Chapter 993: Chapter 993

Jude spoke last, his gaze sweeping the wives. "Tomorrow we ascend further. Climb the mountain. We will take watchers with us. We will meet horizon."

The wives nodded, somber but unafraid. The children yawned as wives lifted them to slings.

Grace brushed his cheek. "We’ll go together."

He touched her hand. "Together."

They slept under watchers’ light. Mist filtered through tents.

When dawn came, it was frigid and bright. Jude wrapped the staff in cloak, loaded backpacks with glyph stones and supplies, and shouldered Laurel. Grace carried Raven. Wives and watchers formed a column of light.

They climbed the basalt steps, each etched with watchers’ spirals. The air thinned, crisp as bone. The watchers brightened; each step they paused, waiting for them, then rose ahead again, guiding the way on moon-washed stone.

Midmorning they reached a plateau ringed by jagged rock teeth. A deep cave slit opened into mountain’s belly. Here watchers formed a circle, stepping aside. Jude and Grace looked to each other. Boys and girls huddled beside them.

Jude raised his voice, summoning gravity. "We stand at the mouth of tomorrow. We will enter together, not to flee, but to remember truth."

Each wife dropped her token onto stone near the cave’s entrance. Children placed lilies in a ring. Watchers pulsed, then retreated, giving space.

Jude stepped forward. The cave was dark but for flickering lights, ribbon reflections on wet walls. He moved inside, Grace at his side, the wives behind.

The watchers stood sentinel at the threshold. Their forms solid against darkness, silent farewells or guardianship.

Inside, voices echoed as they stepped on stones slick with ancient memory. Jude lit a torch. The wives followed, children huddled close.

The path wound upward, stones slick with water. A presence pressed: the mountain’s heart, pulsing beneath stone. Water trickled behind walls; watchers’ light echoed inside.

They rounded a corner into an open cavern, massive, vaulted, with cold air like breath. At its center, a single glyph pillar, towering stone etched with watchers’ spirals millions of times, dripping with bright glyph flowers, glowing softly within dark.

Jude stepped forward. The wives followed, paused. Children’s eyes widened.

He approached the pillar, pressed palms to carved stone. It pulsed, bright, alive, shaking gently.

Watchers’ forms moved forward, weaving around wives, offering presence. Children gasped as mist dripped from stalactites, glowing petals shrinking down walls.

Jude spoke: "This is memory’s heart, where watchers once slept and the island dreamed. We have journeyed with humility to stand before it. We offer our story, rooted and flown."

Grace joined him, placing flower wreath she carried into carved niches in stone. The watchers brightened, light throbbing in sync with hearts there.

Then Zoey whispered: "It remembers me."

Her voice echoed inside hearth. Girls blinked; wives stepped back to give space.

Jude knelt beside her. "What do you remember?"

Zoey’s eyes glazed. She pressed hand to pillar. She spoke in watchers’ tongue: "I remember when this place breathed life into my bones, when I knew I belonged."

The watchers pulsed brighter. The pillar’s glyphs glowed across its entire height. Then the ground trembled.

A slow tremor, hum like metal under pressure.

They braced, children hidden behind wives. Watchers circled close. The pillar emitted pulse twice, once deep, once high.

Then earth shook harder. Dust fell from ceiling. The pillar cracked.

But no collapse. Instead, the pillar glowed in moss-dappled glyphs, alive, breathing, as though awaking at blessing.

Light flooded the cavern. Vaulted stones shone. Watchers floated upward, forming bridges of mist among carvings. Then they drifted back into darkness, dissolving.

Silence.

Then, voices, women’s voices, soft across memory’s tissue: "You belong. You are home."

Warm wind swept through cavern. The air turned cinnamon-sweet; whispered warmth like carried embrace.

Jude closed his eyes and felt tears fall.

Children giggled in wonder, wives gasped. The watchers glowed faintly, hovering near threshold.

Jude stood slowly. "It breathed."

Grace touched the pillar, pressing her heart. "It recognized us."

Jude led them back out. The path downward was brighter, warmed. Watchers navigated ahead, shining among rocks.

They emerged on plateau. The glow of dawn struck the world anew, mountain shaped in warmth, watchers lit around them like stars. The wives embraced. Children danced around ribbons snapped free.

Jude watched watchers above; they didn’t drift off. They stayed, stationed above plateau like shimmering guardians.

He pulled Grace close. "We came home."

She pressed into him. "We belong."

Night fell again. They camped near plateau edge under watchers’ lanterns. Stories passed round. No fear, only joy and belonging.

Around midnight watchers drifted skyward, forming constellation patterns reminiscent of orchard paths and rivers. Watchers pulsed, celebrating.

Jude traced light with his finger. "They honor our way."

Grace smiled. "And we honor theirs."

They lay together under watchers’ sky, no clear boundary between being and memory, island and dream, their hearts and watchers’ pulse.

Morning came. They prepared to descend, carrying tokens from cavern, shards of glowing rock, ribbons soaked in cave glow, glyph stones humming. The watchers guided them down, brighter than ever.

Arriving at orchard, fireflies drifted quiet as homeland glories returned.

The wives laid gifts at wellstone, cave shards, ribbons, seeds bearing the mountain’s heartbeat. Watchers circled, weaving gifts into ribbons overnight.

By afternoon orchard thrummed: new saplings warmed by watchers’ presence. The wives worked, children chased fireflies, no edge of fear remained.

At dusk, near the shrine, they gathered. Twelve wives, two children, one man, watchers overhead. Grace spoke softly: "We walked memory’s heart and found belonging."

Jude lifted his hand. "Today we pledge: memory is our guide, not our burden. We walk forward as island’s future."

Ribbons shivered. Watchers glowed. Fire crackled.

They sang watch-lullaby taught in watchers’ tongue, voices drifting across orchard. Watchers responded in light language, pulsing ribbons, echoing glyphs.

When the last note died, watchers floated upward, higher than ever before, pulsing into constellations.

Light rained across orchard.

Jude hugged Grace. "We belong to eachother forever my dear"

She held him. "Forever."

And watchers remembered, and they remembered together.

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