Chapter 199 — Faultlines in the Spiral - Elven Invasion - NovelsTime

Elven Invasion

Chapter 199 — Faultlines in the Spiral

Author: Respro
updatedAt: 2026-01-29

POV 1: ELARA — DESCENT TOWARD THE SPIRAL

The Moonspire’s prow cut through the Antarctic air like a blade through silk, its silver hull refracting the Spiral’s light into cascading arcs. Elara stood at the forward balcony, her hair whipping around her face in the unnatural wind. The Sixth Tree’s whisper had not faded since she had first heard it — if anything, it had deepened, becoming almost unbearably clear.

Closer. You are closer.

Her ship’s captain approached hesitantly, his voice reverent but strained.

“My Queen… the interference is distorting both scrying and conventional scans. No one aboard can tell how many are down there.”

“I can,” Elara said simply, her gaze fixed on the glowing trunk rising from the basin. She didn’t need magic or sensors. She could feel them — Mary’s corps, Veyra’s High Elves, scattered human operatives, and other presences that defied classification.

The last time she had been this close to a Spiral awakening, she had been barely more than a girl, standing beside the previous queen. That Spiral had withered before it could choose — choked by war before it could root itself in the world.

This one felt different. More determined. More… hungry.

The deck beneath her feet trembled as the Moonspire entered the convergence zone. Snow turned to light below, and the wind carried whispers from voices that had never been born.

She glanced toward the ice horizon and, for the briefest moment, thought she saw another ship approaching — a human vessel, black-hulled and unmarked, moving faster than its design should allow.

Too many threads at once, she thought. The Spiral will not forgive chaos for long.

POV 2: MARY — THE BASIN’S THRESHOLD

The roots had grown taller. What had been tangled ivory arcs moments ago now stood like pillars, interlacing into the base of a trunk that radiated warmth in the killing cold.

Mary’s Royal Knights shifted uneasily. The Spiral’s light made their armor seem thinner, their weapons almost ornamental. Even her own blade felt heavier, as though reluctant to be drawn here.

Veyra still held her position a hundred paces back, her troops forming a defensive arc. The High Captain’s earlier confidence had cracked — Mary saw it in the way her eyes flicked toward the Spiral every few seconds, as though she feared it would suddenly speak her name.

Mary took a slow breath and stepped forward.

The basin floor was not ice anymore. It was glassy and dark, as if the Spiral’s roots had pressed down into the Earth’s crust and drawn up molten memory. With each step, her boots sent ripples of light radiating outward.

She thought of Dyug.

The memory came unbidden: his voice, half a whisper, telling her he’d find a way to make the Queen see her worth. He’d looked invincible then, cloaked in moonlight, certain of victory. Now, he was somewhere beyond her reach — either dead or in chains. And yet, here she was, standing before the same kind of miracle he had dreamed of touching.

If I step further, she wondered, will I still be me when I reach it?

POV 3: SOLOMON KANE — WATCHING THE LINES BREAK

From his vantage at the ridge, Solomon had an unmatched view of the mess below. Two Elven forces facing each other, neither committing to battle. A growing structure in the center that didn’t belong to anyone. And, on the far side, a scattering of human silhouettes — too small to be an army, too deliberate to be lost wanderers.

Through the Spiral’s glare, he recognized one of them.

Reina Morales.

She was moving differently now — not like the submarine officer he’d known in the abyss temple, but like someone following an invisible trail. Her head tilted slightly as if listening to something only she could hear. Jamie Lancaster was a few steps behind her, face pale, eyes darting between the glyphs spinning in the air.

“Damn it, Morales,” Solomon muttered. She hadn’t seen him yet. If she kept walking at that pace, she’d cross between Mary’s corps and the High Elves — which was, in his experience, a good way to die in three languages.

The ice tremored again.

This time, the movement didn’t come from the Spiral’s heartbeat. It came from the ridge itself — beneath his feet.

POV 4: REINA MORALES — THE PULL

She wasn’t walking toward the Spiral. She was being walked. That was the only way she could explain it.

Ever since the abyss temple, since that moment when the black water swallowed the sub and left only her and Solomon alive, she had felt… wrong. Not broken. Not even haunted in the normal sense. Just slightly out of sync with everything else.

Now, the Spiral’s presence was syncing her back.

It wasn’t a voice. It wasn’t a command. It was resonance. Like the rhythm of her heart had finally found its counterpart in the world outside her.

Jamie’s voice came faint behind her.

“Reina! Slow down! You don’t know what it—”

But Reina already knew what it was. Not in words, but in certainty.

The basin air felt thick, like walking through warm water. She could see the light threading through her hands, tracing faint lines that moved upward into her arms. Not magic — not exactly — but something older, like a draft sketch for magic before it became spells.

Every step forward felt more right.

Until she saw her.

Mary. Standing at the Spiral’s very edge, eyes locked not on the structure but on Reina herself.

POV 5: JAMIE LANCASTER — SIGNALS IN THE STATIC

Jamie could see the Spiral’s code now. It was bleeding into the air, running along the edges of the roots, pulsing through the trunk in visible threads. She recognized some of it — her own glyph work, woven in and out like subtext.

But there was more. Something she hadn’t written. Something she had never seen before.

It was keyed to a name.

Not a human one. Not Elven. Not even in a language she could parse. And yet, when her eyes skimmed over it, her mind filled in the syllables as if she had always known them.

She glanced up — and realized the code threads were converging on two people: Mary and Reina.

“Oh, no,” she whispered. “It’s making a choice.”

POV 6: ELARA — THE ARRIVAL

The Moonspire landed hard, skids hissing against the half-glass, half-ice surface. Elara stepped down into the basin’s glow, her Royal Guard forming a loose circle around her.

Every breath here tasted like lightning.

She saw Mary first — her protégé, her defiant captain, standing unflinching in the Spiral’s light. Then her gaze shifted and froze.

The other one.

The human woman — Reina — had the same unshaken posture. And the Spiral’s glow was bending toward her, ever so slightly, like branches leaning toward sunlight.

Elara felt the Sixth Tree’s whisper again.

Two roots cannot grow in the same soil.

And for the first time in many years, she didn’t know whether the voice was warning her… or daring her.

POV 7: THE SPIRAL — NOT IN WORDS

The basin stopped moving. The wind stilled. Every flake of light hung in suspension.

The Spiral had no mouth to speak, but every living thing in its reach felt the same unignorable message:

One step more, and the choice will be made.

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