bc

BEYOND THE WALLS

book_age12+
0
FOLLOW
1K
READ
drama
mystery
another world
like
intro-logo
Blurb

The Wall of Silence had stood for three hundred years. It was a perfect, seamless circle of grey stone, so high it scraped the clouds, so long it encircled the entire city of Aethel. It was the only thing that separated us from the Scarred Lands and the Behemoths that roamed there. We were taught it was a gift from the Makers, our protectors. To question the Wall was unthinkable. It was our entire world.

I am Elara. I lived with my older brother, Kael, in the Eastern District. From our rooftop, we could see the top of the Wall, and beyond it, nothing but empty sky. Kael was a squad leader in the Survey Corps. His job was to lead expeditions beyond the Wall to study the Behemoths, to look for weaknesses, to map the Scarred Lands. It was the most dangerous job in the city, and he was the best at it.

The Behemoths were not like us. They were not made of flesh and blood. They were walking mountains, creatures of earth and stone, animated by some terrible, unseen force. Their eyes glowed with a faint, fiery light, like embers deep within a rockfall. They didn't eat people. They just… erased us. A single footstep could flatten a neighborhood into dust. Their very presence was a rejection of our existence.

Most people in Aethel were just scared. They never looked at the Wall and thought anything except, "Thank the Makers it's there." But Kael was different. He was a thinker. When he came back from missions, he wasn't just tired and sad from losing comrades. He was curious.

One evening, he found me on the roof, practicing with my vertical maneuvering gear. The gear was a complex system of belts, wires, gas canisters, and grappling hooks that allowed the Survey Corps to move through the city, and the forests beyond, with incredible speed, swinging from buildings and trees. I was determined to join him one day.

"You're getting better," he said, leaning against the chimney.

"Good enough for the Corps?" I asked, landing beside him.

He didn't answer right away. He looked up at the Wall. "Maybe. But it's not just about skill with the gear, Elara. It's about what's up here." He tapped his temple. "The Behemoths… I've been watching them. They don't move randomly. They patrol. They search. It's like they're looking for something."

A cold feeling settled in my stomach. "Looking for what?"

"I don't know," he said softly. "But it's important. I feel it. The Wall… it doesn't feel like a shield sometimes. It feels like… a lid."

That was Kael. Always seeing things no one else could see.

The end of our world began on a clear, sunny morning. There was no warning. No storm, no strange signs. I was on the main parapet of the inner wall, doing maintenance on a ballista emplacement with other members of the civilian militia. Then, it happened.

The great Southern Gate, a massive structure of iron-banded oak and stone that was said to be fifty feet thick, didn't break. It didn't splinter. It simply… vanished. One moment it was there, a symbol of our impregnable defense. The next, it was a cloud of fine, glittering dust, drifting gently on the breeze.

Silence. For a heart-stopping moment, the entire city was utterly silent. We stared, unable to process what we were seeing.

Then, through the settling dust, it walked.

It was a Behemoth, but unlike any we had ever seen in the record books. The common Behemoths were gigantic, chaotic piles of rock, like walking landslides. This one was smaller, sleeker, almost human-shaped. Its body was made of a dark, polished stone that shone like black glass—obsidian. And in the center of its chest, where a heart would be, was a core of pure, blinding white light that pulsed with a low, rhythmic hum.

The silence shattered into screams.

The Obsidian Behemoth stepped through the gateway, its footfall landing with a deep, resonant thud that shook the very foundations of the city. The Garrison soldiers, to their credit, did not falter. They launched ballista bolts the size of tree trunks. The bolts struck the Behemoth's body and shattered into a thousand splinters. It was like throwing pebbles at a mountain.

But this mountain fought back with intelligence. Its glowing eyes scanned the battlements. It didn't just swing its arms wildly. It reached out with terrifying precision, plucking a ballista tower from the wall and crushing it in its hand. It was systematically dismantling our defenses.

My only thought was Kael. His squad was stationed near the Southern Gate. I activated my maneuvering gear, the anchors shooting out, biting into the stone of the buildings, and I swung down into the chaos of the streets.

The city was a nightmare. People ran in all directions, trampling each other. Fires had started. The air was thick with smoke and the smell of burning. I swung above it all, my heart hammering against my ribs, heading for the last place I'd seen Kael.

I found his squad in the Grand Plaza. Or what was left of it. The place was a ruin of collapsed buildings and rubble.

