Elven Invasion
Chapter 246 – Ripples in the Deep
POV 1: REINA MORALES – SOUTHERN COMMAND HUB, USHUAIA
The command center stank of sweat, metal, and burnt wiring. Generators thrummed as the storm of signals poured in from across the Southern Pacific.
Reina Morales stood rooted before the wall of screens. What had begun as a battle of attrition was now unraveling into something far stranger.
“Report,” she ordered, voice sharp despite the exhaustion carving lines beneath her eyes.
“Ma’am,” a technician said, knuckles white on the keyboard, “the Gate’s energy readings are spiking again—but not in line with Elven channeling. It’s… mutating.”
On the main display, the Gate pulsed. Once a steady, silver-blue vortex, it now twisted into a darker hue, threads of violet and black spiraling through its glow like veins of poison.
Another officer chimed in, “Satellite sensors confirm—the Nightborne are no longer moving in coordinated waves. They’re… striking anything in reach. Even Elven units.”
A ripple of disbelief coursed across the room.
Reina’s lips tightened. “So the goddess’s perfect weapons aren’t so perfect after all.”
She leaned closer to the console, forcing her voice low and steady. “Patch through to all fleet commanders: exploit the fracture. If those things are turning on their masters, then we turn the knife. Hit the distracted ones. Keep pressing fire into the Gate. That’s our wound, and we don’t stop until it bursts.”
As her words carried, she allowed herself the smallest thought: Maybe Indigo’s death bought us more than time. Maybe it bought us a chance.
POV 2: DYUG VON FORESTIA – THE BATTLEFIELD
The air reeked of salt and blood.
Dyug’s gauntleted hand clenched as he watched the impossible unfold. Nightborne, the so-called eternal legion, were raking claws not only through mortal steel but through elven shields.
A six-armed titan toppled, not from bombs but from the spears of panicked elven soldiers who had been forced to defend themselves.
“This is not what was promised,” one knight gasped, shield trembling.
Dyug silenced him with a glare. “Hold your ground! They are tools of the Goddess—they test us, nothing more!”
But even as he barked the words, his heart knew better. These were not controlled trials. This was chaos, something wrong at the very core of the Gate.
Mary rode up beside him, helm spattered with seawater and silver gore. Her eyes behind the visor were unreadable. “They’re turning, Dyug. The soldiers can see it. If you lie to them, they’ll break.”
His jaw locked. “And if I tell the truth, they’ll shatter.”
For a heartbeat, he wavered—prince and commander, torn between love for his people and the mask of authority.
Finally, he raised his blade, the lunar sigils along its edge blazing. “Knights of the Crown! Hear me! Whether mortal or monster, any who threaten our line will fall! Forestia’s strength lies not in blind trust, but in the courage to strike when the hour demands!”
A ragged cheer rose. It was not triumph—it was defiance.
Mary met his gaze briefly and gave a small nod. For that, Dyug’s chest tightened. In her eyes, he saw faith—not in gods or queens, but in him.
POV 3: QUEEN ELARA – THRONE OF MOONLIGHT
From the height of her fortress-ship, Elara’s perfect composure cracked for the first time in centuries.
The Gate pulsed violently, its rhythm no longer tethered to her song. She poured more lunar magic into the ritual, her hands glowing with silver fire, but the response was distorted—a resonance out of tune, like a harp string fraying.
Her advisers whispered urgently. “Your Majesty, the Nightborne respond erratically. The mortals exploit the chaos. We must—”
“Silence,” Elara hissed. Her voice carried the weight of mountains, and all fell still.
She leaned over the scrying mirror, eyes burning as she fixed upon the Gate. Who dares interfere?
The truth struck her: not mortal, not even the knights. The Gate itself was evolving. The veil between Forestia and this world was not merely opening—it was learning.
For the first time since stepping onto this alien shore, unease prickled along her spine.
Her thoughts were sharp, cold, immediate: If the Gate no longer answers only to me, then who—or what—has claimed its leash?
She straightened, face an ivory mask. “Prepare the high priestesses. If I must rip the Gate into obedience, I will drown this ocean in their blood to do it.”
The chamber fell into fearful silence.
POV 4: MARY – ROYAL KNIGHT CORPS
Spray lashed her faceplate, but Mary’s grip on her spear was iron. Around her, the Knights locked shields, not against mortals, but against the claws of a shrieking Nightborne that had turned its fury upon them.
The impact rang through her bones. Sparks scattered as obsidian talons scraped silver. With a roar, her unit shoved as one, spears bracing.
“Drive it back!” Mary cried. “For Forestia—for each other!”
The creature reeled as another barrage of human missiles struck it from behind. Its chest split, ichor spraying the sea. For the first time, Mary did not curse the mortals.
Instead, she shouted the order: “Strike now!”
Her knights surged forward, blades sinking deep into the titan’s weakened flesh. With a shudder that shook the waves, the beast collapsed, half sinking into the churning water.
Mary panted, sweat running into her eyes. In the silence that followed, she heard her knights whisper.
“They bleed. Even the Goddess’s children bleed.”
And something shifted. Fear did not vanish, but it cracked—enough for courage to breathe through.
Mary lifted her spear skyward. “Then we fight, until none stand against us. Mortal or monster—it matters not!”
Her corps roared with her, and in that roar, she felt something dangerous stirring: the beginning of doubt.
POV 5: CAPTAIN NATHANIEL HARKER – USS PROVIDENCE
The bridge quaked under another wave, alarms wailing.
“Starboard guns offline!” an officer cried.
Harker slammed his fist against the console. “Keep port batteries firing! Focus on the crippled one at grid nine. We finish it before it finishes us!”
Outside, the night sky lit with fire as U.S., Japanese, and Indian destroyers concentrated their salvos. The wounded Nightborne thrashed, clawing at waves, until finally its bulk folded into the ocean, vanishing beneath fire and spray.
The bridge erupted in cheers.
Harker didn’t allow himself more than a grim nod. “Good. Now find me the next target. We keep punching. If they’re tearing each other apart, we help them along.”
And deep inside, he whispered a vow: For Indigo. For all of them. We’ll make this count.
POV 6: REINA MORALES – SOUTHERN COMMAND HUB
The battle reports cascaded across her displays—human fleets holding, Nightborne faltering, elves clashing with their own.
She exhaled, steadying herself. It was not victory, not yet. But the tide had shifted.
“Open a global channel,” she ordered. “Every ship, every soldier, every civilian bunker. Let them see this. Let them see that the Elves bleed, that their titans fall. We fight as one people now.”
As the feed went live, Reina Morales straightened her shoulders. On every screen, across every shore, her voice carried:
“This is Commander Morales. The Gate falters. The enemy turns on itself. Humanity stands. Hold the line—and strike with everything you have!”
The command hub erupted in applause, but Reina’s eyes stayed locked on the Gate’s twisting form.
Because she knew: if it was mutating, then this battle was not the end. It was only the beginning of something worse.
CLOSING SCENE
The Southern Pacific writhed with contradictions:
* Elves and mortals, enemies moments before, found themselves striking the same monstrous titans.
* Dyug and Mary, bound by loyalty and love, led from the front, even as cracks spread through their faith.
* Queen Elara, in her moonlit fortress, fought to leash the Gate that no longer heeded her alone.
* Reina Morales, far from the frontlines, turned chaos into opportunity, binding fleets and nations with her words.
And through it all, the Gate pulsed—brighter, darker, stranger—like a living wound learning to breathe in a world not its own.
The war had shifted. Not just between worlds, but within the very fabric of creation.