Elven Invasion
Chapter 91: The Weight of Return
POV 1: Dyug – Observation Chamber, Andaman and Nicobar Facility
For hours after the initial briefing, Dyug remained in his chamber, seated cross-legged on the sterile bed. The hum of the ceiling lights above mirrored the static inside his mind. His memories flickered in disjointed fragments—the torpedo strike, the scream of his crew, the fire swallowing the sky, the water pulling him under… and Mary.
The holo-image of her—glowing beside the Leviathan—burned behind his eyes.
She was alive. And far more than that.
He had felt the divine pulse in her soul before, had tasted it in the way she moved through battle, the reverence in her prayers. But what she had become now was… unprecedented. Merging with something that old, that powerful, and still remaining herself? It was beyond Royal magic. It was sacrilege and miracle, both.
He rose.
The door hissed open a second later. Vikram Desai was already waiting, flanked by two armed guards.
“You’ve been cleared for transfer,” Vikram said. “We’re moving to a naval carrier for a neutral handover. If that’s still what you want.”
Dyug gave him a nod. “I gave you no reason to fear. I intend to keep it that way.”
Vikram looked him over, uncertain. “You speak as though this wasn’t a rescue mission. That you expected this.”
Dyug’s gaze didn’t waver. “I didn’t expect to survive. But if Mary is still alive… then everything I did, every failure, may still serve a purpose.”
They walked in silence after that, only the low thrum of power conduits and elevator gears marking the passage of time. Dyug could feel it in the air now—the tension of a world teetering between caution and hope.
Outside, the sea shimmered under the dawn light as they arrived at the helipad. A sleek VTOL transport waited, its turbines low and patient. As he boarded, Dyug took one last look at the forested coastline behind the facility.
He whispered, “Thank you.”
Not to the humans. Not even to the gods.
To the silence. To the ocean that had cradled him. To the currents that had not yet claimed him.
POV 2: Mary – Beneath the Tanzanian Coastline
The temple of the Leviathan rested far below the waters, in a natural trench off the coast of Tanzania. Coral and ruins tangled together around the colossal form of the ancient beast, whose heartbeat shook the water in slow pulses.
Mary stood on a platform of glimmering stone, her armor long since replaced with flowing robes woven from Leviathan silk—threads of bio-light and memory. The currents bowed around her presence, as if the ocean itself deferred.
Aleran watched her from a distance, ever silent, ever loyal. But it was Mary who felt the shift. The tremble in the deep.
“He’s near,” she whispered.
The Leviathan stirred, its scales shivering with resonance. Its thoughts brushed hers—curious, uncertain.
Bonded one… shall we rise?
“Not yet,” she murmured. “Let him come. Let me see if he is still who I remember… or someone the sea must drown.”
POV 3: Naval Ship “INS Shakti” – Approaching Tanzanian Waters
The Indian Navy had gone to great lengths to stage the meeting. Not in a base, not under satellite eyes—but on neutral waters, away from nations and cameras. A risk, but one taken carefully.
Dyug stood at the bow, cloaked in a simple tunic. His silver hair fluttered in the wind, his gaze fixed on the horizon.
Then he felt it.
A pull—not magical, but primal. The ocean vibrating with breath. Like a sleeping god dreaming with eyes half-open.
He didn’t need to ask where she was. His bones told him.
Behind him, boots clanged. A man approached—broad, with storm-worn eyes and the unmistakable poise of someone who had faced death and walked away too often.
“I assume you're the elf prince,” the man said.
Dyug turned. And for a moment, just a heartbeat, he mistook the man’s presence for that of a general, a commander.
“You are the one who commands this ship?”
The man smirked. “Not quite. Name’s Solomon Kane. I’m just… a specialist.”
Dyug studied him, the old scars along his jaw, the aura of a man who lived in shadow and fire.
“You wear the mantle of leadership without the rank,” Dyug said. “Interesting.”
Solomon shrugged. “I’ve led enough raids to know that titles are just words. Action matters.”
