The silence that followed cracked like thunder in the cavern.
The brown elf staggered back, dirt falling from his hands. "Eldorath's prince… alive?" His voice broke, disbelief battling against awe. "We thought, you were said to be lost, cut down in the wars above."
"I am not lost," Lindarion answered coldly. His eyes did not leave the man's. "And neither are you, though you hide in the dark like a hunted thing."
The elf's lips trembled, torn between reverence and bitterness. He bowed his head, not deeply, but enough that the roots trembled with the weight of it. "I am Tharion, of Lorienya. Forgive me. It has been long since I have seen kin beyond these roots."
Nysha's shadows stirred faintly, her gaze sharp. "What does a Lorienyan elf dig for in the dark?"
Tharion's eyes darted to her, then to the humans at Lindarion's back. His jaw clenched, as though the words burned before leaving. "Survival," he said simply. "The forest above grows restless. The land shifts. Safer to dig. Safer to hide."
His eyes lifted again to Lindarion, widening. "But if you are truly here… if the blood of Eldorath still walks… then perhaps we are not as forsaken as we believed."
The humans exchanged uneasy looks. The commander muttered under his breath, "Another elf… just what we needed."
Lindarion silenced him with a glance. His gaze remained on Tharion, measuring, weighing. The Lorienyan was no soldier, but the resolve in his eyes was carved deep.
"Rise," Lindarion commanded. "And walk with us."
Tharion hesitated, then nodded, shoulders stiffening as though trying to remember what it felt like to stand beside others instead of in solitude.
The tunnel sloped upward for what felt like hours, stone dripping with dew, roots thickening until the walls themselves seemed stitched with living veins. Every step carried the group closer to air that no longer smelled of ash or decay.
The humans moved uneasily, their eyes flicking to the roots as though at any moment they might strangle them. They had not seen green in months, perhaps years.
Then came the light.
At first, it was faint, a shimmer between cracks in the ceiling. Then it grew until the tunnel spilled them out onto soft earth beneath an open sky.
The squad froze.
The air was not choked with dust, nor thick with blood. It was crisp, wet with morning, heavy with the perfume of blooming wildflowers. A vast forest stretched out in every direction, canopies glittering with sunlight that spilled through like liquid gold. Birds darted between branches, their songs bright and careless. A river cut through the clearing ahead, its surface so clean it reflected the sky like a polished mirror.
No ash. No fire. No corpses.
The humans stood slack-jawed, their weapons dangling uselessly at their sides. One dropped to his knees, clutching the grass between his fingers as though afraid it would vanish. Another stumbled forward, tears streaking down a face carved with soot, staring at the river like it was the first water he had ever seen.
"What… what is this?" a young woman whispered, her voice trembling. "How… how is this still here?"
Lindarion did not answer immediately. His eyes swept the forest, narrowing. Too quiet, too untouched. The world beyond these trees was in ruin. He had bled across its ashes. Yet here… it was as though the corruption had never touched it.
Nysha stepped to his side, her crimson eyes glimmering warily. Shadows curled tight around her wrists, twitching as if restless in the face of so much life. She tilted her head slightly, her voice low so only he could hear. "This shouldn't exist."
"No," Lindarion murmured. His hand tightened on the hilt of his sword. "It shouldn't."
Ashwing, perched on his shoulder in his lizard form, flicked his tongue and made a faint sound in his mind. 'It smells good here. Clean. Not like the caves. I like it.'
Lindarion didn't answer. His thoughts burned sharper.
'Why? Why here, when everywhere else drowns in Maeven's filth?'
The commander of the human survivors broke the silence, stepping forward slowly, as though expecting the forest to vanish with each pace. His scarred face twisted with something between awe and suspicion.
"This… is impossible. My scouts said the entire world above was ash. That nothing lived. And yet—" He spread his arms to the trees, his voice breaking. "This."
Murmurs rippled through the group, louder now, voices rising with a fevered mix of relief and fear.
"A sanctuary."
"A miracle."
"Maybe the gods—"
"No god did this," Lindarion cut in sharply. His voice cracked the air like steel against stone. The whispers died instantly. Dozens of eyes turned toward him.
He let the silence linger, then looked toward the horizon. Beyond the treeline, faint against the sky, rose a shape that stole the breath from his lungs.
A trunk. Vast. Endless. Its base was hidden by the forest, but its crown pierced the clouds, leaves shimmering with a faint golden light.
"The World Tree."
Lindarion's jaw tightened. He had heard of it only in whispers. A myth told in fragments, even among elves. Some said it anchored the continents. Others claimed it was the first root of creation. Whatever the truth, its presence here explained everything. The purity. The untouched soil. The silence of corruption.
But it also meant danger.
Because anything that could preserve this place in such a world was power beyond imagining.
"Form ranks," Lindarion ordered suddenly, his voice snapping the humans from their stupor. "Stay sharp. This forest may look untouched, but do not forget where we are. Do not forget what hunts you."
Some hesitated, unwilling to let fear spoil the miracle. But the commander barked at them, and slowly, reluctantly, they tightened their formation, weapons raised once more.
Nysha's shadows rippled faintly as she leaned closer to Lindarion, her voice quiet. "You know what this means, don't you?"
He nodded once, his eyes fixed on the distant gleam of the World Tree. "We're in Lorienya."
The words spread through the group like fire. Humans glanced at one another, uncertain, but the elves, Tharion among them, stiffened with recognition.