Primordial Heir: Nine Stars -
Chapter 102: Rainy Night
Chapter 102: Rainy Night
Roughly half an hour later, the two crossed paths once more.
They met in a clearing, their footsteps quiet on the moss-covered earth. The fading sunlight filtered through the high canopy above, casting shifting patterns of gold and green across the forest floor.
"Khione."
"Nero."
The names left their lips like distant echoes—acknowledgment, recognition, and challenge all in one.
Then silence.
No further words were exchanged.
None were needed.
Their eyes met—hers glacial and composed, his smoldering with quiet intensity.
Without a spoken agreement, they turned away—an unspoken truce for the night.
Their contest would resume with the next sunrise.
°°°
They found themselves now at the heart of the ancient forest.
To the north, not far from their position, a solitary mountain stood like a silent sentinel beneath the stars. Its jagged peak pierced the sky, crowned with wisps of cloud. A silver river snaked down its side, winding between rock and root, its waters whispering softly as they flowed into the woods. Around them, the trees were vast and varied—twisted oaks with bark like stone, crystal-bloomed sycamores, and hollow pines that sang with the wind. Flowers glowed faintly in the dark, fed by ancient mana, casting gentle hues of violet and blue across the underbrush.
Night fell over the pocket world like a dream.
Above, the sky unfurled into a vast ocean of stars, each one a flickering ember against the deep velvet of the heavens. A moon hung high—full, white, and radiant—pouring silver light across the land. It shimmered on the river’s surface, danced on leaves, and made the mist rising from the earth glow with ethereal beauty.
Crickets sang from the shadows, and distant howls echoed now and then—gentle reminders that the forest, no matter how peaceful, was still alive and watching.
They found a quiet spot nestled at the foot of the mountain range, where the river widened into a gentle basin framed by smooth stones and hanging ferns. The air was crisp and clean, filled with the scent of pine and distant mist.
They agreed, wordlessly, to take turns bathing.
Khione went first.
Silent as moonlight, she stepped toward the water. Her expression remained unreadable, serene as always. Her long white hair flowed like silk down her back, catching the silver glow of the moon. Her icy blue eyes reflected the stars above, distant and unwavering.
With slow, deliberate movements, she slipped off her garments, folding them neatly on a nearby rock. In the soft night air, her pale form stood briefly bathed in silver light, a vision of grace carved from frost and shadow.
She stepped into the river, the surface parting around her like glass. Cool water embraced her, and for a moment, she simply stood still, eyes closed, letting the current wash away the fatigue of the day. Ripples shimmered around her as she submerged deeper, the moonlight weaving patterns across her skin.
No words. No sound.
Just the river, the stars, and the quiet breath of the ancient forest.
Once she had finished her bath, Khione stepped out of the river without a word, her hair glistening like threads of moonlight. She dressed in silence, and as she passed Nero, their eyes met briefly—an acknowledgment, nothing more.
Then it was his turn.
Nero entered the water with less grace, but no less composure. The coolness bit into his skin, drawing a sharp breath from his lips. The warmth of battle still lingered in his muscles, and the river stole it away with every ripple. He submerged himself fully, emerging moments later as steam rose faintly from his shoulders. Fire and water—momentarily reconciled.
When he returned to the shore, drying quickly with controlled pulses of heat, evening had deepened, the moon climbing higher over the treetops.
It was time for dinner. NovelFire
Earlier that day, Nero had snared a wild mountain hare in the underbrush—a clean kill. Now, beneath the starlit canopy, he set about preparing it. With practiced hands, he skinned and cleaned the animal, careful and methodical. Khione watched for a moment, then stepped forward without being asked.
She knelt beside him, unfolding a small container from her dimensional pouch. Inside—grains of wild rice, salt, and a tiny bundle of dried herbs wrapped in cloth.
"Give me the pot," she said softly.
Nero passed it to her without comment.
While she rinsed and set the rice to soak in water drawn from the river, Nero began slicing the meat into strips. He built a small fire with gathered wood, igniting it with a flick of his finger. Flames flickered up like eager tongues. A pan was placed over the flames,
Sii~
And soon, the scent of browning meat filled the clearing.
