehouse walls funneled sound like a tunnel. Crates were stacked unevenly, some broken, and a loose fishing net lay coiled near the entrance. A single lantern flickered above, its weak glow struggling against the daylight.

At the far end of the alley—

stood a girl.

Not a child.

A teenager, maybe seventeen, with sharp posture and sharper eyes.

Her short mint-green hair framed her face unevenly, the kind of cut done quickly for practicality rather than style. She stood firm, back straight, one foot subtly angled as if she were ready to pivot or counter.

A massive, overpacked engineer's backpack weighed on her shoulders—so full that every tiny shift of her body made it clank and rattle like a traveling workshop.

She wasn't trembling.

She wasn't cornered like prey.

If anything...

she looked annoyed.

Five thugs circled her, older men with the swagger of people who picked easy targets. One stepped forward, jabbing a finger at her chest.

"Last chance, girl. Drop the bag. Tools like that fetch good money."

Sylvi's arms were crossed.

Her glare was flat and tired—like someone whose morning had already gone wrong, and this was somehow the last straw.

"Touch my tools," she said coldly, "and I swear I'll weld your hands to your own face."

Aria froze at the firmness in her tone.

The girl sounded older—far older than Aria, almost like one of the guild's senior teens back home.

Ryoto muttered, "She's got attitude. I like her already."

Aria elbowed him lightly.

"Not the time."

The biggest thug reached toward the strap of Sylvi's backpack.

She didn't flinch.

She didn't back up.

She just raised a single eyebrow, irritated beyond belief.

That's when Ryoto stepped forward.

"Hey."

His voice echoed off the alley walls, sharp and firm.

The thugs turned.

"You heard her."

Flames glimmered faintly around his fists as he cracked his knuckles.

"Back. Off."

Aria stepped beside him, drew a steady breath, and lifted her hand.

"O guiding winds of light, carry him swiftly!

Grace!"

A soft sky-blue glow wrapped around Ryoto's legs like drifting breeze.

Ryoto grinned.

"Oh yeah. That's the good stuff."

The first thug lunged.

Ryoto moved—

a blur of fire-fueled speed—

and planted a flaming fist into his stomach.

Thud.

The man folded instantly.

Another thug swung wildly.

Ryoto sidestepped, grabbed his collar, and tossed him into a stack of crates. Wood splintered under the impact.

Aria flinched.

"Ryoto, maybe—"

"You can't half-punch a criminal," he called back.

Meanwhile, the thug nearest Sylvi tried grabbing her arm.

Sylvi sighed, reached for a compact gadget holstered at her belt, and flicked a tiny switch with practiced ease.

Wh-tkk!

A glowing blue pellet fired out—

striking the thug square in the chest.

He froze mid-movement.

His whole body locked in place, muscles seizing as if invisible ropes had tied every joint. For a second he stayed there, eyes wide in shock—

—then he toppled over sideways like a stiff board, hitting the ground with a heavy thump.

Aria blinked.

"What... was that?"

Sylvi brushed a strand of hair from her face.

"Paralysis round. Version seven. I'm still perfecting it."

Ryoto stared. "Version seven?"

"Version six paralyzed the wrong people," she muttered.

Aria wasn't sure if she wanted to know the details.

The last two thugs took one look at the fallen man, one look at Ryoto, and bolted out of the alley screaming something about "crazy inventors" and "fire demon kids."

Ryoto let them go.

Aria released her spell; the glow around his legs faded.

Sylvi exhaled sharply and adjusted her backpack—the tools inside clink-clank-clunking as she repositioned her weight.

She did not look grateful.

She looked irritated.

"I had it handled," she said flatly.

Ryoto raised both eyebrows.

"Oh yeah? Your frozen friend there sure looked handled."

Sylvi gave him a side-eye filled with seventeen-year-old judgment.

Up close, he was taller than she expected—broad-shouldered for someone still young, with short, messy crimson-orange hair that caught the light even in the narrow alley. His eyes were a bright, heated red-orange too, matching the faint embers still licking around his fists. He wore his confidence openly, like he thought the world would bend before he did. The AetherBound emblem on his right shoulder marked him as the real deal, not some street punk playing hero.

