The Essence Flow

Chapter 48: When The Walls Spoke



Chapter 48: When The Walls Spoke

The corridor spilled them into a vast circular chamber, its upper reaches swallowed by shadows so thick they seemed liquid. Dozens of candles lined the walls—cold wax, blackened wicks, yet each emitted a thin curl of smoke that hung motionless in the air. Embers drifted between them like lethargic fireflies, their glow pulsing in time with some unseen heartbeat.

Towan crossed the threshold, his boots scuffing against inscribed stone. "...This place feels awake."

Beneath them, the floor spread in concentric rings of runes and interlocking channels—neither active nor dormant, but poised. At the center, a massive circle had been worn smooth by generations of use. The depressions were unmistakable: knee-marks here, the faint grooves of braced knuckles there.

(Training ground. Meditation floor. Maybe both.)

Elliot crouched by the outermost ring, fingers tracing grooves filled with centuries of dust. "These runes..." His thumb caught on a spiraling pattern. "They're not static." The dust fell away to reveal channels that branched like river deltas. "They're based on flow patterns. Real ones."

"Like..." Towan hovered his palm over the markings, feeling the ghost of warmth. "Elemental Essentia?"

Elliot's head shook slowly, his eyes reflecting the floating embers. "No." His voice dropped to a reverent hush. "These are older. Fundamental."

Somewhere beneath their feet, the monastery exhaled. The embers brightened just for a moment—as if something vast had opened one eye.

His fingertip connected with the rune—and the carved line moved. Not physically, but in the way a reflection distorts when water is disturbed. The groove rippled beneath his touch, channels rearranging like mercury seeking new pathways.

Then—

A pulse.

Essentia radiated from the stone in a slow, shimmering wave. It passed through Towan's body like a forgotten melody played against bare skin. His breath caught; his heart stuttered—not in fear, but in the visceral certainty of a homecoming. The energy wasn't attacking. Wasn't testing.

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It was remembering.

(Like tracing fingers over weathered stone and hearing it sigh your name.)

Towan stumbled backward, one hand clawing at his sternum as if he could physically grasp the resonance vibrating through his ribs. Behind his eyelids—

—A FLASH:

Young Towan's bare feet pressed into dew-damp earth, the training ground's packed soil molded by generations of disciplined steps. Dawn mist clung to the clearing, the surrounding trees standing like patient observers.

The man before him needed no grand stance to command the space—his stillness alone vibrated with presence. Broad shoulders relaxed beneath plain linen robes, hands loose at his sides.

"Essentia isn't fire." His master's voice flowed like water over river stones. "It isn't wind. It isn't destruction."

When he turned, Towan's chest ached. Time had carved new lines into that familiar face, a scar pulling at one eyebrow—but the eyes remained the same. Endless. Gentle.

"It's memory." His master raised a calloused palm. Silver light unfurled from his fingertips, languid as honey pouring from a spoon. "It's decision. And you, Towan..."

The energy coiled around his wrist, alive and listening. "...must decide who you are with every breath you shape."Towan mirrored the motion. His own Essentia sputtered—uneven, but undeniable. The glow reflected in his master's approving smile.

"Your body knows. Listen to it." A hand pressed between Towan's shoulder blades, warm as sunlight. "The mind will follow."

PRESENT DAY

Towan crashed to one knee, the chamber's cold stone biting through his pants. His lungs burned as if he'd been drowning. "I saw him."

Across the ring, Elliot stood statue-still, his fingers splayed over the runes. When he spoke, the words came thin: "Him... and us. Training." His thumb traced a groove in the stone. "I remember the ground. I remember the flow."

Towan pressed his forehead to the carved circle. The master's voice echoed through him, clearer than his own heartbeat: "Decide who you are with every breath."

Silence pooled between them. Then Elliot's whisper, raw with revelation:

"That's... what he told me too."

Above their heads, the floating embers brightened—as if the monastery itself had leaned closer to listen.

Their gazes tore from each other, drawn instead to the chamber itself—and the unsettling certainty that the chamber was observing them in return.

From the shadowed periphery, a voice murmured: "Strange, isn't it? To remember things you've never done."

They whirled.


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