The Essence Flow

Chapter 84: The Line That Wasn’t Hers



Chapter 84: The Line That Wasn’t Hers

The Circle's headquarters always smelled like burned paper and cold metal—the scent of secrets turned to ash and blades left to rust. A place where intent was forged, sharpened, and bound in chains.

But Seriah didn’t go to the meeting chambers.

She walked barefoot through the halls, silent as a shadow slipping between torchlights. Past the initiation room with its still-drying bloodstains. Past the blackstone doors etched with names of the vanished. Down, deeper, until the air grew thick with silence and the walls narrowed like a throat closing around a secret.

At the end of the corridor stood an unmarked door—old wood, warped with age, sticking slightly when pulled.

Inside—

A desk.

A chair.

A box of charcoal, half-crumbled from use.

And the floor littered with discarded sketches, each one a failed attempt to capture something wrong.

She sat cross-legged, rolling out a fresh sheet of paper with the care of a scribe copying sacred text. Her hand moved—not with an artist’s grace, but with the precision of a hunter skinning prey.

Lines. Not shapes, but movement.

Curves. Not contours, but pressure.

A ripple where the paper itself seemed to recoil from the marks.

She wasn’t drawing Towan.

She wasn’t even drawing his Essentia.

She was drawing the absence where something else had been.

That pulse of intent.

That breath of something other.

Her charcoal stilled.

"It wasn’t his," she whispered.

Stolen from its rightful author, this tale is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.

A knock.

Sharp. Three times.

She didn’t answer.

The door opened anyway.

"Didn’t think rats cared for art," Askael muttered, leaning against the frame.

Seriah didn’t turn. She dragged the charcoal along the edge of the spiral, smudging the line with her thumb. Her eyes never left the paper.

"You’re bleeding," she noted, voice light.

He stepped inside. His right sleeve hung in tatters, bandages hastily wrapped around his ribs, already blooming red.

"Thanks to your little ‘show.’"

"You’re welcome."

"You disobeyed protocol."

"Mmm. Protocol’s boring."

Askael’s boots scraped against stone as he moved closer. His gaze flicked to the sketch. Paused.

"What is that?"

"Intent," she said.

"What?"

She finally looked up at him. Her expression was blank—not empty, but erased.

"His intent. For a second… it wasn’t his. It came from somewhere else."

Askael scoffed.

"You’re playing games again."

"I’m not."

Her voice had changed. Flat. Final. A blade resting against the pulse of a thought.

"It felt like… a dead star flaring back to life. Just for a heartbeat. Ancient. Familiar. Wrong."

Askael’s face hardened.

"You’re projecting."

"Am I?"

She rose, slow and deliberate, lifting the sketch between them. Let the candlelight warp the lines, making the spiral seem to breathe

."Have you ever felt someone fighting with borrowed purpose?"

A beat. "That’s what he did. That boy."

"He touched something he shouldn’t have."

She stepped close enough for Askael to smell the charcoal on her hands, the iron tang of old blood beneath her nails.

"And I want to know what it was."

Silence.

Then—

Askael snatched the paper and crushed it in his fist.

"Forget it. The higher-ups have plans for him. Stay out of it."

"You should’ve seen it," she said, not angry—haunted.

"The way the air reacted. The way the forest held its breath."

Askael’s jaw tightened.

"He’s just a kid."

"Maybe," Seriah said, already pulling out a fresh sheet.

"But the thing inside him isn’t."

She sat down.

This time, her hand moved slower.


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