Elven Invasion
Chapter 227 – The Sky Torn Asunder
POV 1: REINA MORALES – USHUAIA COMMAND HUB
The operations chamber throbbed with tension. The wall-sized displays were alive with static, energy readouts, and blurred satellite imagery. Across them all, one anomaly dominated—the South Pacific, west of Easter Island, where the ocean boiled as if the sea itself had been set aflame.
Reina Morales stood at the table, arms braced against the edge, her dark eyes fixed on the growing distortion. She’d seen many battle maps in her life, but none had ever radiated such wrongness.
The Second Gate. Elara’s gamble.
“Energy spikes climbing,” an Argentine technician reported, sweat slicking his brow. “Three hundred percent over the last hour. The ionosphere above the anomaly is destabilizing. Our satellites are blinded.”
Reina forced herself to breathe slowly, evenly. Her heart wanted to race, to panic. But she had no such luxury. Calm was the only weapon against despair.
“What about the fleets?” she asked.
“U.S. Seventh Fleet moving from Pearl. Japanese and Australian carrier groups converging. Russian subs already tracking the area. India has deployed their Green Guardians on carriers from Diego Garcia.”
“Good,” Reina said, though her tone was tight. It won’t be enough. She knew it. Everyone here knew it. The elves had already proven Antarctica wasn’t some isolated thrust—it was the opening gambit. This, whatever Elara was summoning now, was escalation on a scale that bent imagination.
Her gaze flicked briefly to the side screen—Dyug’s marker. The elusive prince had been confirmed fighting in the Pacific theater. That alone made this Gate all the more dangerous.
“Patch me through to all regional commands,” Reina said, her voice steady but sharp as a drawn blade. “We have less than twelve hours before that thing stabilizes. If it opens, Earth won’t just be fighting elves anymore. We’ll be fighting whatever Forestia keeps locked behind their own walls.”
POV 2: DYUG – SOUTH PACIFIC FRONT
The sea roared beneath him, the salt spray bitter against his lips as his elven warship cut through the storm-wracked Pacific. Around him, flotillas of enchanted vessels glimmered under cloaking wards. The elves’ ocean campaign had begun in earnest, pressing against scattered human fleets.
But Dyug’s gaze wasn’t on the human ships. It was on the sky.
Above, the heavens split. Great arcs of silver and violet lightning lashed from horizon to horizon, converging on a spiraling wound in the firmament. The Second Gate. Its call was deafening—not to the ears, but to the soul. Magic of such magnitude that even his royal blood trembled in response.
“Your Highness,” Myrren whispered at his side, her priestess robes whipping in the gale. Her pale face was lit with awe and dread. “The Queen truly dares it. This Gate is no simple bridge. It is… a summoning.”
Dyug gripped his staff tighter, knuckles pale. He could feel it—something vast straining to cross into this world. Something not meant for mortal seas or skies.
For a moment, pride flared in him. This was the scale of Forestia’s might, the proof that elves were supreme. But then, almost at once, doubt slid in. If the Queen unleashed such forces, what place would be left for him?
His victories, his resurgence, his redemption—they might all be eclipsed by the sheer weight of Elara’s ambition.
“Your Highness!” a knight shouted from the deck. “Human fleets approaching—carriers, destroyers, subs! They mean to strike before the Gate is stable!”
Dyug’s heart pounded. He turned his silver eyes back to the roiling sky. The choice was before him: hold the line so Elara’s Gate could open fully, or seize command of destiny himself.
For the first time in years, he wondered: was he his mother’s son—or her rival?
POV 3: QUEEN ELARA – THRONE OF MOONLIGHT, FORESTIA
Within the Moonlit Citadel, Queen Elara stood cloaked in silver radiance, her eyes half-lidded in trance as she poured her essence into the Grand Invocation. The chamber shook with power. High Elves knelt in concentric circles, their chants binding the Gate’s weave. Priestesses wept as the Goddess’s light burned through them.
