Reincarnated as an Elf Prince

Chapter 219: Rune



No one spoke.

No one needed to.

Velna cleaned her blade with the same rhythm someone might use to calm a heartbeat. Rythe sat cross-legged, watching the treeline like it owed her an answer. Derran leaned on his bad leg like it didn't bother him.

Lindarion waited three minutes.

Long enough for someone to speak.

No one did.

He turned back toward the ravine mouth.

"Gear up," he said. "We move."

Kael gave a low grunt. Not resistance. Just acknowledgment.

Stitch packed his vials without comment. Mekir rose without a sound. Luneth didn't glance back, she was already moving, light on the trail, watching everything.

Lira walked beside him. Always half a step off his flank. Nothing new there.

Ashwing's distant wingbeats echoed overhead. High. Watching. Waiting for a signal that might mean fire.

They moved as one.

No chatter.

No complaints.

Each step took them further from known terrain. The rock formations around them grew sharper, unnatural.

Not jagged like a collapse. Patterned. Chiseled in ways too symmetrical to be erosion.

Lindarion saw a line cut through three stones in a row.

Same depth.

Same angle.

Too perfect.

"They didn't build something here," Sylric said behind him. "They revealed it."

Lindarion kept walking.

The air shifted. Slightly colder. Not from wind. From distance. Like something massive lay ahead, and the world was holding its breath around it.

They reached a bend in the path.

On the other side, black stone. Smooth. Seamless.

Carved with a symbol he recognized now.

A piece of the rune.

But this one was complete.

One ring.

No light. No glow.

Just pressure.

Lindarion raised a hand. Everyone stopped.

He didn't speak.

Didn't blink.

Just stared at the shape etched into the stone.

And felt his mana pulse once in his chest.

Not from power.

From warning.

It took a full ten seconds before anyone breathed.

The curve of the stone rose out of the mountain like it had grown there, one unbroken circle carved into the wall with almost arrogant precision.

The lines were too clean, too straight, too deep. They hadn't just been etched, they'd been bored into the cliff, shaped by something with strength far beyond mortal tools.

Lindarion stepped forward slowly. No magic. No traps. No flicker of mana in the air. Just stone and silence.

And pressure.

Not magical. Just… wrong. Like this shape didn't belong in the world, and the mountain knew it.

Sylric exhaled sharply behind him. "That's not a rune you find in a textbook."

Lira's voice came next. Low. Even. "Because it's not from any human design."

Lindarion glanced back.

She was standing still, hood down, eyes locked on the structure like it might breathe.

"You recognize it?"

Her gaze didn't shift. "I've seen pieces. In ruins under Tirnaeth. And deeper."

Kael raised a brow. "You never mentioned you were a scholar."

"I'm not," Lira said. "But I had a teacher."

"What kind of teacher shows this to a kid?" Stitch muttered.

Lira stepped forward, ignoring him completely.

She didn't touch the rune. Just watched it, walking slowly around the edge, following the curve with her eyes. Her posture was different now. Not guarded. Not battle-ready. Focused.

Sylric muttered, "I thought she just stabbed things."

"So did I," Lindarion said quietly.

Lira spoke again, more to herself than the rest. "It's part of something layered. Not a message. Not a ward. A… boundary. Old language. Pre-continental fracture. Pre-veil."

"Translate?" Kael asked.

"It's a perimeter. Not containment. Not summoning. A door."

That landed.

Hard.

Lindarion moved closer. "You're saying this opens something."

"Yes," she said. "Or keeps something shut from the inside."

Luneth appeared at his side without a sound. "Then why carve it here?"

Sylric shook his head. "Because this is where the seal's weakest. And they didn't want to build a prison. They wanted a keyhole."

Lindarion felt the pressure again. Not magical. Just behind the air, inside the stone.

Waiting.

He turned to Lira. "Can you read the rest of it?"

"Some," she said. "Enough to know someone finished it. Recently."

He looked at her. "How recently?"

She finally met his gaze. "Days."

The group tensed.

Mekir moved to the edge of the formation and crouched low. "There are prints. Not boots. Bare feet. Small."

Stitch looked over. "Acolytes?"

"Or something pretending."

Lindarion stepped to the edge of the rune and knelt.

He didn't touch it.

He didn't need to.

Because something in his core reacted.

His mana didn't flare.

It coiled.

Not in fear.

In recognition.

Like it remembered this shape before he was born.

His mind jumped—

To the system.

To the first time it ever pinged him.

To the line in his affinity chart that never made sense.

[Void: 2]

It buzzed faintly in his spine.

Lira turned her head. "You feel it too?"

He nodded.

"That's what this is made for," she said.

"Or made from," he replied.

They stared at the rune in silence.

Then Rythe stepped forward, voice calm but tight. "We need to map the structure. Before it shifts again."

Sylric pulled out parchment and ink. "We draw, then we burn. Just like before."

"No," Lindarion said.

They all looked at him.

He didn't raise his voice.

"This one doesn't burn."

Lira nodded once, slow. "It stays."

"For now."

They worked fast.

Lira sketched segments with geometric precision. Luneth traced the perimeter for disturbances, markings, trails, anything unnatural. Kael and Derran set up a watch perimeter.

Lindarion walked the curve of the rune in silence.

Step by step.

His mana didn't hum. It pressed, forward. Like something was asking to be opened.

He clenched his fists once. Stepped back.

And said nothing.

Because the last thing they needed was him admitting that the rune was waiting.

For him.

Night fell fast over the ridge.

No one built a fire.

No one wanted to give whatever made that rune another beacon to look at.

They ate in silence.

Rythe sat with her back to the wall. Velna stood halfway up the path. Mekir hadn't spoken in hours.

Lindarion chewed slowly, not tasting much. Lira sat beside him, still scanning the sky like she expected it to break open.

Then she said quietly, "You felt drawn to it."

He didn't answer.

Didn't need to.

Lira's voice dropped. "That's not good."

"I'm aware."


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