Low, her eyes, now imbued with a predatory sharpness she hadn't possessed before, caught something the others had missed. High up on the corridor wall, at least fifteen feet above the floor, was a reinforced window. It wasn't large, but it showed the deep blue of the twilight sky and the dark silhouette of the forest outside. It was freedom.
"There!" Low yelled, her voice cutting through the sounds of the approaching guards. "That's our way out!"
Hope, fierce and desperate, surged through them.
"We can't reach it!" Low gasped, looking at the smooth, sheer wall.
"You won't have to," Leonotis said, a determined glint in his eye.
"Jacqueline, break that window!" Leonotis shouted.
Gathering the last of her strength, she summoned a pillar of solid, swirling water from her hands. With a final, powerful roar that shook the very walls, the water slammed into the reinforced window. The glass shattered outwards.
"Low, grab my seeds and throw them out the window!" Leonotis said.
Low did just as she was asked. She quickly grabbed the apple seeds from his pocket and threw them out the window. Only one made it out. The seed glowed a brilliant green as it landed. They heard a loud creaking sound.
Without a second's hesitation, Leonotis ran toward the wall. As he reached out, a thick tree branch erupted from the window at his command, coiling into a makeshift staircase. He scrambled up it, and hauled himself through the window, tumbling onto the soft grass outside. He turned back, his hands reaching. "Come on!"
They scrambled up the wall, using the steps Leonotis had created. One by one, they tumbled out into the cool night air as the sounds of the guards grew to a furious roar just inside the broken window. As they ran, the branch stairs retracted out the window, back into the apple tree. The tree looked even bigger than the one Leonotis had created earlier that morning.
Jacqueline looked at Leonotis. That feats he performed, the fight with the Warden, the giant tree stairs, would have taken more of his ase than he feasibly had. Leonotis should have ase sickness, but here he was able to keep pace with the others, just a little more winded. Jacqueline put the thought out of her head; now wasn't the time to be questioning things.
They didn't look back. Battered, bruised, and utterly exhausted, but together, they ran, melting into the deep, welcoming shadows of the forest, leaving the cold, sterile evil of the Aetherium Genesis Institute behind them.
Under the pale, new light, they found themselves on a rough dirt road that cut a lonely path through rolling hills. The air was cool and smelled of damp earth and night-blooming jasmine. Leonotis cradled the dryad in his arms; her frail form seemed even lighter now, almost ethereal, her breathing a shallow, barely perceptible whisper.
After a moment of pained, labored silence, the dryad's eyelids fluttered open. Her gaze, though still hazy and unfocused, seemed to look past them, fixing on the distant, misty horizon to the north. Her lips, dry and cracked like autumn leaves, moved, forming words that were barely a whisper.
"North…" she rasped, her voice the rustling of those same dry leaves. "The forest… the heart of the Green… I must go north."
Leonotis leaned closer, his own heart aching with a profound, sympathetic sorrow at her obvious weakness. "The Dark Forest? Are you sure? You're in no condition to travel anywhere…"
"It is… where the roots remember," she murmured, a flicker of something ancient and powerful glowing deep within her emerald eyes. "Where the green… still breathes free from their stone and their poison. I must… return. I must be replanted."
Jacqueline, seeing the life-force flickering so weakly within the dryad, quickly produced a waterskin. She uncapped it and held it in her palm, murmuring a series of soft, melodic words in a language that flowed like water itself. A soft, cerulean light bloomed from her hands, infusing the water within the skin until it pulsed with a gentle, pure luminescence. "Here," she urged, her voice soft with compassion. "This is imbued with a sliver of the Shrine's purity. It may grant you strength." She gently offered the waterskin to the dryad, who managed to take a few weak, grateful sips.
Low, who had been pacing restlessly, scanned their surroundings. "That forest is on the other side of the kingdom," she said, her voice a low, practical growl of concern. "That's weeks away, even at a good pace. And in case you've forgotten, we're probably being hunted. We can't afford a journey like that."
Zombiel, his gaze fixed on the dryad's fragile form, let out a soft, mournful sigh, a sound like wind whistling through the hollow reeds of a riverbank. The fiery spirit within him, a creature of pure life and energy, seemed to recoil from the sight of a life so deliberately and cruelly diminished.