chap-preview
Free preview
CHAPTER 1: THE PRISONER'S BURDEN
The title "Hero of Aethel" was a crown of thorns, each point a lie. In the weeks after the Obsidian Behemoth fell, the city's gratitude felt heavier than the rubble it had left behind. The Council held a grand ceremony in the main square. Archon Cadmus, his voice thin as parchment, hung a cold, silver medal around my neck and praised my "divinely inspired bravery." Each word felt like a betrayal of my brother's final, gasping truth. I stood on the dais, the polished metal a brand against my skin, and looked at the cheering crowd. They saw a savior. I saw a ghost who had killed a jailer. They saw safety reaffirmed; I saw the bars of our prison reinforced. My hands, clenched at my sides, still trembled with the phantom vibration of the Behemoth's core. I had not been brave. I had been a vessel for a storm of grief and rage. Now the storm was gone, leaving only the desolate landscape of Kael’s words: "We're the prisoners." My home was a tomb. The apartment I shared with Kael echoed with a silence louder than any Behemoth's roar. His Survey Corps jacket still hung on his chair. I’d set two cups of tea on the table out of habit, the steam from his cup a tiny, mocking ghost. It was in this crushing quiet that his revelation became my mantra. The official story was a careful lie. The Council declared the Obsidian Behemoth a rare anomaly, a fluke that proved the Wall's ultimate strength. The Southern Gate was being rebuilt, the new stone raw and angry against the ancient grey. Life was stitching itself back together. But I saw the fissures. The furtive, fearful glances people now cast at the Wall. The Garrison patrols, their numbers doubled, moving with a new, tense vigilance. I could not stay in that silent apartment, suffocating under the weight of knowledge. Kael’s quest was my inheritance. Days after the ceremony, I marched into Survey Corps headquarters. The building was a monument to loss, its halls lined with plaques bearing the names of the fallen. I found Commander Valerius in his office, the grizzled, one-eyed veteran who had been Kael's mentor. He looked up from a map, his single, flinty eye holding no surprise. "Elara," he rumbled. "I was expecting you." "I'm here to enlist," I stated. "I want my brother's post." Valerius leaned back, his chair groaning. "The Corps is not a shrine. We look forward, not back." "I'm not here to memorialize him," I countered. "I'm here to continue his work. He believed the Behemoths were more than monsters. He was right. You know he was." A long silence filled the room. Valerius's gaze drifted to a charcoal sketch on his desk—a likeness of Kael, smiling. "He was the best of us. He saw patterns. It made him unpopular with the Council." He fixed his eye on me. "That thing you killed… it was different. Intelligent." "It was a key," I said. "It didn't break the Gate. It unmade it." Valerius’s eye narrowed. He stood, unlocked a cabinet, and produced a small object wrapped in black felt. He placed it on the desk. It was a shard of the same black obsidian, and deep within it, a sliver of white light pulsed with a faint, stubborn rhythm. "Recovered from the rubble," he said quietly. "It's inert. Our finest blades can't scratch it. Our scholars have no texts for it." He let the silence hang. "Your brother would have torn the world apart for this. Report for training at dawn. Dismissed." My training was a brutal, physical exorcism. I learned to strip my maneuvering gear blindfolded, to judge an anchor line by its feel, to navigate by sound and shadow. The other recruits saw my quiet intensity as arrogance. They didn't understand that every drill was a conversation with a ghost. The real work began after hours. Valerius granted me access to the Corps' archives. While the city slept, I pored over expedition logs and bestiaries, cross-referencing them with Kael's notes. I was looking for his pattern. And I found it. Hidden in dry reports of sightings and patrol routes, it was clear: the Behemoths weren't random. They moved in overlapping, concentric circuits around Aethel—a perfect, systematic patrol. It was the behavior of guards. Furthermore, their activity spiked not during storms, but always after any Corps expedition ventured beyond a certain perimeter. It was a response. A warning. One night, I found it: Kael's private journal, hidden inside a hollowed-out book. My hands shook as I opened it. The pages were filled with his precise handwriting, frantic sketches of the Obsidian Behemoth—before we had ever seen one—and diagrams that looked like engineering schematics. On the final page, a sentence was scrawled in a hurried, desperate hand: "The Wall is not a structure. It is a system. And every system has a source. Find the Heart. Break the Cycle." I closed the journal, my breath catching. The Gate was just a door. The Wall itself was the lock. The Obsidian Behemoth was a mobile key. Kael hadn't just discovered we were prisoners; he had been hunting for the warden's control room. The next morning, I went to Valerius. I laid the journal open on his desk, my finger on that final sentence. "He knew," I said, my voice tight. "He was looking for the source." Valerius read the words, his face stone. "The 'Heart'. A fanciful term." "Is it?" I challenged. "The Behemoth had a core that was a key. What if there's a larger one? A heart that powers the entire prison? The Wall, the Behemoths… all of it." "The Council will never sanction a search for a myth," he stated. "To pursue this is treason." "Then I am a traitor," I replied, the words a release. "My loyalty is to the truth. It is to my brother." Valerius looked from me to the journal, to the pulsing shard. He let out a long, slow breath, the sound of a man stepping off a cliff. "Your first expedition is in three days," he said, his voice low. "A perimeter patrol. Route Seven. The logs indicate… anomalous mineral deposits there. It would be a shame if your team got lost. Took a wrong turn. Explored a little deeper than ordered." Understanding dawned. He was giving me a thread to pull. "Understood, Commander," I said, a grim purpose solidifying within me. "A navigational error. It happens." He gave a curt nod. "See that it does. And Elara… do not get caught." I left his office, the hero's medal feeling like a brand. The title was a lie, the safety was a lie. But in the quiet conspiracy of that room, I had found the first real thing since Kael's death: a mission. We were going to find the Heart of the prison. And we were going to stop it.

editor-pick
Dreame-Editor's pick

bc

Her Regret: Alpha, Take Me Home

read
20.2K
bc

Seriously, There Are Werewolves?

read
4.0K
bc

The Luna Who Does Not Kneel

read
7.2K
bc

The Forgotten Princess & Her Beta Mates

read
154.4K
bc

Part of your World

read
88.3K
bc

The Betrayed Luna's Shadow

read
34.6K
bc

Their Bullied and Broken Mate

read
641.8K

Scan code to download app

download_iosApp Store
google icon
Google Play
Facebook