Alistair and Willow stood at the edge of the pool, surrounded by Midhir, Arwen and Lonan. They both held their weapons tightly as they prepared to cast their resonances. As the gems embedded into their weapons began to glow, a soft wind blew against his face, and the water began to swirl.
Alistair raised his spear over his head, then struck the ground with its haft. A clear sound rang as the crystalâs glow strengthened, and the water in the pool flowed aside, creating a wide tunnel that stretched into the darkness.
âJump,â Willow stepped forward, into the pool. Strong winds swirled around her, catching her mid-air, and allowing her to slowly float down.
Arwen was the next to jump into the now empty pool, followed by Lonan. Midhir and Alistair waited for last. The winds Willow created caught them before they fell. Their slow descent into what seemed like the abyss began.
Seeing the wall of water swirling quite a distance away from them was both awe inspiring, and nerve wrecking at the same time. He couldnât even imagine how much water there was, though somehow Alistair didnât seem even a little tired.
Soon, the light coming from the temple began to fade. They were simply too far down, and the wall of water all around them seemed to absorb it before it reached them. The glowing flower Midhir carried lit up their surroundings still, but a mix of blue and crimson light only served to make their surroundings seem more terrifying.
It was a few dozen heartbeats before they saw the ground, and about that much more time passed before their feet finally touched the sand-covered surface.
Lonan breathed an audible sigh of relief as soon as the winds around him vanished. With visibly shaking hands, he wiped his forehead and took a few deep breaths. âIâm too old for thisâ¦â his voice was shaky and weak.
âI doubt youâre quite that old,â Willow chuckled as she let him hold onto her for a moment until he could trust his knees not to give out.
Midhir knelt and ran his fingers through the sand. It was a fine, white sand. He dug a little deeper, expecting to find the cavern floor, only to see more of that same, white sand. It almost reminded him of ash, with how fine and pale it was.
He saw movement with the corner of his eye. His head jerked to the side as he looked at the wall of water about a dozen steps away from them. Was it just the movement of water he saw, or was it something else?
With a tight jaw, he stood back up. âWhat now?â he glanced at Alistair.
They couldnât see anything beyond the swirling and howling wall of water. There could have been an altar just a few steps beyond its edge, and they wouldnât know.
âWhat do you think, historian?â The young Orlein heir asked, glancing at Lonan. âWhere do you think the previous inhabitants of these lands built more?â
Lonan visibly flinched upon hearing his name. He nervously shifted his weight from one foot to the others. âIâm not certain-â
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âGuess, then.â Alistair curtly said. âTime is of the essence, and we havenât made any tangible progress.â
âRightâ¦â Lonan muttered. His gaze scoured their surroundings. He squinted, trying to see beyond the wall of raging water. After a moment, he crouched and took a handful of sand in. âClearly this place has been submerged for quite a while,â he let the sand fall back down. âOn a side note, Iâm amazed by your ability to control water so well.â He pointed at the sand with a half-smile. âYou even dried the sand.â
âWhat?â
Midhirâs chest tightened. The sand was dry. And Alistair was surprised about it. He turned his gaze to the wall of water swirling around them. The sand just next to the water was a darker colour. Hesitant, he walked to the edge of the small, round area Alistair kept free of water, and touched the ground.
Small drops of water fell on the back of his hand. His fingers touched the cold, wet sand below. He squinted, trying to see beyond the wall of water. Everything beyond the raging wall of water was distorted. He could see the sand beyond it, but it looked like it was in two different colours â darker nearby, and lighter farther away.
âLight!â Arwenâs voice rang, startling him. The young womanâs staff glowed brightly as she cast her resonance. An orb of light formed between the three prongs of her staff. As soon as it grew to the size of a childâs head, she opened her eyes. âSomething is wrong in this place,â she glanced at Alistair before lightly waving her staff.
The orb of light floated off, towards the wall of water. âThe Old Faith has its hold here â even one of its beings of worship was here until it perished in Midhirâs hands.â She walked behind the floating orb, and only paused when it reached the edge of the water. âPlease stop your resonance, Alistair. We arenât in need of it.â
Willowâs eyes shot wide open. âWhat?â She exclaimed loudly. âWeâll drown!â
Arwen shook her head. âNo, I donât think we will.â She pointed upwards. âI donât think the water will reach us at all. Alistair, please trust me.â She looked at the young Orlein heir with a confident look in her eyes. âYouâre only blocking out path now.â
âIâll recast it if youâre wrong,â Alistair took a deep breath. âEither way, we wonât drown,â he reassured Willow. Then, the glow on the crystal embedded into the haft of his spear faded.
Water crashed down from above, and it rushed up from below. For a split second, his mind refused to believe his eyes as the water flowed upwards, finally returning to its calm quite far above them.
It felt like they were looking at the surface of a lake, but the lake was upside down. Even looking at it made him dizzy as it defied all logic, and all laws of nature. Even a tear in the veil wouldnât change how gravity itself worked.
âDivine beings protect usâ¦â Lonanâs whisper broke the charged silence. He clenched something under his coat â a pendant, or something similar hanging from a golden chain around his neck. âHow did you know?â His dumbfounded gaze turned to Arwen.
âThe sand was never wet.â She replied coldly, her gaze fixed far away. âWe are not alone.â
Beyond the seemingly endless white sands illuminated only by her light and the blooming flower, two glowing blue dots rose from the sand.
Her eyes shot wide open. In a hurry, she pushed herself off her rocking chair, startling the snake sleeping curled up by the window, and the cat napping by the sun shining through it. She stumbled over the stacks of books in the back of the room, ran out into the hallway, and hurried through another door to reach a basin filled with what looked like water.
âBy blood and ancestry, memories shared, and bonds forged, show me my daughter. I command thee as the Crimson Witch of the Sands, do my bidding!â her voice rang clear, her command echoed through reality, through a veil unseen and reached through space and time.
She saw a pair of blue eyes, fixed on a blue-crimson glow that wasnât of this world.
âWhy are you awake?â She whispered, brushing her crimson locks of hair aside. âThat wonât do, itâs not time yet. I yet live.â