And at the heart of it, Elara smiled.
Through the Gate she felt the Pacific—the roaring seas, the trembling skies. Humanity’s resistance was admirable, even impressive, but it was finite. Her will was infinite.
“Let them throw their fleets,” she whispered, voice carrying like a hymn. “Let their machines burn the waves. They cannot halt the tide of Forestia.”
Still, in her heart, there lingered an ember of unease. She had felt Dyug’s spirit through the tether of blood. Her son. Her disappointment. Her shadow. And yet… he thrived in this war. The Goddess favored him.
Elara’s lips curved in a thin, cold smile. “So be it. If the Goddess raises him, let him serve as the blade of my will. But no light shall eclipse mine.”
Her eyes flared silver, and with a sweep of her hand she unleashed the final verse of the invocation.
Far across the void, the Gate screamed open wider.
POV 4: MARY – ROYAL KNIGHT CORPS
The decks trembled beneath Mary’s boots as her knights braced against another barrage. The humans had pushed further than ever, their hybrid mechs slamming through lines of enchanted warships with brutal efficiency. Her blade of solar fire bit through steel, severing the arm of a Red Archer mech, but her arms ached with the effort.
“Hold steady!” she roared, voice raw. “The Gate must be protected!”
Yet even as she shouted, Mary’s thoughts turned to Dyug. He was somewhere out there, perhaps already beneath the Gate’s light. She could feel the pull as strongly as he must—it wasn’t just magic, it was destiny grinding its teeth.
She raised her shield against a fusillade of missiles, solar wards flashing. Around her, knights cried out, their bodies cracking under strain. The humans were not breaking.
And above them all, the Gate widened. Mary’s heart clenched as she glimpsed shadows moving inside it—vast shapes, serpentine and colossal, wings like mountains folded within the rift.
Her blood ran cold. Elara hadn’t just opened a way for reinforcements. She had unleashed something older.
POV 5: REINA MORALES – FINAL ORDERS
“Gate instability rising,” the technician reported. “We estimate breach in two hours—maximum.”
“Two hours,” Reina repeated, almost to herself. Her knuckles whitened on the table edge. Every instinct screamed that they could not allow it.
“Admiral Zheng requests permission to launch nuclear payloads,” an aide said quietly.
The room went still. Even the alarms seemed to hush.
Reina closed her eyes briefly. To strike with nuclear fire would mean contaminating the Pacific, devastating ecosystems, risking escalation with Elara’s magic counterstrikes. But if they didn’t…
Her mind flicked back to the Arihant incident, to whispers of elven constructs—living weapons, bound titans that once crushed rival kingdoms. Was that what Elara was calling through?
She opened her eyes. “Authorize strike preparations. But not yet. Not until we are certain. If humanity fires first and misses, we doom ourselves. Monitor every fluctuation. The moment that Gate breaches, I want every fleet, every missile, every mech hammering it at once.”
The officers saluted, tension snapping like taut wire.
Reina looked once more at the distorted image of the Gate, its storm swallowing half the Pacific sky. Her throat was dry, but her words came firm.
“If this storm brings gods to Earth, then we will remind them—gods can bleed.”
CLOSING SCENE: THE GATE
The South Pacific convulsed. Tidal waves surged in all directions, battering human ships and elven fleets alike. Lightning carved the heavens. The Gate widened, its edges no longer light but shadow, jagged and dripping with starless void.
Dyug stood at the prow of his ship, hair and cloak whipping in the gale, eyes fixed upward. Mary, bloodied and exhausted, raised her sword toward the same sky. Reina Morales, half a world away, leaned over the tactical display, her jaw clenched like iron. And Elara, in her moonlit citadel, whispered the final words of power.
The Second Gate split wide open.
And through it came the roar of something not seen on Earth since myth itself—monstrous, winged, and terrible.
The sky was no longer the sky. It was a battlefield between worlds.