Khione added the herbs and salt, stirring slowly with a wooden spoon. The two days spent with Nero wasn’t for show, she was a fast learner, beside it wasn’t like she couldn’t cook at all, just that she had a little bit of experience, having observing him cook she learned a few things.
Nero poured in the rice and water. Their movements were smooth, efficient—a rhythm without rehearsal. He handed her ingredients before she asked. She stirred in silence, occasionally glancing at the fire, the meal, then at him.
"Not bad," she murmured after a while.
Nero raised an eyebrow. "The rabbit or the teamwork?" View the correct content at NovelFire.
Her eyes held his for a beat. "Both."
He smirked faintly but said nothing more.
Once the meal was ready, they divided it between two wooden bowls. The rabbit was tender, the rice fragrant, the herbs subtle and earthy. From her storage, Khione retrieved a small dark bottle—wine, deep red and sharp on the tongue. She poured two portions into metal cups and handed one to Nero.
They sat on opposite logs, the fire between them crackling gently.
The world around them was peaceful. No monsters, no contest—just the quiet clink of cups, the warm scent of food, and the company of a worthy rival.
They didn’t speak much.
They didn’t need to.
But in the calm of the night, beneath the stars, something unspoken passed between them.
Tomorrow, they would compete again.
’’I suggest to erect our tents far from here.’’
A suggestion from Nero, Khione nodded, she would have suggested the same thing if he hadn’t said anything.
They pitched their tents at the base of the mountain, a safe distance from the riverbank where the terrain rose slightly into a natural plateau. The surrounding trees swayed gently in the evening breeze, and above, clouds loomed thick and heavy, cloaking the moon behind a veil of storm.
Ordinarily, both Nero and Khione would have stepped out to train under the stars—refining their techniques in solitude, sharpening their instincts. But one glance at the sky was enough. A storm was coming.
They said nothing.
Silently, they retreated into their tents, knowing the night would be better spent in meditation.
Moments after the tent flaps closed, the first drops fell—soft, scattered taps on canvas and leaves. Then the wind picked up. The sky opened.
A curtain of water came down in sheets.
The forest transformed under the weight of the storm. Rain hammered the canopy in relentless waves, turning branches into drums and rocks into echo chambers. Streams of water ran down the mountainside in silver threads, pooling along roots and flooding the lowlands. Thunder rumbled in the distance, low and deep, like the growl of something ancient stirring in its sleep.
But inside her tent, Khione remained unmoved.
Seated cross-legged, she breathed with slow precision, her back straight, her posture flawless. Each inhale pulled prana into her lungs; each exhale refined it—cold, clear, and sharp as ice. Her core spun gently at the center of her being, gathering energy like a snowstorm quietly building beneath still skies.
The roar of the rain outside did nothing to disturb her. She might as well have been meditating at the top of a glacier. Her mind was a frozen lake—silent, undisturbed, absolute.
In the neighboring tent, Nero mirrored her resolve.
The storm didn’t frighten him—it energized him.
Cross-legged, hands resting on his knees, he drew in long breaths, each inhale infused with the rawness of fire. But fire was wild, chaotic. It had to be tamed. Purified.
As the downpour intensified, water pelting the canvas above like a thousand drumbeats, Nero focused inward. At the center of his chest, a second core pulsed—a forge of prana nestled within his heart. With every breath, he channeled energy toward it, filtering it through will and instinct, burning away impurities.
Outside, the storm raged.
Inside, two people sharpened their souls in silence, one cold as winter, the other fierce as flame—both unmoved by the fury of nature, both preparing for the battles that would come.
A few minutes later he stopped storing prana into his second core, it wouldn’t be wise otherwise, this second core wasn’t completely stable yet.
He inspected his inner world next, the nine stars, the vortex, the usual. The gold star had one of its chains broken, the second one was half broken.
’’Not bad!" Nero was truly pleased, he left his inner world and laid down on the bed while it was heavily raining outside.
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