Ashes Of The First Tyrant -
Chapter 55: Restoration of the flame
Chapter 55: Restoration of the flame
Thalen watched the morning sun rise over the Citadel’s towers, its beams dancing across the Circlet of Memory now resting atop Emberane’s bed in the healers’ tower. The Circlet glimmered softly its glow no longer veiled, but steady, almost breathing. A promise.
He felt the weight of Willow’s promise roots restored, memories rekindled and with it, hope for a world healed.
Stepping through the courtyard, Thalen found Renal by the eastern wall, consulting parchments and scouts. He offered a nod.
"Scouts have reported no Shadehand flickers for two days," Thalen said. "We’re holding."
Renal folded his parchment. "Once Emberane begins the Writ of Restoration, aura tremors will ripple. We’re bracing around the Watch posts."
"Good," Thalen replied. "The Border Watch needs protection and purpose."
In the Great Hall, the council met again. The table bore Circlet, scroll, and orb emblems of restoration reborn. Emberane, robed in a simple gray tunic, sat beside Thalen. Her presence seemed to quiet the room.
Varos began: "Our priority is clear: restore the root of the Spirit without unleashing its fury. We must anchor the Restoration in ritual and truth."
Ilara stood: "I’ll synchronize the orb’s attunement with the circlet. It will bind city and citadel. If all goes well, the Restoration ritual begins at dusk, in the Hall of Echoes below."
Renal nodded. "The Crown sends engineers to retrofit the Watch towers with containment glyphs ensure no rupture during ritual."
Simeon added: "I propose a public ceremony symbolic unity. Reuven and Crown citizens gather in the plaza. Emberane and Thalen will lead."
Emberane’s voice was soft. "Memory is not spectacle, but sanctuary. The gathering must honor that."
Thalen agreed. "It will be solemn. Not triumphal."
By afternoon, he followed Emberane, Varos, and Ilara into the Hall of Echoes a vaulted chamber below the Citadel, carved with concentric rings of reflective stone. Lanterns were dimmed; whisper-echo wards muted all noise. Only the orb and circlet glowed.
Varos placed the orb on a stepped dais. Emberane sat across, Circlet in hand. Ilara murmured aura alignment incantations as Thalen stood at their side, holding the sealed scroll.
The Restoration began as dusk bled gold into shadows. Emberane placed the Circlet upon her head. Its light pulsed. She closed her eyes.
Ilara traced lines connecting orb to circlet with aura strands. The air trembled.
Thalen read from the scroll ancient words of remembrance. It felt like ice on his tongue. The Circle of Remembrance, once lost, returned.
Memories surged into Emberane: first bloom of the Flame witnessing each bearer’s struggle, each failure. Her voice caught as she wept.
Thalen faltered. The scroll’s words spoke of roots and fractures. The history of betrayals, of pain, of knowledge buried to protect and of hope forgotten.
Ilara steadied the orb: "Hold it together."
The circlet glowed brighter. Aura rippled outward, around them, up through the Hall, toward every Watch tower, every wall.
Thalen’s voice rose to match Emberane’s sob. He read the last lines: "May memory be sacred. May Flame be healer. May the Tyrant Spirit be remembrance, not dominion."
The orb blazed. Emberane raised her hands. Aura soared violet and silver, warm and alive.
The Hall shook.
"Ground it!" Ilara shouted. Symbols flared on the floor, drawing the aura into the orb, then through the circlet, then outward.
Emberane’s face was serene under the glow.
When the aura snapped into place, the orb dimmed. The circlet glowed with steady warmth.
Silence reigned.
Dusk had deepened by the time they emerged into the plaza. Crowds had gathered Reuven villagers, Crown soldiers, engineers, scholars all standing in a spiral formation mirroring the Hall’s design.
Emberane stood at the center beside Thalen. The circlet glowed softly on her brow, orb nestled in her hands.
Thalen walked to the edge and raised his blade. The crowd hushed.
He spoke clearly: "We have restored the root of the Flame not for power, but for memory. Not for rule, but for healing. Tonight, we remember together."
He looked to Emberane. "You may speak."
She breathed deeply, aura glowing around her like a halo. "We remember." Her voice grew strong. "We remember the bearers of the Flame how they sought unity, how they failed to temper their strength. We remember the pain, the betrayals, the cost. But we also remember why we cannot choose oblivion."
A spark of applause rose, suppressed by solemnity.
She continued: "From this moment forward, the Tyrant Spirit shall be known as the Flame of Remembrance. It is ours but not to command. We honor its bearers, not control them."
She removed the circlet and placed it on an altar. "The Circlet will be displayed, unsealed, here in the Hall of Memory. Any may visit."
The crowd perked, seeing her hand unglow, the orb’s light steady but mellow.
Thalen descended into the crowd and took Emberane’s hand. He saw hope in her eyes still, gentle, unburdened.
Varos and Renal emerged, flanking them.
The crowd began chanting: "Memory. Memory."
The chant spread.
That evening, Abbot Merin led a vigil in the small chapel adjacent to the Hall. Thalen, Emberane, Ilara, Varos, Renal, and others bowed around the candlelit altar.
Emberane closed her eyes and whispered, "Forgiveness for those who bound us. For the flame we mistook as tyrant."
Thalen laid his blade beside the altar. "And for those who wielded it to teach rather than tear and failed."
The candles flickered no wind, no interruption, but a warmth like hearthlight.
When the vigil ended, the group walked in silence through the corridors passing murals newly commissioned: one of Emberane placing the Circlet on her head beneath a soaring Flame symbol, and another of Thalen and Renal standing side by side.
Emberane paused before the mural. She touched it lightly. "This is a beginning."
Thalen put his arm around her. "A promise."
Night deepened. In his private chamber, Thalen sat by the window, the orb on the table beside an open scroll. He ran his hand over the orb’s smooth surface.
Ilara entered quietly. "Aura readings are stable across the border. More than stable ameliorating. You’ve anchored something, Thalen."
He looked at her. "This is bigger than the Border Watch."
Ilara nodded. "This is a new Chapter."
She paused. "I don’t know how to thank Emberane."
"Be there for her," Thalen said. "Help restore what she rebuilds."
She nodded.
He looked at his reflection in the window, dark outlines of the towers behind him.
He whispered softly: "Memory. Where you lead, I will follow."
That night, torches burned in every Watch tower. The Flame of Remembrance glowed in each. Patrols moved with purpose, but without fear.
From a hidden chamber beneath the Citadel, a lone Shadehand acolyte watched runes fade. He whispered a broken vow then extinguished his lantern.
The Restoration had begun.
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