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📍 Noticed
Beneath the Silver Sky
by BRITTANY D MONROE
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Synopsis
Liora Vale had always known the desert’s secrets. As a child, she had spent countless nights beneath the pale glow of the twin moons, tracing the patterns of the stars with a makeshift telescope of polished brass and glass lenses salvaged from ancient wreckage. By day, she learned to read the ...
Liora Vale had always known the desert’s secrets. As a child, she had spent countless nights beneath the pale glow of the twin moons, tracing the patterns of the stars with a makeshift telescope of polished brass and glass lenses salvaged from ancient wreckage. By day, she learned to read the shifting dunes, where wind-sculpted ridges told stories older than memory. But on the morning of the Convergence, when the silver sky rent itself in two, even her seasoned heart trembled.
She first noticed it before dawn’s first light, when the horizon glimmered with an unnatural luminescence—an ashen streak cutting across the silver sheen overhead. From her perch atop a sandstone outcrop, Liora adjusted her cloak against the chill of dawn, breath crystallizing in the air. Her journal lay open at her side, the pages already filled with meticulous observations: star charts, wind-direction readings, sand-sample sketches. In all her years of solitary study, she had never recorded an anomaly like this.
A low rumble rolled across the dunes, as if the desert itself groaned in pain. Liora’s pulse quickened. She steadied her hand and lifted her small brass telescope, focusing on the fissure in the firmament. It was impossible, she thought. The sky was supposed to be an immutable dome, an eternal canvas upon which the heavens traced their paths. Yet here it yawned open, a jagged wound revealing swirling hues of violet and obsidian beyond. No mortal eye had glimpsed such depths since the Age Before, when the Skyborne walked among the people—if they existed at all.
A sudden flash of violet light pulsed from the rift, and Liora stumbled back, dropping her telescope. Her heart drummed wildly as she struggled to her feet. The ground beneath her feet vibrated in step with the tremor of the heavens. Far in the distance, the dunes rippled like a disturbed sea, the wind rising to a howl that carried distant cries—human, perhaps, or something older, something not wholly human. She swallowed hard against the dry air. There would be others drawn to the phenomenon, drawn to its peril as well as its promise. She could not wait for dawn.
Drawing her cloak tighter, she descended the outcrop with cautious steps, each imprint in the sand a small testament to her purpose. She had known this day might come. For months, Liora had felt the pull of destiny in her veins, a stirring ignited by the discovery of a fragment of star-map in the ruins of an abandoned observatory. The map had been inked in silver filigree on brittle parchment, the symbols as cryptic as hieroglyphs carved by some long-vanished hand. She had spent countless nights piecing it together, aligning its constellations with the night sky. It spoke of a prophecy: the return of the silver city and the rise of one who would unlock its power. Liora had believed it a myth—but myths had a way of becoming real.
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