Leonotis gently adjusted his hold on the dryad, her body feeling no heavier than a bundle of sticks. "We'll get you there," he promised, his voice thick with a fierce determination fueled by her fragile hope and his own deep, painful connection to her suffering. "We'll protect you."
They had only walked a few hundred yards down the deserted road, the dryad leaning heavily against Leonotis, when she suddenly stiffened. Her breath hitched in her throat, a small, choked, rattling sound. Her eyes widened, not with fear, but with a strange, bewildered, almost peaceful recognition.
"The earth…" she whispered, her gaze dropping to the dusty ground beneath her feet. A faint tremor ran through her frail body, a vibration Leonotis felt as a deep, resonant hum against his own chest. "It calls me home."
Then, with terrifying, unnatural speed, the final transformation began.
"No," Leonotis gasped, his eyes wide with horror. Refusing to let this poor creature go, he quickly thought back to the apple tree he'd created, the surge of life he had commanded. He had to try. "No, you don't!" he yelled, pouring all his will, all his desperate green magic, into her, trying to flood her with life, to hold back the change. But it was no use. It was as if the well of his power was bone dry.
The dryad's skin, already a mottled grey, began to darken and roughen, the texture shifting and hardening into bark. Tiny fissures appeared all over her body, spreading like cracks in parched summer earth. Leaf-like growths, small and green, sprouted from her fingers and toes, elongating and stiffening into tiny, perfect branches. Her form elongated, her limbs thickening and solidifying with a soft, grinding sound. The gentle whisper of rustling leaves filled the air as her moss-green hair transformed into a canopy of nascent branches, their new leaves reaching instinctively towards the pale morning sky.
Leonotis cried out, a choked, desperate sound, clutching her tighter, but her transformation was inexorable, a force of nature reclaiming its own. He felt the fading warmth of her body, replaced by the cool, unyielding solidity of living wood. In mere moments, the frail, suffering dryad he held in his arms had become a young, beautiful oak tree, its rough bark pressing against his chest, its new, vibrant leaves rustling softly in the gentle morning breeze.
He stood there, frozen, cradling the small oak sapling that had been a living, breathing person only moments before, his mind reeling in disbelief and utter horror. The others stared in stunned, breathless silence, the rising sun casting long, mournful shadows that stretched across the empty road.
He sank to his knees by the side of the road, still clutching the young tree, great, gasping sobs shaking his small frame as tears streamed down his face. His connection to the natural world, the very magic that had allowed him to hear her silent plea for help, now amplified his grief tenfold. He felt the echo of her fading life force in the rustling of the sapling's transformed wood. It was as if a vibrant, beautiful chord in the symphony of life he was just learning to hear had been abruptly silenced.
He buried his face in the rough bark. The injustice of it, the brief, flickering candle of hope extinguished so cruelly, the crushing weight of all their efforts ending in this silent, rooted tragedy. It was unbearable. The earth beneath him seemed to weep with him, the dew-kissed grass heavy with his sorrow. The vibrant green of his magic, usually a source of strength and connection, now felt like a cruel, mocking reminder of what had been so irrevocably lost.
Low watched him, her own face a mask of anger and helpless sorrow. She kicked a loose stone, sending it skittering across the road. "Damn it all," she cursed, her voice thick. "Damn that king and his whole rotten institute!" She walked over and stood awkwardly beside Leonotis, not touching him, but just being there. "Get up, Leonotis," she said, her voice gruff, but lacking its usual bite. "Staying here makes us an easy target."
Jacqueline knelt on his other side, placing a gentle hand on his shaking shoulder. "Her spirit has returned to the earth, Leonotis," she said softly, her own voice heavy with a shared sadness. "In a way, she is finally free from what they did to her. She is… home."
Zombiel, his fiery eyes reflecting the boy's raw grief, cautiously approached the new oak tree. He reached out a hesitant finger and gently touched one of its new, perfect leaves. He tilted his head, a look of profound, childlike confusion on his face. "Gone?" he asked, his voice a questioning whisper.
The silent road stretched before them, no longer a path to a destination, but a testament to their heartbreaking failure. The cost of their noble actions was etched not in the dangers they had faced, but in the silent, rooted form of the dryad they had tried, and failed, to save.
Leonotis suddenly felt incredibly weak, unlike anything he's ever felt and fell to the floor unconcious.
