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She unrolls it with practiced care, revealing text in the flowing, serpentine script of the naga. The characters seem alive somehow, not simply written but grown into the parchment itself.

"This is the Threadborn Prophecy," Leira says, her fingers tracing the lines without touching them. "The original is carved into the walls of the deepest chamber in the Temple of Threads, but this is a faithful copy made by Eira herself."

She clears her throat and begins to read, “When the stone is scorched, and silence reigns, And blood remembers what fire forgets. A child of flesh shall cross the gate. Bound not by scale but fate.”

Her voice takes on a rhythmic quality as she continues, “She shall walk where none have tread. Through tunnels veined with sorrow’s thread. Eyes of ash and voice of dawn. She weaves the path the war shall pawn.”

Something cold slides down my spine as she reads. Thechild of flesh.The tunnels. The war. This is not abstract poetry but a specific prediction. One that seems to describe Leira's arrival among the naga with eerie accuracy.

“Marked by flame that does not burn. She takes the bond one dared return. Serpent and soul in crimson tied. The wound shall close where kin have died.”

Leira's voice drops lower as she continues, the words now weighted with personal significance, “Four shall wake when one is crowned. Their powers stirred, their fates unbound. Fire first, the Sovereign Flame. Earth and air shall heed his claim.”

I think of Varok controlling fire, of Lurok commanding the wind in the market district. Of my own ability to wield air, and Leira’s to wield fire. Two elements. Two of the four powers awakened.

“Water flows, yet waits his hour. Together forged, the season’s power. But only love shall fully ignite their might. Bonding heart and soul, flame and light. One bond to end what fire began. One heart to break the endless span. Thus heralding the Season of Naga.”

Silence falls when she finishes, the words hanging in the air between us like invisible threads pulling tight around my heart. I struggle to process everything I've heard, to fit the pieces together into something that explains Lurok's rejection.

"The Temple Guardians believe this prophecy foretells rebirth," Leira explains, carefully rolling the scroll closed. "They see the arrival of the Threadborn, that's me, as the beginning of healing between naga and humans. They believe theSeason of Nagameans transformation into something new and better, the end of ancient hatreds, and the beginning of unity."

She places the scroll back in its case, her movements measured and deliberate. "My bond with Varok awakened his fire element. He is the first, theSovereign Flame.The prophecy says three more will follow. Earth, Air, and Water."

"And Lurok," I say, my voice barely above a whisper. "He's Air."

Leira nods. "It seems that way. His power showed itself when he saved the Talons in the market district from the explosion. But the TrueCoil, and many others like Lurok, they interpret the prophecy very differently."

Her expression darkens. "To them, thechild of fleshisn't a savior but an omen of corruption, a human intruder who will poison naga bloodlines. TheSeason of Nagadoesn't mean rebirth but extinction. The end of their people as they've always been."

Understanding crashes through me like a physical blow. "He thinks that if he accepts what's growing between us, if he acknowledges our connection..."

"He believes he'll be accelerating the destruction of his own kind," Leira finishes. “It's not just TrueCoil fanatics; many traditional naga teach that each awakened element brings them one step closer to thisSeason of Naga.To them, it's not rebirth but annihilation."

I press my fingers against my temples, trying to process this revelation. "So when he pushed me away?—"

"He wasn't rejecting you, Serin. He was trying to protect his people from what he believes is coming."

The realization cuts deep, a different kind of pain than I'd been carrying. Not the sharp sting of personal rejection but the dull ache of understanding a sacrifice made for noble reasons, however misguided. Lurok didn't cast me aside because I meant nothing to him. He did it because he believed loving me might destroy everything he's sworn to protect.

"That doesn't make it hurt any less," I whisper, wrapping my arms around myself.

"No," Leira agrees softly. "But it means there might still be hope, if he can be shown another way to interpret what's happening between you."

I trace the outline of the scroll case in Leira’s hand with my fingertip, feeling the weight of ancient words that somehow shape our present, our futures. "Do you believe it? The Temple Guardians' interpretation?"

Leira's gaze turns distant, thoughtful. "I believe that fear of change often makes us blind to opportunity. The prophecy is happening whether they resist it or not. The elements are awakening. The Season of Naga approaches. The only real question is whether they'll face it with open hearts or closed fists."

Outside Zara's chamber, the sounds of the crowded Flame room continue: frightened whispers, soothing chants from Temple Guardians, the occasional cry of a frightened hatchling. And somewhere beyond these stone walls, Lurok prepares to face death with the weight of prophecy bearing down on his shoulders.

A different kind of weight settles on mine. The knowledge that his cruelty was born of fear rather than hatred, of dutyrather than indifference. It doesn't erase the hurt, but it transforms it into something I can at least begin to understand.

A sudden cry cuts through my musing like a crack of thunder. Zara's head snaps toward the Flame room, her small body tensing as she uncoils from her guard position.

"They are coming," she whispers, her voice thin with dread.

Before I can ask who, the chamber beyond erupts into motion. A surge of bodies, and sharp commands cut through the frightened murmurs. The unmistakable metallic scent of blood reaches us even here.

Leira and I exchange a glance of alarm before hurrying to the doorway, the scroll and its ancient prophecies momentarily forgotten as the present crashes in with brutal force.