The Essence Flow

Chapter 53: Lightning And Silence



Chapter 53: Lightning And Silence

The world inhaled—

—then erupted in reverse.

Not with sound, but with the vacuum left behind when sound is stolen. A streak of silver-blue split the clearing from treeline to treeline faster than the eye could track—

—and Lytharos stood where empty air had been.

His outstretched palm crackled with contained lightning, the veins in his arm glowing white-hot under the skin. His eyes—sharp as the edge of a stormfront—locked onto Vaeren.

"Back." The ground trembled. "Off."

The Thunder Strike landed not as a bolt, but as a seismic pulse through the earth. The shockwave hit Vaeren mid-step, shattering his corrupted glyphs like glass. For the first time, the ancient being flinched, robes flaring as he skidded backward through the dirt.

"Oh." Vaeren straightened, his glowing veins flickering unevenly. A smile twitched at his lips. "You're here already." He dusted off his sleeve with deliberate slowness. "That complicates things."

Beside Elliot, the air rippled—

—and Sylra materialized in a crouch, her fingers already pressed to his throat. Battle-honed reflexes took over as she checked his pulse, her other hand yanking a vial of shimmering liquid from her belt.

Sylra's fingers lingered at Elliot's wrist before withdrawing. "Nice footwork." Her smirk was all teeth. "Shame about the follow-through."

Elliot rolled onto his side with a wet cough, spitting dirt. "Did I..." He wiped his mouth, "...get the angle right?"

"Close enough," Sylra said, hauling him upright with one arm. "For a rookie."

Vaeren took a single step back—not retreating, but recalibrating. The corrupted veins beneath his skin pulsed like distant lightning.

"We'll meet again." His voice carried the weight of prophecy. "The book is patient." A pause. "I am, too."

Space itself convulsed. His body folded inward like a page being torn from reality, edges curling until nothing remained but the scent of ozone and the echo of his promise.

Sylra moved to Towan's side, her grip firm as she pulled him to his feet.

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Lytharos didn't turn from the trees. His knuckles whitened around his staff.

"That wasn't a battle." The words landed like a tombstone. "That was a warning."

Above them, the first birds began to sing again.

INT. STONEVEIL INN – NIGHT

The fire had burned down to embers, its glow painting the room in fever-orange and restless shadows. Towan and Elliot lay on their cots—breaths steady now, but the bruises beneath Sylra’s bandages darkened like stormclouds under skin.

Elliot sat upright, his gaze locked on the book. It sat wrapped in oilcloth at the table’s center, innocuous as a sleeping viper. He hadn’t blinked in thirteen minutes.

"We weren’t ready,"

he murmured.Towan’s voice came from the cot, rough but awake: "Yeah." A beat. "But we will be."

Sylra leaned against the windowsill, her arms crossed. Moonlight cut across the scar on her collarbone—a thin white line that hadn’t been there in the book’s memories. "You two fight like you’ve trained for years," she said, "but not together." Her eyes flicked between them. "It’s like your bodies remember wars your minds haven’t caught up to."

Towan’s half-grin was more a baring of teeth. "That’s... exactly what it feels like."

She snorted, tossing a pouch of salve that hit his chest with a thwap. "Use that. You smell like smoke and ego."

Elliot’s chuckle died in his throat.

By the door, Lytharos hadn’t moved. His stillness was tectonic, his gaze fixed on the boys with something between appraisal and quiet fury. The firelight caught the old burns along his knuckles—the ones that never quite healed.

Then—

—a flicker.

The Essentia rings on their fingers pulsed. Not the vibrant glow of channeled power, but the slow, rhythmic throb of a lighthouse warning ships away from rocks.

Elliot turned his hand. "That’s new."

Lytharos was on his feet before the words finished. "Rings are tied to Essentia flow and external resonance." His voice had gone glacier-cold. "If they’re glowing—"

Sylra’s blade hissed free of its sheath. "—It means something’s looking for them."

Outside, the town held its breath.

No creak of carts. No tavern laughter.

Just the wind, slinking through the streets like a thief.

EXT. STONEVEIL INN ROOFTOP – NIGHT

The figure crouched like a gargoyle come to life.

Askael.

Moonlight slid off his matte-black mask, a featureless oval that swallowed reflection whole. His cloak—stitched from layered leather and lined with anti-Essentia runes—rippled soundlessly in the wind. Not a whisper. Not a creak.

Twin curved blades gleamed at his hips, their edges honed to a hunger so sharp the air seemed to bleed around them.

(The Hunter Without Flow.

The man who didn’t wield Essentia.

He murdered it.)

Below, two shadows slithered through the alley:

Velica’s crystalline gauntlets pulsed with a sickly violet light, each step leaving faint cracks in the cobblestones where her corrupted Essentia leaked.

Morn’s exhales plumed in the warm summer air, his frost-rimed knuckles flexing with a sound like glaciers calving.

Askael’s voice was a dry rasp, barely louder than the settling of his blades: "Three inside. One a known Elementalist." A pause. "Two anomalies."

Velica’s grin split the darkness. "Which one has the book?"

The mask tilted slightly, tracking heat signatures through the inn’s walls. "Doesn’t matter." His fingers brushed a knife’s hilt. "We kill both."

Inside the inn, the rings on Towan and Elliot’s fingers burned white-hot.


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