"You punched a guy so hard he bounced," she said. "Congratulations."

Her gaze shifted to the girl beside him.

Aria looked much younger—small, with navy-blue hair that fell in a soft bob around her face, and wide sky-blue eyes that hadn't dulled yet. She held herself politely, almost formally, fingers still curled where she'd cast her spell. Compared to Ryoto's loud presence, she felt like a softer light—gentle, but steady. 

Aria stepped forward, keeping her voice gentle.

"Are you hurt?" she asked.

Sylvi hesitated—not out of fear, but because Aria's tone was unexpectedly warm.

"...No," she said. "Just annoyed. They slowed me down."

Ryoto tilted his head. "Slowed you down from what?"

Sylvi shifted her backpack, making the metal inside clatter loudly.

"I'm traveling," she said.

"Heading toward a town called Lantern's Reach."

Aria's eyes brightened. "That's where we're from!"

Sylvi paused.

Her gaze dropped to Aria's left hand—

to the sky-blue emblem of the AetherBound Guild.

Then to the red-orange emblem on Ryoto's shoulder.

"You two... really are from AetherBound," she said quietly.

It wasn't disbelief.

More like relief she didn't want to show.

Ryoto gave a half-smirk. "And proud of it."

Sylvi clicked her tongue, but the corner of her lip twitched.

"...Good," she said. "Then I guess this works out."

Aria tilted her head sweetly. "Works out?"

Sylvi looked away for a moment—just a second—then back at them.

"I'm on my way to join the AetherBound Guild," she said at last.

"Lantern's Reach is my destination."

Aria's smile bloomed instantly.

Ryoto's eyebrows shot up. "No kidding?"

Sylvi crossed her arms, trying to look unbothered.

"Yeah. So if you're heading back, I'm coming with you."

Ryoto grinned and stuck his hand out.

"Then I'm Ryoto Ashborne.

Fire mage. And I punch things a lot."

Aria gave a small polite bow.

"I'm Aria Roseheart... It's nice to meet you."

Sylvi blinked, hesitated—just for a moment—then exhaled sharply.

"...Sylvi," she said.

"Just Sylvi. And don't expect me to bow."

Ryoto laughed.

Aria smiled warmly.

Sylvi looked away, cheeks faintly warm.

Closing Narration 

"And so, in a small harbor alley far from the great cities of Elarion,

three paths crossed for the first time.

A simple quest... a stubborn inventor... and two young mages still learning their place in the world.

None of them knew what their journey would become,

or how deeply their lives would intertwine.

But on this bright morning in Marinveil,

a new friend took her first step beside them—

and the road home felt a little warmer."

The camera pulls back:

Aria smiles gently, Ryoto lifts the backpack off Sylvi's shoulders to help her, and Sylvi mutters something annoyed-but-grateful under her breath as they leave the alley together.

Sunlight catches the three of them as they walk toward the road leading out of town.

Their journey back to Lantern's Reach... begins now.

Chapter 2 - Welcome Home, Sylvi

The road stretching out of Marinveil curved gently along the coastline before bending inland, where the trees grew taller and the air lost its salty bite. The morning sun glowed warm on their backs as the three of them walked—Aria, Ryoto, and Sylvi—each at their own pace, yet close enough that their footsteps blended into a quiet, shared rhythm.

Aria held her hands together in front of her as she walked.

Her first quest was done.

Her first official mission.

Even now, her heart carried a soft flutter of pride.

She glanced over her shoulder at Sylvi—whose oversized engineer's backpack rattled with every step—and then at Ryoto, who walked beside them with his usual relaxed swagger, hands folded behind his head like he had no earthly problems.

Aria felt a gentle, warm breeze brush against her cheek.

It felt like the world was smiling with her.

"Um..." she began, hesitating for a breath. "Thank you both again. For everything back there."

