13. Sybil

SYBIL

The shrine is older than anything I have ever stood inside.

I feel it the moment we step through the outer ring of tiphe trees — a pressure against the skin, not painful but present, the specific weight of something that has been watching this clearing for longer than Briarhollow has existed.

The stone at the center is worn smooth by hands that came before my father's and before his father's and before his, and the glyphs carved into the outer ring pulse with a faint cold light that is not caused by the morning sun filtering through the canopy above.

Ancient beasts surround us at every approach.

Not attacking — not yet — but present, circling the tree line in the slow deliberate way of things that know they have time and are in no hurry to spend it.

Corrupted creatures, black-eyed, their movements wrong in the particular way that has been wrong for months, drawn to the fracture in the barrier the way pressure always seeks a crack.

Rolin speaks to them in the old tongue and they hold their distance.

But only barely. And his voice carries a strain I have not heard before.

"The bond is accelerating," he says, beside me at the center stone. His palms are flat on the surface and the amber of his eyes dims and brightens in a rhythm that is not his own. "The deity knows we're here. Every moment we delay it pulls harder."

"How long do we have before—"

"Not long." His eyes catch mine. "Do the ritual, Sybil."

I open my father's journals.

The founding rite is in the oldest pages, the ones Rolin translated for me in the margins across three long evenings at the kitchen table.

Simple beneath the ceremony, as all sacred things are when you strip them down to their bones.

Blood and breath and the words spoken true, in the right order, by the right people.

The Esquine bloodline on one side. The Keeper's bond on the other.

Joined willingly. Not one side sacrificing to the other — both contributing, both present, a partnership the way the original covenant always intended.

The willingly is the word that mattered to every failed Keeper who came before. None of them had a partner. The covenant was built for two, and they each tried to carry it alone, and they were consumed one by one across three centuries because alone was never what the pact was designed for.

I begin the first sequence.

The bond-light in the root network responds immediately — surging up through the stone and into my palms, a recognition so old it has no language attached to it.

I feel the orchard two miles away. The roots reach back, straining toward this connection they've been waiting for.

My father's thirty years of tending, quiet in the soil, patient and whole, offering itself forward to whoever came next. My throat tightens. I keep reading.

The corrupted creatures at the edge of the forest press closer as the ritual energy builds, drawn to the power concentrating in the clearing.

Rolin commands them back in sharp bursts of old tongue, but each command costs him something I can watch being taken, the bond pulling at the edges of him the way a tide pulls sand.

His jaw sets harder between each sequence. His breathing goes wrong.

"Rolin."

"I'm here."

"Your eyes."

"I know." He locks his gaze on my face with the deliberate effort of someone fighting to hold a grip. "Keep reading."

I am in the fourth sequence when Bram Tallow walks out of the trees.

He looks like three days of bad decisions — hollow-faced, coat torn at the shoulder, the crossbow leveled at the white stag standing at the shrine's edge.

The stag that is the anchor of everything.

Bram does not look at the ancient beasts circling the clearing, or at Rolin.

He looks at the stag with the flat certainty of one who has calculated the risk and decided the payout is worth it.

"The heart preserves for three days if you know what you're doing," he says. "I have a buyer in Vhoig. They clear everything I owe and I start clean somewhere else. This doesn't have to involve any of you."

"If you kill the stag the barrier fails before you reach the road." My voice comes out steadier than I feel. "Every ancient predator in the deep forest comes out simultaneously. You won't survive the tree line."

"Step away from the stone and I take it somewhere else."

"Bram—"

The crashing of underbrush from the tree line behind him stops the word in my mouth.

Celia Mercer steps out of the trees. She is out of breath and dirty from travel and she has a branch in both hands and she looks at Bram Tallow with the air of a woman who has spent the better part of three days coming to a decision and has arrived at it with her whole self.

She does not hesitate. She hits him across the back of the head before he can turn.

The crossbow fires into the canopy. A shower of bark and dead leaves.

Bram goes down hard and the creatures at the boundary surge forward — toward him, not toward us, toward the source of three years of poaching and violation.

The bond doesn't require Rolin to direct them. Some reckonings run themselves.

Bram runs, staggering, into the trees. The sounds stop quickly.

Celia stands at the far end of the circle. Her chest is heaving. She has the specific expression of a woman who knows exactly what her debt is and has no idea yet how long it will take to pay it, but has decided she is paying it regardless.

"Tell me what you need," she says.

I cross to her and press the third page of the founding documents into her hands.

"The lines I point to, when I point to them.

Your bloodline is Briarhollow-rooted. It anchors the covenant side.

" I hold her gaze. "You were born here. This land is in you whether you've tended it or not. Your voice matters."

She looks at the page, then at me. Then she nods.

I go back to Rolin. His hands are shaking against the stone and the amber of his eyes is almost entirely gone.

"Both of us," I say. "Joined willingly. Your bond and my bloodline together. Not you surrendering and not me watching. Both of us." I put my palms flat on the stone beside his. The bond-light hits me like a wave. "I know what I'm choosing. Do you?"

The struggle in his face is the most human thing I have ever seen — a man fighting for himself with everything in him, against something enormous, because there is something worth fighting for.

"Yes," he says.

"Then hold on."

I begin the final sequence. His voice joins mine. Celia reads the line I point to without flinching. The shrine ignites around us, and the ancient clearing finally remembers what it was built for.

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