Elven Invasion
Chapter 110: Echoes Through the Mantle
POV 1: Reina Morales – Gate Zero Threshold, Antarctica
The spire kept rising.
Reina stumbled backward as Solomon stepped ahead, his silhouette bladed by the rising light of Gate Zero—not light that illuminated, but light that remembered.
The structure was singing again.
Low vibrations pressed against her chest like a second heartbeat. The song wasn’t in any tongue she knew. It was a tone, deeper than language. Her cold-mask cracked further as her body shivered, not from the cold—but from recognition. Her DNA was humming.
“Solomon...” she whispered.
He reached out—not to her, but to the Gate.
“This place isn’t just a tomb,” he said. “It’s a vaulted decision. The memory of choice.”
From the central spire, molten lines of golden resonance cracked outward through the ice, each one pulsing with glyphs not of elven make, but something older. Something even the elves had buried. And with each pulse, Reina saw flickers—of cities not built, of species not born, of realities that had forgotten themselves to survive.
Gate Zero wasn’t a prison.
It was an editor.
And someone was hitting undo.
POV 2: Admiral Ryoko Sato – JSN Mizuchi, Bridge
“All allied ships, fall back NOW!” Ryoko shouted, fingers dancing over the tactical console as the pulse from Gate Zero hit again.
It wasn’t a shockwave. It was a reverberation. It rewrote instruments, twisted radar into poetry, and collapsed sonar into memory-verse. Depth was meaningless. Time—fractalizing.
“Mizuchi's hull is resonating,” the engineer reported, eyes wide. “Ma’am... she’s remembering when she was forged.”
Ryoko’s fists clenched. “Maintain distance. Ready deepstrike torpedoes—if we lose coherence, fire on my last coordinates.”
The old Cold War protocols had been a bluff before.
Now she realized why the ancient engineers had encoded Protocol Mnemosyne into naval doctrine. It wasn’t for good luck at sea.
It was for when memory itself became hostile.
The deepwave logs were already unreadable.
Gate Zero was rewriting reality in inverse—not from present to future, but from present to past.
And her ship was drifting into memory.
POV 3: Mary – Earthwatch Orbital Station, Med-Chamber
Dyug's body convulsed harder.
The chamber surged with blue Lunar light, but underneath it was something... darker. Mary's own armor shimmered as defensive enchantments activated, trying to suppress whatever was awakening inside the Elven prince.
He was muttering again.
But now—in an ancient tongue even she barely recognized.
The language of the first priestesses, encoded in dream-silk.
"Seven faces... one wound... the Gate is the Womb and the Blade..."
Her breath caught. She looked at the prophecy scrolls she had kept hidden, forbidden even among the High Circle of Lunar Faith a gift from the Lunar Saint herself after Mary completed her mission together with Dyana von Forestia,Dyug’s Twin sister and her rival in love, then Mary and Dyana had thought it as just a ancient relic and hence Dyana had just given the useless ancient relic to her to show her Royal grace but only know Mary knew it's true worth.
There it was: The Mantle of the Forgotten Flame. A mythical transformation that could only happen if the Recall failed—if the Keepers of Forgetting remembered too much.
“If one born of both moon and ruin awakens the blade of reversal, the Gates will sing again, and the Mantle will burn the veil between choice and consequence.”
Dyug’s skin began to glow with non-lunar runes.
And Mary knew.
Whatever he was becoming—he wasn’t waking as just a prince.
POV 4: Jamie Lancaster – Approaching Andes Fold
The snowfield blinked.
Not flickered—blinked, like an eyelid reopening.
Jamie’s hoverbike jerked mid-air as the Fifth Gate Marker burst into crimson resonance. Her map recalibrated—no longer showing lat-long coordinates but temporal echoes. She wasn’t headed toward a mountain anymore.
She was heading toward a moment.
“This fold isn’t in space,” she whispered. “It’s in narrative sequence.”
The Fold wasn’t just opening on Earth.
It was opening inside the story of Earth—and she was riding straight into a missing chapter.
POV 5: Solomon Kane – Beneath Gate Zero
He knelt at the base of the cathedral-like structure, placing his palm on the ice now transmuted to memory-glass.
“The Mantle’s forming,” he said.
Reina crouched beside him. “Is that what the Abyss Knights warned about?”
“No,” Solomon said. “They never dared wear it.”
He turned to her, eyes shimmering not with color—but with resonant paths.
“I saw their world, Reina. I saw what we lost to survive. And now... Earth is remembering what it chose to forget.”
Above them, the Gate began unfurling petals—spatial structures like organelles, forming a bloom of forgotten timelines.
The air burned with song.
And the sky fractured—not broken, but peeled.
POV 6: Queen Elara – Temple of the Dream-War
Elara stood alone in the Inner Sanctum. The priestesses outside were weeping—not from grief, but from remembrance. Across Forestia, every elf now remembered the First Sealing. Not as myth, but as witnesses.
Even the children.
“Begin the Mantle-Protocol,” Elara whispered.
An old High Elf general gasped. “Your Majesty... that would awaken the Remnant Ascendants.”
“I know,” she said.
She turned to the Lunar Mirror.
It was cracking.
Not physically.
But narratively.
The Mirror no longer showed the future.
It showed alternate pasts.
And in all of them—Earth was the origin point.
POV 7: Black Sun Mercenaries – Antarctic Fringe
Kassia Morn had lost half her team to resonance death.
Now, she and her last five mercenaries were crouched near the shattered remains of an old American research tower—watching a cathedral of light and memory rise in the distance.
“Reaper-5,” she whispered. “Record everything.”
Her comm buzzed.
Not with noise.
But with her own voice.
Reciting words she hadn’t spoken yet.
“Oh hell no,” said one of her men. “We’re in a time loop?”
“No,” Kassia muttered. “We’re in a recall spiral.”
The Gate wasn’t just waking up ancient things.
It was pulling current ones backward.
And the deeper they stayed... the more they'd become echoes.
POV 8: Gate Zero – Solomon Kane & Reina Morales
The Gate opened fully.
What lay beyond was not a portal.
It was a timeline shaped like a blade.
And on its hilt, burned into cosmic iron, were the names of every being who had ever chosen to forget.
Solomon stepped forward.
“Earth must remember,” he said. “Or it will become what we feared to face.”
Reina reached for his hand.
And together, they stepped through the Gate.
Not into the past.
But into Earth’s unchosen future.
Final POV: Shadow Continent — Forgotten Thrones
Beneath the dense jungle floor, far below the roots of trees that had never seen sunlight, ancient thrones sat empty—carved from obsidian memory and fossilized time. Each belonged to a king or queen no history dared name, their legacies erased not by death, but by deliberate forgetting.
Now, the soil began to pulse.
The awakening of Gate Zero and the Chorus's song had reached even here, stirring what should never wake. Forgotten monarchs shifted in their silence, and the air grew heavy with intent. Statues wept tar. Vines retracted, as if in reverence or fear.
Something was rising—not to reclaim, but to remind.