Ryoto cracked a wide grin, not looking at her. "Hey, don't thank me. I was just responding to a scream. And you know me—classic hero instincts."

Aria shook her head, amused. "I don't think punching someone into a crate is... um... standard hero behavior."

"It is if the crate deserved it," Ryoto said with total confidence.

Sylvi let out a small noise—half a snort, half a suppressed laugh.

She quickly looked away.

None of them mentioned it.

For a moment, the road grew quiet except for the crunch of gravel and the distant sound of waves fading behind them.

Aria loved this kind of silence.

A warm, friendly one—like a blanket that didn't smother, just rested.

Sylvi, on the other hand, seemed unfamiliar with it.

Her eyes kept shifting from tree to sky to path to the two beside her, like she wasn't used to walking with people at all.

Ryoto noticed.

"So..." he said casually, turning his head toward her. "First time in this part of Elarion?"

Sylvi shrugged, adjusting her pack. The metal inside clanked sharply.

"First time going anywhere with company."

Aria's steps slowed a little. "Really...?"

Sylvi didn't elaborate. Her face didn't soften.

But there was a tiny tension in her shoulders—almost shy, almost defensive—like she regretted saying it.

Ryoto, in predictable Ryoto fashion, bulldozed straight through the awkwardness.

"Well hey, you lucked out then," he declared proudly. "Because we're excellent company. Top-tier. Five stars."

Aria nodded earnestly. "We really are."

Sylvi stared at them both.

"...You two are weird," she said at last.

Ryoto beamed. "Thank you."

"That... wasn't a compliment," Sylvi muttered.

Aria hid a small smile behind her hand.

They continued along the dirt path as it opened into a wider clearing. Ahead, the familiar signpost came into view: a wooden marker carved with swirling patterns and etched with a small lantern symbol at the top.

Aria's heart lifted the second she saw it.

Lantern's Reach — 1 mile

She picked up her pace. "We're almost home."

Sylvi watched her quietly, observing the way Aria's eyes softened—how her shoulders relaxed, how her steps grew lighter the closer they got.

Home.

It was a foreign word on Sylvi's tongue.

She'd been traveling for so long she had almost forgotten what the idea should feel like.

The trees thinned, and the path sloped gently downward. A warm breeze carried scents Sylvi had never known to associate with a town: citrus, sweet bread, warm wood, faint smoke from bakeries.

And then—just past the final bend—

Lantern's Reach emerged.

Ether-lanterns hung from wooden beams over the entrance road, glowing with soft pastel light even in midday. Shop banners fluttered gently. A copper-fox darted across the street, disappearing between two fruit stalls. Someone played a stringed instrument in the distance, its cheerful notes drifting lazily on the air.

Sylvi blinked.

The town... sparkled.

Not with power.

Not with grandeur.

With life.

Aria stepped forward, smiling so bright she practically lit the road.

"Welcome to Lantern's Reach."

Ryoto, chest puffed with pride, swept his arm across the view like a tour guide.

"Best place in Elarion to start a new life."

Sylvi's lips parted—only for a second.

Then she snapped them shut and folded her arms, pretending she wasn't impressed at all.

"...It's fine," she said flatly.

But her eyes kept drifting—toward lanterns, toward laughing children, toward the musician, toward the bakery where warm bread cooled in the window.

Ryoto elbowed Aria lightly and whispered, "She loves it."

Sylvi shot him a glare. "I heard that."

Ryoto didn't look remotely sorry.

Aria giggled softly...

and Lantern's Reach welcomed them with its warm, humming heartbeat.

Lantern's Reach breathed with life.

As the trio walked deeper into town, the road widened into a central path lined with woven banners and wooden lantern posts. Ether-lamps glowed in soft pastel colors even beneath the daylight, casting a calm shimmer across the cobblestones.

Aria practically radiated excitement, waving at familiar faces as they passed.

"Good afternoon, Mr. Fynn!"

A middle-aged man stacking crates at his fruit stall smiled warmly. "Good afternoon, Aria! New friend of yours?"

