EMBERS OF THE FORSAKEN
A year after the void's heart shattered, Elara dreamed of silver light again.
She was standing on a beach of black sand, staring at a sea that glowed like molten metal. The waves didn't crash. They whispered. And beneath the whisper, a voice she'd hoped never to hear again.
Did you think you had destroyed me?
Elara's hand went to her sword. It wasn't there.
I am hunger. I am patience. I am the void before the void. You cannot destroy me with a blade.
"Then what can destroy you?"
Nothing. You can only delay me.
"I've heard that before."
And yet here I am. Again. Always again.
The silver sea rose. Elara woke screaming.
---
James reached her room before her feet touched the floor.
Thirty years of fighting had made him light a sleeper—the slightest sound, the faintest cry, and he was awake, moving, ready.
"The void," Elara said. "It's back."
"The heart is gone. The anchor is shattered."
"The void doesn't need a heart. It is the heart." She grabbed his arm. "It's been reforming. Beneath the Glass Sea. Growing. Waiting."
James's blood went cold.
"How long?"
"Months. Maybe longer. The dreams have been coming for a while. I didn't want to believe them."
"Believe them now."
---
Taylor stood in the doorway, her sword in her hand.
"Deep Ones at the gate," she said. "They came through the night. They say the void is waking."
James pulled on his boots. "Tell them we'll meet them in the hall."
---
The Deep One leader was Serev—the same who'd helped them before. Her silver skin was cracked, her eyes dim with exhaustion.
The void reforms, she said. Faster than we predicted. The heart you shattered is regrowing. The hunger is returning.
"How long until it wakes?" James asked.
Weeks. Maybe days. The void is angry. It wants revenge.
"Against who?"
Against you. Against the echo. Against everyone who dared to resist it.
Elara stepped forward. "Then let it come."
You are brave. But bravery is not enough. The void has learned from its defeat. It will not be tricked again.
"Then we won't trick it. We'll destroy it."
You cannot destroy hunger. You can only feed it or starve it.
"Then we starve it."
How?
Elara looked at her father.
"I don't know yet. But I'll find a way."
---
The council met in the hall.
Lina had come from Ravensbrook. Sarai had been carried from the clinic. Tommy stood by the door, his hand on his sword.
"The void is reforming," James said. "We need a new strategy."
"We've tried everything," Lina replied. "Anchors. Rituals. Sacrifices. The void keeps coming back."
"Then we try something new."
"Like what?"
James looked at Sarai.
"The Dissembler's final journal," Sarai said. "There was a passage I never understood. About feeding the void something it cannot digest."
"What can't hunger digest?"
"Meaning. Purpose. Love." Sarai's voice was thin. "The void consumes existence. But it cannot consume the bonds between people. The memories. The hopes. Those are beyond hunger."
"You want to feed the void love?"
"I want to feed it something that will make it sick. Something that will make it sleep forever."
Elara stepped forward. "I'll do it."
"Elara—"
"The void wants me. The echo. Let me go to it. Let me give it something it doesn't expect."
"Which is?"
"Myself. Not as a sacrifice. As a... companion. A keeper. Someone who will stay with the void and remind it why sleep is better than waking."
James stared at his daughter.
"You want to become the void's guardian."
"I want to become its prison."
---
Taylor grabbed Elara's arm. "No."
"Mom—"
"No. I've watched your father sacrifice himself a dozen times. I've watched Sarai waste away carrying the hunger. I've watched Mira lose herself to the void. I'm not watching you do the same."
"The void will keep coming back. Every time we destroy it, it reforms. Every time we seal it, it breaks free. The only way to end this is to change its nature."
"Elara—"
"The void is hungry. It consumes because it's empty. What if it wasn't empty? What if it had something inside it? Something that made it full?"
Taylor's grip loosened.
"What are you proposing?"
"I'm proposing that I go into the void. Not to fight it. To live inside it. To fill it with something other than hunger."
"You'll be trapped."
"Maybe. Or maybe I'll be free. Free from running. Free from fighting. Free from fear."
James stepped forward. "There has to be another way."
"There's always another way. But we're running out of time."
---
The Deep Ones agreed to help.
They would open a passage to the void's heart—the reforming heart, still weak, still growing. Elara would enter. She would carry with her a crystal filled with memories—her own memories, her family's memories, the town's memories. She would feed them to the void.
It may work, Serev said. Or it may destroy her.
"That's not comforting."
I am not here to comfort. I am here to help.
James looked at Elara. "You don't have to do this."
"I know."
"Your mother and I can go in your place."
"The void wants me. The echo. It won't listen to anyone else."
"Elara—"
"I love you, Dad. Both of you. But this is my choice."
She turned and walked toward the Deep Ones.
---
The passage to the void's heart was beneath the Glass Sea.
The chasm had grown wider, deeper, darker. Silver light pulsed from below, faint but steady.
James stood at the edge, watching his daughter descend.
Taylor stood beside him.
"She's brave."
