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THE LOST HEIR OF LUCENTIA

Marife_Adonis
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Synopsis
Elias has spent his entire life hiding from a past he never knew — until the day the ancient flame inside him awakens. Hunted by the Order, haunted by a voice that knows his name, and saved by a stranger who refuses to reveal his own, Eli is thrust into a world of fractured magic and forgotten bloodlines. The capital city feels him the moment he arrives. The old magic recognizes him. And the enemies who destroyed his family begin to close in. Deep beneath the city lies a sanctuary built for one purpose: to protect the heirs of the phoenix line. But even here, Eli is not safe. The flame inside him is rising too fast, cracking ancient wards and stirring forces older than the kingdom itself. Every surge threatens to expose him. Every fear feeds the fire. Under the guidance of Seraphine — the last High Magister who knew his mother — and the silent, guilt-ridden stranger sworn to protect him, Eli begins to unravel the truth of his lineage. The phoenix flame is not a gift. It is a weapon. A curse. A legacy that has consumed every heir before him. And now it wants him. As visions of a burning future haunt his steps, Eli must confront the memories he buried, the destiny he never asked for, and the fracture in the magic that could destroy the kingdom — or remake it. But the Order is moving. The wards are failing. And something ancient is calling his name from beyond the fire. Eli must choose: Rise with the flame… or be consumed by it. Because the phoenix does not wait for readiness. It waits for an heir strong enough to survive it.
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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER 1 — THE BOY WHO DIDN’T BELONG

Eli didn't remember the first time he felt it.

That quiet ache.

That wrongness.

That sense that the world had been built for someone else — and he was just borrowing space.

He stood at the edge of the village square, half-hidden behind the crumbling archway, watching the others laugh and chase each other through the dust. Their voices rang out like bells, bright and careless.

He didn't join them.

He never did.

Not because he didn't want to.

Because the fire inside him wouldn't let him.

The flame had rules.

Don't get too close.

Don't get too loud.

Don't get too happy.

Because happiness made it stir.

And when it stirred, things broke.

Eli clenched his fists, feeling the faint pulse beneath his skin — a warmth that wasn't warmth, a flicker that wasn't light.

He hated it.

He hated the way it made him different.

He hated the way it made his mother look at him — not with fear, but with something worse.

Regret.

She loved him. He knew that.

But she also knew what he was.

And sometimes, when she thought he was asleep, she whispered things to the fire.

"Not yet."

"Please, not yet."

"Let him be a boy a little longer."

Eli didn't understand what she meant.

But the flame did.

And it waited.

Until the day it didn't.

It happened in the orchard.

A boy pushed him.

Laughed at him.

Called him broken.

Eli didn't mean to react.

He didn't mean to scream.

But the flame surged — wild, bright, furious — and the tree behind him exploded into fire.

The boy ran.

The others screamed.

And Eli stood in the ashes, shaking, eyes glowing gold.

That night, his mother didn't speak.

She packed a bag.

She kissed his forehead.

She led him into the woods.

And when he asked where they were going, she said:

"Somewhere the flame won't hurt anyone."

Eli didn't cry.

He didn't ask why.

He just followed.

Because he already knew.

He was the boy who didn't belong.

And the world was about to remember why.