Aria nodded shyly, glancing at Sylvi.

Sylvi immediately looked away, pretending to examine a barrel of apples like it was the most fascinating thing she'd ever seen.

Ryoto grinned. Shy, huh? Didn't expect that from Miss 'Touch my tools and I'll weld your hands shut.'

They kept walking.

"Hello, Miss Marin!" Aria called to a seamstress sweeping her doorway.

"Oh! Aria dear! You're back so soon," Miss Marin said, brushing blonde hair from her face. Her gaze flicked to Sylvi's enormous backpack. "And you brought home a traveler! My, you must be strong to carry that."

Sylvi blinked, stiffening. Compliments weren't her natural terrain.

"I... work out," she muttered.

Ryoto snorted. "Yeah, emotionally."

Sylvi elbowed him in the ribs. Hard.

Aria giggled behind her hands.

The town had a rhythm—warm, lively, and loud enough to feel full without being overwhelming. Bakers opened their shutters; the smell of bread and citrus drifted through the streets. Kids chased a copper-fox between market stalls. A street musician plucked his lute in Eternal Sun Plaza, letting soft notes float lazily on the midday breeze.

Sylvi tried not to stare.

She failed.

Her eyes kept drifting—quick, cautious glances—at all the life she wasn't used to seeing.

People greeting each other.

Laughing.

Living together.

Her fingers curled slightly around her backpack strap, gripping it tighter.

Ryoto noticed. He didn't comment.

He just smiled a little.

Dorm Row — Blossoms & Banter

The trio turned onto a quieter road where flowerbeds lined the walkway. Rows of pastel-painted buildings stood neatly in a row—each with carved wood frames, lantern hooks above the doors, and garden patches filled with bright blossoms.

Ryoto stretched an arm out dramatically.

"Welcome to Blossom Hall — girls' dorm! Aria's home and—"

He winked. "—soon yours."

Sylvi raised a brow. "You all live in... flower houses?"

Aria puffed her cheeks. "They're pretty!"

Sylvi huffed. "Pretty doesn't stop monsters."

Ryoto shrugged. "No, but it stops Aria from being sad. And that's basically the same thing."

Aria flustered, waving her hands. "R-Ryoto!"

Sylvi actually smiled—tiny, but real.

Ryoto pointed across the street at a simpler row of buildings.

"That's the boys' dorm," he said. "If you ever need backup, I'm literally ten steps away."

Sylvi smirked. "Backup? Please. I'll call you when I need someone punched into a wall."

Aria gasped. "Sylvi!"

Ryoto brightened. "See? I knew I liked her."

Sylvi rolled her eyes but didn't deny it.

Arrival — The AetherBound Guild Hall

They turned the final corner.

There it was.

The carved wooden doors, tall and warmly stained, framed by lanterns mounted on curved iron brackets. The front porch carried scuff marks from boots.

Aria placed her hands on the door.

"Ready?" she asked Sylvi softly.

Sylvi, for once, hesitated.

"...Yeah."

The doors swung open.

Chaos.

Warm, lively, joyful chaos.

The guild hall was a two-story open space filled with round tables, long benches, and banners displaying the AetherBound emblem. The smell of food drifted from the tavern side. Laughter mixed with clattering plates, muffled arguments, and occasional magical fizzles.

Sylvi froze in place.

So many people...

A tray whizzed by.

"Coming through—woah—WOAH—!"

Tarin slipped, somehow turned the slip into a spin, and landed perfectly upright while balancing five plates.

Tarin gave a nervous smile before scurrying off.

Elira glided between tables carrying mugs of tea with masterful grace.

Garron sat in a corner booth, quietly sipping from a bowl-sized cup while reading a book titled The Gravity of Good Cooking.

Orin adjusted a holographic Ether map, muttering strategies under his breath.

Mila was in the middle of stretching, pulling one leg behind her head like it was nothing.

"Morning, Ryoto!" she called out with a grin. "Who's the new kid?"

