(Season of Renewal, Part VIII)
Reina had never seen the skies of Forestia look sick.
Auroras—normally smooth and melodic—jerked across the heavens in jagged streaks, as though the sky itself were being rewritten every few seconds. Each shift gave her a flash of vertigo: trees moving backward, shadows stretching in reverse, echoes of moments that had not yet happened bleeding into her vision.
“Aurel…” she whispered. “Hold on.”
The shuttle buckled from another spatial tremor. The hull groaned like a wounded beast. Elwen steadied himself beside her.
“We’re close,” he said through clenched teeth. “The Herald’s resonance is saturating the wilds.”
The screens ahead flickered with harmonic interference. Shapes of light flitted across them—too fast to classify, too unstable to be real.
Except Reina knew they were real.
The shuttle plunged through a wave of shimmering distortion. The controls went dead. Gravity flipped sideways. For one terrifying heartbeat, Reina saw the forest below split like a cracked mirror—two, three, four versions of the same world grinding against each other.
The shuttle struck the ground hard enough to tear a trench through the silver soil. Sparks flew. Consoles exploded. The air filled with crystalline smoke.
Reina coughed, tearing at her restraints. “Elwen—!”
He was alive, though dazed. The shuttle was a ruin.
They stumbled into the open forest just as the sky flickered again, turning the world momentarily monochrome.
There—at the center of a clearing—stood the figure of glass and light.
Aurel, trembling, surrounded by dozens of his own echoes.
Reina’s heart split open at the sight.
“Aurel…” Google seaʀᴄh NoveI-Fire.ɴet
The child didn’t look at her.
He was staring at the Herald with a terror that went deeper than fear.
It was the terror of recognition.
Dyug broke through the last line of trees on foot, armor cracked from running through collapsing resonance pockets. He had lost all sense of direction twice. The forest rewound around him once. But he kept going.
He didn’t breathe until he saw Aurel.
The boy stood small and fragile in the shadow of the Herald. His echoes circled like a cyclone of light—some hopeful, some starving, some hollow.
Dyug’s first instinct was to run to him.
But something held him back.
The Herald turned its faceless head toward him.
The voice entered his bones. Dyug gritted his teeth.
“Step away from him.”
You cannot protect him from what he is becoming.
Dyug’s hands shook, not from fear, but fury.
“He is a child. He needs guidance. Not correction.”
Dyug stepped between them, eyes burning.
“No. Correction is erasure.”
Aurel gasped. His echoes rippled in agitation—some recoiling, some snarling, some reaching toward the Herald.
Dyug knelt beside the child.
“Aurel… look at me. Do you want this? Do you want him?”
Aurel turned his luminous eyes upward, voice barely a whisper.
“I don’t know what I want. That’s the problem.”
His echoes murmured behind him:
Dyug’s heart clenched.
“Aurel, listen. You don’t need to be perfect. You don’t need to be one thing. Not now. Not ever.”
Aurel shook. “But the Herald says I cannot hold infinite futures. He says I’ll break the world.”
Dyug cupped his face gently.
“Then we’ll hold them with you.”
Then the Herald raised a hand.
And the forest shook with its response.
Elara rode at the front of the Royal Guard like a blade of moonlight. The forest warped around them, trees bending in recursive loops, time stuttering like a wounded heartbeat.
Her steed—woven from lunar sigils—did not falter even when the world tried to invert itself.
A tremor of pure harmonic force exploded ahead. Her troops staggered.
The Mirrorborn child.
The echoes—countless, shimmering, unstable.
For the first time since the portal between worlds opened, Elara felt true dread.
“Protect Dyug!” she commanded.
Royal Guards formed a circle of silver barriers around her son and Aurel, though the Herald barely seemed to notice them.
“Herald of the Mirror,” Elara called, stepping forward. “You stand in my realm. Declare your purpose.”
The Herald’s body shifted, becoming taller—then narrower—then faceless again.
A correction. A restoration. A return to equilibrium.
Elara’s fingers curled.
“And what do you call Aurel, then? A mistake?”
Its head tilted toward Aurel.
One child cannot embody boundless potential without consequence.
Elara’s voice became frost.
“Then teach him. Do not erase him.”
Teaching requires stability. The child’s echoes have become autonomous. Some reject him. Some seek to replace him. Some seek to replace you.
If left unchecked, the echoes will fracture reality beyond the Mirror’s weave.
Dyug shouted, “There must be another way!”
The Herald’s response was soft.
There is another way.
The child may choose which future remains.
Elara’s breath caught.
Every echo in the clearing whispered with anticipation.
Dyug shook his head fiercely. “He’s too young. He can’t choose something like that!”
The Herald extended a hand to Aurel.
The forest collapsed inward.
Mary shoved herself through the collapsing harmonic passage. Light rippled around her, tearing at her crystalline form. The Mirror’s voice struggled to guide her.