"She's stupid."
"Same thing."
James took her hand.
"She's going to be okay."
"You don't know that."
"No. But I hope."
---
Elara descended into the darkness.
The walls were silver, pulsing, warm. The air was thick, heavy, sweet. The void's voice whispered in her mind.
You came back.
"I came back."
You brought gifts.
"I brought memories. My family's memories. The town's memories. Hope. Love. Purpose."
I cannot digest those.
"I know. That's the point."
The silver light pulsed. The void's heart came into view—small, reforming, fragile.
You will trap yourself here.
"Maybe. Or maybe I'll teach you to be something other than hunger."
I am hunger. It is my nature.
"Nature can change."
Can it?
Elara reached into her satchel and pulled out the crystal. It glowed with warm light—not silver, but gold. The light of memory. The light of love.
"I'm going to stay with you," she said. "I'm going to remind you what it feels like to be full. Not with food. With connection."
You are strange, mortal.
"I've been told."
She pressed the crystal to the void's heart.
---
The silver light surged.
Elara felt the void enter her—not hungry, not angry, just curious. It tasted her memories. Her fears. Her hopes.
You are not afraid of me.
"I'm terrified. But I came anyway."
Why?
"Because someone has to. Because the world deserves peace. Because my family deserves to rest."
And you? What do you deserve?
"To matter. To make a difference. To be more than a vessel."
The void was silent.
I have never met anyone like you.
"Now you have."
The silver light faded.
The void's heart stopped pulsing.
Elara stood in the darkness, alone.
---
James felt the shift before he saw it.
The silver light in the chasm dimmed. The air warmed. The weight on his chest—the hunger he'd carried for decades—lightened.
"What's happening?" Taylor asked.
"She's doing it," James said. "She's changing it."
The light faded completely.
The chasm went dark.
Elara emerged from the darkness, her grey eyes bright.
"It's done," she said. "The void is... different. Not hungry. Just... present."
"Present how?"
"It's inside me. Not as a hunger. As a... companion. A keeper. We're going to take care of each other."
James stared at his daughter.
"You're carrying the void."
"The void is carrying me. It's mutual."
"Is it permanent?"
"I don't know. But for now, the hunger is gone. The void is sleeping. The world is safe."
Taylor pulled Elara into a hug.
"Don't ever scare me like that again."
"I can't promise that."
"I know."
---
They returned to Ember's Rest as the sun rose.
The city was waking. Children running. Merchants opening stalls. The smell of bread baking.
Elara walked through the gates, and the crowd parted for her. She was different now—not just a hero, but something more. A living bridge between hunger and hope.
James walked beside her.
"You're not going to stay," he said.
"No. The void needs to be watched. Needs to be kept calm. I'm going to travel. See the world. Help people."
"Alone?"
"Not alone. The void is with me."
"That's not what I meant."
Elara smiled. "I know. But it's what I need."
---
That night, James sat on the porch of the farmhouse, staring at the stars.
Taylor sat beside him.
"She's leaving."
"Tomorrow."
"The void is going with her."
"Apparently."
Taylor leaned against him. "We raised a strange child."
"We raised a good child. Strange is part of it."
James put his arm around her.
"Are you okay?" he asked.
"I'm tired. I've been fighting for so long. I don't know who I am without a war."
"You're Taylor. My wife. Elara's mother. The woman who taught me that running isn't the only option."
"That's not an answer."
"It's the only one I have."
---
Elara left at dawn.
She walked out the gate with a pack on her back and a sword at her hip. The void was inside her—not heavy, not hungry. Just present.
James and Taylor stood at the gate, watching her go.
"Come back," James said.
"I will."
"Promise."
"I promise."
She walked down the road, toward the rising sun.
James watched until she disappeared over the hill.
---
END OF CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE
---
Next Chapter: The Watcher – Five years later. Elara travels the world, keeping the void calm. But a new threat emerges—not from the hunger, but from mortals who fear what she carries. Book Two continues.EMBERS OF THE FORSAKEN
Book Two: The Waking Void
Chapter 32: The Heart of the Void
Word Count: 3,500
The crack in the Glass Sea had grown into a chasm.
James stood at the edge, staring down into silver darkness. The void's heart pulsed somewhere below—he could feel it in his chest, in his bones, in the hunger he'd carried for three decades. The same hunger that now called to him like a lover.
Come down, it whispered. Come home.
"Not today."
You cannot resist forever.
"I don't need forever. I just need long enough."
Taylor stood beside him, her sword drawn. Elara stood on his other side, her grey eyes fixed on the darkness. Tommy and twenty soldiers waited behind them, their torches casting long shadows across the salt flats.
"The anchor is down there," James said. "The void's heart. If we destroy it, the hunger weakens. Maybe sleeps forever."
"Maybe?" Taylor asked.
"There are no certainties."
"There never are."
James stepped into the chasm.
---
The descent was slow and treacherous.