"Seventeen," Sylvi corrected sharply. "Not a kid."

Mila blinked, impressed. "Oh. Nice. You're taller than I expected."

Sylvi wasn't sure if that was a compliment.

Then—

THUD.

A table lifted.

As in, literally lifted off the floor.

Jim Hogan, muscle mountain of a man, was bench-pressing it.

"RYOTO, BROTHER OF MY BROTHERLY FIRE!!! BACK ALREADY?!" he boomed.

Aria panicked. "M-Mr. Hogan, the table—!"

"SISTER," Hogan said with righteous conviction, "TABLES WERE BORN TO BE LIFTED!"

Everyone shouted different variations of "PUT IT DOWN!" and "NOT AGAIN!"

Sylvi stared, eyes wide.

"...What is this place?"

Ryoto grinned. "Home."

Aria smiled softly. "Our home."

Sylvi's chest twitched—strange, unfamiliar, warm.

Seraphine — The Gentle Flame

The noise softened as a calm presence drifted through the hall.

Seraphine stepped forward from the upper landing, descending the steps with her staff lightly tapping the wood. Her long coat trailed behind her like a soft whisper of Ether wind. Her voice, gentle yet clear, carried through the room:

"Welcome home, children."

Aria bowed. "Master Seraphine."

Ryoto straightened his posture in one quick jolt. "We're back! Mission complete!"

Seraphine's attention turned toward Sylvi.

"And who might this young spark be?"

Sylvi stood straight, chin slightly lifted.

"Sylvi," she said simply.

"...Just Sylvi."

Seraphine studied her—not with suspicion, but with quiet understanding.

Her eyes softened.

"Your Ether flickers," she murmured, "like someone who has walked alone for a long time."

Sylvi's grip on her backpack tightened.

Seraphine stepped forward and placed a gentle hand on her shoulder.

"You are safe here."

Sylvi's breath caught in her throat.

She looked away quickly—but her lips curved, only a little.

The smallest smile.

But real.

And for the first time since she arrived in Elarion...

she didn't feel alone.

For a few seconds after Seraphine's words, the guild hall felt strangely quiet to Sylvi.

You are safe here.

The sentence kept echoing in her head, softer each time, like someone gently tapping on a door she'd forgotten she had.

Then the silence shattered.

"Wait—she's joining?"

"Did Master Seraphine just say she's staying?"

"A new member?!"

Voices rose from every corner of the guild.

In an instant, chairs scraped, boots thudded, and people converged on them from all sides. Sylvi took an involuntary step back as the circle closed around her—faces, eyes, smiles, questions all at once.

"Hey, hey, give her room," Ryoto tried, but he was smiling too, clearly amused.

Tarin skidded in first, nearly tripping over his own feet. "H-Hi! I'm Tarin Luminara! I help in the kitchen and with, uh, rune stuff sometimes. Do you like stew? Elira makes the best—"

Elira appeared right behind him, lightly flicking his ear. "Don't crowd the girl, Tarin. You'll scare her off before she even tastes it."

She turned to Sylvi with a warm bow. "Elira Luminara. I run the tavern and help keep this place fed and sane. Welcome."

Sylvi blinked, trying to keep up. "Uh... thanks."

Mila slid into view next, stretching one arm behind her head, the other on her hip. "Mila Bronzefist. Flowstrike martial artist. Close-combat specialist." Her amber eyes gleamed. "Wanna spar later?"

Sylvi stared. "I literally just got here."

"So that's a maybe," Mila said, grinning.

From the corner, Garron closed his book with a quiet thump and walked over. He loomed, but there was a gentleness in his eyes.

"Garron Maul," he said. "Gravity mage. If you ever need someone to hold something heavy in place while you work, call me."

Sylvi's instinctive reply slipped out faster than she could stop it. "I can handle heavy."

Garron's lips quirked. "Good. Then we'll get along."

Orin stepped up next, adjusting his glasses and tucking a map under one arm.