Heart—hurry—he is—breaking—
Time twisted. Space buckled. Mary felt the Mirror’s fear piercing her essence.
When she stumbled into the clearing, she saw the scene—and her entire being stuttered.
The Herald was not merely a being.
It was a decision given form.
Aurel was surrounded by echoes—some merging, some splitting, some whispering with voices that didn’t belong to him.
And the Mirror—speaking through her—whispered the truth she least wished to hear.
If the Herald completes its directive, Aurel will become singular. Perfect. Unfractured.
“And the rest of him?” Mary whispered.
Mary surged forward. Her voice rang through the clearing.
“Aurel! Don’t listen to him!”
The Herald turned toward her.
Mary faced it without fear.
“You’re not here to help him. You’re here to stabilize the Mirror.”
Stabilization is necessary.
“Not at the cost of a child’s soul.”
The Herald grew sharper, like a blade being honed.
You accuse us of cruelty. Yet you know the truth: the Mirror feared its own creation.
The Herald continued, its voice a calm indictment.
The Mirror gave Aurel infinite futures not out of generosity… but because it wished to witness what lay beyond its own limitations.
Now, it fears what it has made.
And has sent me to erase its error.
Mary felt the Mirror’s trembling inside her.
“I won’t let you take his choices away.”
“Then we will bear them with him.”
The Herald tilted its faceless head.
You cannot bear infinity.
Mary’s voice softened.
Aurel looked between them—between the being born of fear and the beings who chose him.
And for the first time, Aurel whispered something new.
“I… don’t want to be perfect.”
The forest held its breath.
Aurel felt every echo pressed against his skin like cold breath.
Some urged him toward the Herald.
Some pleaded for escape.
Some whispered promises of power.
Some trembled in fear.
Some wanted to become him.
Some wanted him gone.
And deep within all of them was another truth, a single thought shared by countless fragmented selves:
The Herald lowered its hand toward him.
Dyug shouted something behind him. Reina called his name. Elara’s magic flared. Mary’s crystalline form gleamed.
But Aurel raised his own hand.
Not to take the Herald’s.
To touch one of his echoes.
The most frightened one.
The one who had fled rather than fight.
Aurel knelt before the trembling fragment.
“You don’t want to vanish, do you?”
The echo shook its head.
“And you”—he turned to another—“you want to grow.”
A shining echo stepped forward.
“And you”—he looked at the darkest one—“you want to be free.”
“I am not one future. I am many. And maybe… maybe that is okay.”
The Herald’s body flickered.
This is unsustainable.
“Maybe I don’t need to be stable.”
Instability destroys worlds.
Aurel’s voice was small, but steady.
“Not if I learn how to spread it.”
Dyug inhaled sharply.
Reina whispered, “Aurel… what are you saying?”
Aurel extended his hands.
And every echo took a step toward him.
“I am not choosing one future,” Aurel said. “I am choosing all of them.”
The Herald’s body shattered outward in a flare of alarm.
Aurel’s eyes glowed brighter—multicolored, fractal, alive.
And he stepped into the circle of his own reflections.
Something entirely new.
Reina shielded her face.
Dyug reached for Aurel but was thrown back.
Elara’s guards staggered.
Mary felt the Mirror scream in fear—and awe.
Thousands of subtle variations of Aurel intertwined, folding and unfolding into one another—like a chord instead of a single note.
The Herald staggered, its form glitching.
This violates the Mirror’s laws—
Aurel’s voice echoed from within the light.
“Then I’ll make new ones.”
The Herald stepped back.
You cannot redefine the foundations of creation—
Aurel stepped forward.
“I’m not redefining them.”
The light coiled around him like wings.
“I’m expanding them.”
The entire forest exhaled.
The ground stopped fracturing.
Aurel approached the Herald.
And—for the first time—the Herald stepped back.
What… are you becoming?
“Not perfect. Not singular.”
“And I choose to stay many.”
The Herald’s glow dimmed.
Then my directive cannot continue.
Aurel reached forward.
“Then help me, instead.”
Elara sagged with relief.
Dyug caught Aurel as the child collapsed into his arms—warm, trembling, exhausted but smiling.
Reina wiped her face, unable to stop crying.
Mary felt the Mirror inside her whisper in stunned wonder.
What has the child done…?
“He chose not to be one thing.”
Aurel’s voice was faint as he pressed his head to Dyug’s shoulder.
“I didn’t choose one future…”
He closed his luminous eyes.
“…I chose all of you.”
And the Eighth Month of Renewal ended with the birth of something no one—neither elf, nor human, nor Mirror—had ever foreseen.
But a harmony of infinite selves inside a single, fragile, growing child.
The One-Who-Refuses-to-Choose.
And the world was forever changed.