The walls were slick with silver moisture, pulsing like veins. The air was thick, heavy, hard to breathe. Every few feet, James had to stop and rest, his old lungs burning.
"You should have let me go first," Elara said.
"You're too valuable to lose."
"You're too valuable to lose."
"I'm old. Replaceable."
Elara grabbed his arm. "You're not replaceable. You're my father."
James looked at her—at the fire in her grey eyes, the same fire he'd seen in Taylor's eyes decades ago.
"Then keep me alive," he said. "That's an order."
They descended.
---
The chasm opened into a vast cavern.
The walls were silver. The floor was silver. The ceiling was silver. And at the center, a pulsing mass of silver light—the void's heart, the anchor that bound the hunger to the world.
You came, the void whispered.
"I came."
You brought the echo.
"I brought my daughter."
She will serve me well.
"She will never serve you."
The silver light pulsed. Figures emerged from the shadows—Deep Ones, dozens of them, their silver eyes fixed on James.
The echo will serve. Or she will be consumed. Her choice.
Elara stepped forward. "I choose neither."
Bold words for a mortal.
"I've been hearing bold words from immortals my whole life. They're usually wrong."
She raised her sword.
The Deep Ones attacked.
---
The battle was fierce.
James cut down one Deep One, then another, then another. Taylor fought beside him, her blade singing. Tommy and the soldiers held the line, driving the Deep Ones back.
Elara pushed toward the void's heart.
You cannot reach me.
"Watch me."
Silver fire exploded from the heart, driving her back. She stumbled, fell, rose again.
You are strong. Stronger than your father.
"I know."
But strength is not enough.
The void reached out—not with hands, but with intent. Elara felt it pressing against her mind, her memories, her self.
Surrender. Let me in. I will give you peace.
"I don't want peace."
What do you want?
"Justice."
She lunged.
---
Her sword struck the void's heart.
The silver light screamed. The cavern shook. The Deep Ones collapsed.
Elara pulled her sword back and struck again.
And again.
And again.
The heart cracked. Silver light poured from the wound—not hungry, not angry, just dying.
You cannot kill me, the void whispered.
"I'm not trying to kill you. I'm trying to put you to sleep."
Same thing.
"No. Death is permanent. Sleep is temporary." She struck again. The heart cracked further. "I want you to dream. For a thousand years. For ten thousand. For as long as it takes for the world to forget you."
The world will never forget hunger.
"The world will try."
She struck one last time.
The heart shattered.
The silver light vanished.
The cavern went dark.
---
James lit a torch.
The void's heart was gone—shattered into pieces, scattered across the floor. The Deep Ones lay motionless, their silver eyes dark.
"Did it work?" Taylor asked.
Elara knelt beside the heart's remains. "The void is sleeping. I can't feel it anymore."
"Permanently?"
"I don't know. But for now." She stood. "For now is enough."
James pulled her into a hug.
"You did it."
"We did it."
"You led."
"We followed."
Taylor wrapped her arms around both of them.
"Let's go home."
---
The journey back to Ember's Rest was slow.
The soldiers were wounded. The supplies were low. But they walked.
James walked at the front, his hand on his sword, his eyes on the horizon.
"You're brooding again," Taylor said.
"I'm thinking."
"About what?"
"The void said it would dream. Not die. Someday it will wake."
"Someday is not today."
"Someday is not today. But someday is coming."
Taylor took his hand. "Then we'll be ready. Or our children will. Or their children."
"That's not comforting."
"It's reality."
---
Ember's Rest welcomed them with cheers.
The city had survived. The walls still stood. The people still lived.
Elara walked through the gates, and the crowd parted for her. She was a hero now—not just the vessel's daughter, but the void's end.
She didn't feel like a hero.
She felt tired.
Sarai met her at the clinic door.
"You're hurt."
"A few scratches. Nothing serious."
"Let me be the judge of that."
Sarai examined her wounds, cleaned them, bandaged them.
"The void," Sarai said. "Is it truly sleeping?"
"I destroyed its heart. The anchor is gone."
"But the void itself? The hunger?"
Elara was quiet for a moment.
"I don't know. I hope so."
"Hope is not certainty."
"Hope is all we have."
---
That night, James sat on the porch of the farmhouse, staring at the stars.
Taylor sat beside him.
"You did it again."
"We did it again."
"The world is safe. Again."
"For now. Again."
She leaned against him. "How many times are we going to do this?"
"As many times as it takes."
"And when we're too old to fight?"
"Then Elara fights. And her children. And theirs."
"That's a lot of fighting."
"That's life."
---
Elara found them on the porch.
"I can't sleep," she said.
"Neither can we," James replied.
"The void keeps calling to me. Even though it's sleeping. Even though I destroyed its heart. I can hear it whispering."
"What does it say?"
"That I'm not done. That it's not done. That someday—"
"Someday is not today." James stood. "Today, we rest. Today, we heal. Today, we remember why we fight."
Elara nodded.
"Okay."
She sat between her parents.
They watched the stars together.