"Orin Vale. Strategy and map constructs. If you plan to build anything big, talk to me first so we don't accidentally put it over a fault line. Or under a lake. Or inside a cliff. That happened once."

"It happened one time," Ryoto muttered.

"Once is enough," Orin replied.

More faces pressed in closer around Sylvi now, the circle tightening.

"What's your magic?" someone called from the back.

"How old are you?" another asked.

"Where are you from?"

"Do you like rice balls?" Tarin added, far too eagerly.

Sylvi's eyes widened. Her brain tried to triage the questions: Magic, age, origin, rice balls—why rice balls? Her fingers clenched her backpack straps tighter and tighter until her knuckles paled.

"I—uh—one at a—"

"LET THE YOUNG SPARK BREATHE!"

Jim Hogan's voice boomed over everyone like a thunderclap.

The crowd flinched.

Jim stepped forward, chest out, mustache blazing with pride.

"A NEW SOUL JOINS OUR FAMILY!" he declared. "THIS IS A MOMENT OF MUSCULAR CELEBRATION!"

"Mr. Hogan, please don't—" Aria started.

Too late.

He flexed.

His shirt exploded.

The fabric shredded off his upper body like it had been waiting for an excuse, leaving him in his bright yellow wrestling pants and boots, muscles gleaming, veins pulsing with pure enthusiasm.

Several newer members shrieked. Someone in the back dropped a plate.

Tarin covered his eyes. "Why does this keep happening?!"

Hogan pointed dramatically at Sylvi. "WELCOME, YOUNG ENGINEER! MAY YOUR WILL BE AS UNBREAKABLE AS YOUR WRENCHES!"

Sylvi just... stared.

"...What is wrong with him?" she whispered.

Ryoto sighed, rubbing his temples. "We stopped asking."

Aria, trying very hard not to laugh, whispered, "He's... a good person. Just... energetic."

The guild hall buzzed again—laughter, embarrassed yelling about clothes, someone shouting for a spare shirt, Mila losing it in the corner.

Sylvi's head spun.

Too many people.

Too many voices.

Too many eyes on her all at once.

Her heart fluttered in a way that had nothing to do with battle.

Seraphine raised her staff and gently tapped the floor.

"Everyone," she said softly.

The room quieted almost instantly.

"Introductions can continue later. Right now, we must complete her registration properly." She gave Sylvi a small, reassuring nod. "Come with me, Sylvi."

Sylvi exhaled slowly, like someone had let the pressure out of her chest. "Y-Yeah. Okay."

As she followed Seraphine through the parting crowd, she caught a glimpse of Aria and Ryoto standing together near the doorway.

Aria gave her a two-handed, energetic little wave and a bright smile.

Ryoto flashed a thumbs up.

You've got this, their faces seemed to say.

For some reason, that helped.

The Registration Room

Seraphine led her down a short hallway and opened a heavy door into a quieter room.

It was smaller than Sylvi expected—not a grand chamber, just a practical space with a sturdy wooden table, a cabinet of records, and a single Ether-lamp glowing softly on the wall. In the center of the table sat a round, clear crystal sphere mounted on a metal stand.

The air felt still here.

Like the room was holding its breath.

Jim Hogan entered behind them, now wearing a different shirt that already looked like it was under threat.

He stood off to the side, arms folded, posture surprisingly respectful.

Sylvi glanced between them. "So this is...?"

Seraphine smiled gently. "This is where every AetherBound wizard officially joins the guild. It is simple, but no less important for that."

She gestured toward the orb.

"This Ether sphere will measure your magic and link it to our records. Once that is done, you will choose where your emblem appears... and what color it takes."

Sylvi's eyes flicked to her right arm unconsciously.

Seraphine noticed.

"You've already thought about it," she said softly.

Sylvi hesitated. "Just... a little."

Seraphine motioned to the table. "Place your hand on the orb, please. You may keep your gloves on. It reads your Ether, not your skin."

Sylvi stepped closer.

It was strange. She'd handled enchanted tools, cursed scrap, unstable Ether batteries... but this simple clear sphere made her more nervous than any of those.

