Chapter 209 – Echoes Before the Storm - Elven Invasion - NovelsTime

Elven Invasion

Chapter 209 – Echoes Before the Storm

Author: Respro
updatedAt: 2026-01-29

POV 1: JAMIE LANCASTER –USHUAIA, ARGENTINA – NAVAL BLOCKADE COMMAND

Jamie Lancaster pressed her palms against the cold steel railing of the observation deck. Beyond the reinforced glass, the southern seas churned, whipped by Antarctic winds. Warships bristling with missile tubes and radar arrays prowled the blockade line like wolves circling a wounded prey. Yet Jamie’s eyes weren’t on the vessels—they lingered south, toward the frozen horizon where the elves had claimed dominion.

She had barely slept since returning from the Drake Passage. Solomon Kane’s rescue still burned in her memory, his ragged voice calling her name when she woke aboard the hidden submersible. Kane had insisted on being left behind in Ushuaia, his presence there a burden he carried with visible discomfort. For Jamie, the reunion was tangled with questions: why had he risked so much for her? Why now, after decades apart?

“Commander Lancaster,” a voice broke her reverie. It was Captain Arjun Vashisht of the Indian Navy, crisp uniform pressed despite the salt spray. He carried a datapad brimming with fresh reports. “Satellite sweeps confirm increased magical interference from the Antarctic fortress. Communication blackouts now extend two hundred nautical miles.”

Jamie’s jaw tightened. “That’s deliberate. They’re pushing us back—probing our resolve.”

“They want us blind,” Vashisht replied. “But India’s shielded satellites can hold out a little longer. For now.”

Her gaze swept across the command floor where American, Indian, Japanese, and European officers worked side by side, uneasy allies forced into cohesion by crisis. She had been thrust into this crucible by survival, yet her name carried weight. Lancaster blood meant something, even here, even now. And Solomon Kane’s shadow haunted her every decision.

POV 2: REINA MORALES – ABOARD USS AEGIS DAWN – SOUTH ATLANTIC

The carrier cut through gray waters, deck crews braving sleet as aircraft lifted off with thunderous roars. Beneath the armored hull, hidden in a labyrinth of reinforced steel, Reina Morales coordinated with the growing Antarctic Resistance.

The transmission crackled with static, the elf jamming spells clawing at every word. “—supply caches intact, but patrols thickening. Fortress expanding outward. They’ve enslaved the ice, bent it into walls.”

Reina’s knuckles whitened against the console. These weren’t just military updates—they were cries from survivors still trapped on the frozen continent. “Hold your ground,” she whispered into the mic. “We’ll break through. One day, one strike at a time.”

Her superior, Admiral Holtz, stepped in. “Commander Morales, the council wants proof before committing more assets. These ‘Resistance Cells’—they fear they’ll bleed resources dry.”

Reina rose, shoulders square. “With respect, sir, without them we’d have no eyes south of the blockade. No one else can tell us what the elves are building.”

Holtz hesitated, then gave a curt nod. “You’ll have your line open. But don’t overextend. We can’t lose you.”

Reina turned back to the faint, flickering transmission. “We won’t,” she promised softly, though her heart ached with the weight of every name she couldn’t save.

POV 3: MARY – FORTRESS OF ETERNAL FROST – FORMER MCMURDO STATION

The grand hall glowed with pale crystal light, its ceiling carved from enchanted ice. Mary, Sun Knight turned commander of the Royal Knight Corps, stood before a holographic map woven by priestesses’ spells. Red markers pulsed along the blockade line—ships, submarines, patrol aircraft.

Her golden eyes narrowed. “They gather like vultures. Do they truly think steel and fire can shatter divine magic?”

Beside her, High Elf Commander Veylith scoffed. “Mortals cling to arrogance. Their blockade is nothing more than a delaying line.”