There was a moment of silence between them. Then Dyug asked, “Do you trust her?”
“I don’t trust anything ancient and godlike,” Solomon replied. “But I do trust people who bleed for what they believe. Mary fits that bill.”
Dyug’s expression shifted. “She always did.”
POV 4: Dyana – Sky-Crown Orbital Platform
The orbital platform floated silently above the Earth, like a sentinel. Dyana paced the observation room as live satellite feeds flickered across the screen. The Indian vessel moved steadily southward, hugging the edge of the naval blockade.
“They’re really doing it,” she muttered. “Handing him back.”
Her aide nodded. “We’ve seen no hostile movement from the Leviathan since the demand. Our models suggest that Mary’s link is suppressing its deeper instincts.”
Dyana frowned. “Suppressing? Or redirecting?”
The aide didn’t answer.
Dyana pressed her fingertips to the glass.
“If Dyug wakes something in her… something too human… then we’ve lost more than strategic ground. We’ve lost the balance and if she even harms his hair then she will pay for it.”
POV 5: Underwater Dock – Tanzanian Trench
The small submersible descended into the deep, carrying only Dyug, Solomon, and an Indian Navy pilot.
As they neared the Leviathan’s resting place, Dyug felt it—not in magic, but in memory. The sea remembered his name. The Leviathan’s breath pressed against the hull like thunder turned to mist.
And then he saw her.
Mary stood alone on a stone rise, lit by bioluminescence. Her eyes glowed—not with magic,but something deeper.
The sub docked.
Dyug stepped out first.
They stared at each other across the silence of the sea.
No words.
Not yet.
Mary walked forward, slowly. The trench around them quieted, even the Leviathan stilling.
Solomon stepped forward, but Dyug raised a hand. “Stay,” he said gently. “This is not your moment.”
Solomon frowned, but didn’t interfere. He lingered at the edge of the platform, hands near his weapons, just in case.
Mary stopped just in front of Dyug. She looked at him—at the faint scar along his collarbone, the way his silver hair had dulled.
“You’re thinner,” she said softly.
“And you,” he said, voice equally quiet, “are terrifying.”
Mary exhaled slowly. “Do you understand why I called for you?”
“I do,” he said. “But I need to hear you say it.”
She looked up at him. “Because I needed something real. Something that knew me before I became this.”
Dyug stepped closer. “You haven’t become a monster, Mary. Not yet.”
“But I could,” she whispered. “If they took you from me forever… I might’ve let it all drown.”
A pause.
Then she added, “You’re not a hostage. You’re a tether.”
The Leviathan pulsed behind her in agreement.
Dyug said nothing for a long moment. Then he reached up and placed his palm against her shoulder. “Then hold fast, Commander. We haven’t lost everything yet.”
POV 6: Solomon Kane – Observation Deck
Solomon watched as Mary and Dyug stood there—two ancient souls in the eye of something vaster than either of them.
He keyed his comm. “They’re talking. No hostility. She looks… calmer.”
Asha’s voice came through. “Maintain distance. But if the Leviathan stirs—”
“I know,” Solomon said. “I’ve got grenades, EMP rounds, and a god-complex of my own. But I’m hoping we don’t need any of them.”
He looked back at the pair. “Because if this works… we might actually survive whatever’s coming next.”
POV 7: Mary – Embrace of the Deep
Mary let herself lean into Dyug’s warmth. The Leviathan didn’t resist. It accepted him as part of her. As someone trusted.
“I’m going to negotiate a ceasefire,” she said. “But I need you beside me.”
Dyug smiled faintly. “Then you shall have me. Not as a prince. Not as a warrior.”
She looked up.
“But as the one who never stopped believing in you.”
POV 8: Dyana – Sky-Crown
Dyana stood in silence, watching the stream shared by her temporary human allies.
“No weapons raised,” her aide said. “No energy spikes.”
Dyana allowed herself the smallest smile.
“Then perhaps,” she murmured, “there’s still a future left to write.”