Joining a guild for real, huh...

She set her gloved right hand on the orb.

For a heartbeat, nothing happened.

Then the crystal glowed—soft at first, then brighter. Not a wild, chaotic light, but a steady, warm one. Tiny sparks of gold and faint metallic flecks swirled inside, like someone had melted brass shavings into starlight.

Seraphine watched with quiet approval.

"Your Ether has a firm core," she murmured. "Stubborn. Focused. A builder's heart."

Sylvi swallowed. "That's... one way to put it."

The light slowly settled, a single amber-gold band circling the heart of the orb.

Seraphine nodded. "Good. The registration is complete."

She opened a leather-bound book on the table, its pages filled with names and emblem sketches.

"Now," she said, lifting her quill. "For the record: your given name, and the place you come from."

Sylvi paused.

For a moment, old images flickered in her mind—chimneys, forges, half-broken tools, arguments over blueprints, the sound of metal on metal until late at night.

She cleared her throat.

"Sylvi," she said quietly. "From... a small workshop town a few days east of here."

Seraphine's gaze softened, understanding more than the words themselves.

"That is enough," she said kindly, writing it down without pressing further.

She finished the line, then looked up again.

"Now," Seraphine continued, her tone taking on a formal warmth, "every member of AetherBound chooses where to bear their emblem. Some place it over their heart, some on their hands, some where it moves with them in battle... or work."

Her eyes flicked to the tools on Sylvi's belt.

"You may choose the place that feels most like you."

Sylvi didn't have to think long.

She tugged lightly at the edge of her right glove and looked at her forearm—the part of her arm that always moved when she hammered, when she tightened bolts, when she sketched diagrams in the air without realizing it.

"Here," she said, tapping just above where her glove ended. "Right arm. Lower forearm. I... want it where I can see it when I'm working. And where other people can see it too."

Seraphine smiled. "A declaration, then."

She rested the tip of her staff lightly on the floor.

"Hold still."

The orb brightened again, its amber-gold light flowing out in a thin line toward Sylvi. A gentle warmth wrapped around her right arm—tingling, not painful. Light gathered on her skin in a small, focused swirl just above her glove.

Sylvi watched, eyes wide, as the glow shaped itself into the familiar AetherBound emblem: a solid, teardrop-flame silhouette.

The mark gleamed bright amber-gold, pulsed once like a heartbeat...

Then settled into a clean, flat color against her skin.

Sylvi flexed her fingers experimentally. The emblem didn't hurt. It just felt... warm. Present. Like a weight that wasn't heavy, but impossible to ignore.

Jim nodded, pleased. "Good spot," he said. "Working arm. Strong choice."

Sylvi looked at it for a long moment.

It was simple.

Sturdy.

Unmistakable.

My emblem...

Seraphine closed the ledger and set her quill down.

"Sylvi," she said, voice soft but steady, "from this moment on, you are a member of the AetherBound Guild."

She placed a light hand on Sylvi's marked arm.

"Welcome home."

Something in Sylvi's chest squeezed.

Home.

The word didn't feel fake this time.

She looked away quickly, embarrassed by the prickling at the corner of her eyes.

"...Yeah," she said, voice rougher than she meant it to be. "Thanks."

When they stepped back into the main hall, the noise swelled again—but this time, it didn't feel quite as overwhelming.

Aria spotted the emblem first.

Her eyes sparkled. "It looks perfect on you, Sylvi!"

Ryoto let out a low whistle. "Right arm, huh? Nice. Very 'tinkerer ready to punch a machine back to life' vibe."

Sylvi scoffed. "If a machine needs punching, it was built wrong."

"See?" Ryoto said. "She fits right in."

Laughter rippled around them—light, easy, welcome.

Sylvi glanced down at the amber-gold mark on her forearm one more time.

I really... did it.

She stood in the middle of the AetherBound hall, surrounded by noise and warmth and too many people who already felt like they'd decided she belonged.

And for the first time in a very long time...

She didn't want to run.

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