But Mary’s thoughts were not so simple. Behind her cold expression lingered Dyug’s memory—his voice, his stubborn smile, the warmth of his hand in hers. She had sworn vengeance, yes, but vengeance alone did not guide her. She sought to prove herself worthy of him, to forge a place where common-born knights could rise beyond the chains of caste.

Queen Elara’s voice swept through the chamber like a chill wind. Her astral projection shimmered, regal silver hair flowing like moonlight. “The blockade must be broken. The world must learn despair, or they will not yield.”

Mary knelt, fist over heart. “My knights will lead the strike. Give us leave, Majesty, and the humans’ line shall shatter.”

Elara’s gaze softened only briefly. She knew of Mary’s bond with Dyug, though none dared speak of it aloud. “So be it. Take the priestesses, unleash the storm. Remind the world why elves are eternal.”

POV 4: MYRREN – HIDDEN CHAMBERS – BENEATH THE FORTRESS

In the deepest sanctum, away from the clamor of strategy and command, Myrren traced runes upon a blackened shard of lunar crystal. The ritual chamber pulsed faintly with forbidden energy. Whispers of the moon goddess echoed, faint and fractured.

Dyug’s vow resounded still, a vow of devotion cast across realms. The goddess had not ignored it. She had marked it, bound it to fate. And that mark was bleeding into Earth itself.

Myrren shuddered. Her visions had sharpened: tides rising unnaturally high, storms brewing with crescent-shaped scars in their clouds, dreams of mortals filling with lunar light they could not understand. The barrier between Forestia and this world was fraying.

She pressed a trembling hand to the shard. “You’ve doomed us all, Prince Dyug,” she whispered. “And yet… you may be the only salvation.”

POV 5: SOLOMON KANE – USHUAIA – SOLOMON KANE’S APARTMENT

Solomon Kane sat in a dimly lit room overlooking the port. The city bustled with soldiers, refugees, and merchants, all cloaked in the grayness of looming war. A bottle of whiskey rested on the table beside him, unopened. His hands trembled not from drink but from memories.

He had saved Jamie Lancaster—Henry’s granddaughter, his own lost love’s blood. But her eyes, sharp and resolute, reminded him more of Henry than of the woman he once loved. And that cut deeper than any blade.

A knock came. Kane ignored it until the third, harder strike rattled the wood. He rose, pistol in hand, and cracked the door open.

It was Jamie herself, flanked by two Indian marines. “We need to talk.”

Kane stepped aside. She entered, gaze scanning the sparse room. “You’re hiding.”

“I’m surviving,” Kane muttered. “There’s a difference.”

Jamie faced him fully, steel in her eyes. “You didn’t save me just to vanish into a bottle. You know things about them—their fortress, their magic. The Resistance needs you.”

Kane shook his head. “I’ve given my pound of flesh, girl. You don’t know what it costs.”

Her voice dropped, almost a whisper. “Then don’t do it for me. Do it for the ones still trapped there. Reina Morales is risking her life because she believes we can win. She needs every scrap of intel you have.”

Kane’s chest tightened. Reina. The name stirred something half-buried—an echo of a cause he once believed in. He set the pistol down and looked Jamie in the eye. “Fine. But when the storm comes, don’t expect me to shield you. You’ll have to stand on your own.”

Jamie nodded once. “I already am.”

FINAL POV: APPROACHING TEMPEST

The blockade tightened. Warships maneuvered into kill-box formations, submarines prowled the depths, and reconnaissance drones braved magical disruption. Southward, the fortress thrummed with gathering power, priestesses chanting beneath the frozen spires.

The world teetered on the edge of a second great clash—steel and sorcery poised to collide once more. Yet beneath the martial rhythms, subtler currents stirred. Dyug’s vow whispered through storm clouds, Luna’s mark spread unseen, and the Spiral watched with growing hunger.

Somewhere between Earth and Forestia, destiny was already rewriting itself.

And when the storm broke, nothing would remain untouched.

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