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Reincarnated as an Elf Prince-Chapter 137: The Forest (1)
Lindarion adjusted the strap of his pack one last time. The leather had grown stiff overnight, cold from where it had rested near the door. It pulled slightly at his shoulder, but not enough to matter.
He shifted the weight, felt it settle against his spine.
'Good enough.'
The fire crackled behind him. Low. One of the logs split in the heat with a dry pop.
He didn't look back at it. They were done here. Whatever this place had given them, it had already been taken. Warmth. Space. Names.
And now it was time to move again.
Lira stood a little to his left. Cloaked now, shadowed in the gray light that leaked through the window slits. She hadn't said much since agreeing.
Just stood there like a stone shaped to look like a person who might, one day, speak again.
Ren adjusted her coat with short flicks of her fingers. She wasn't fidgeting. Not really. Just treating her own clothes like they needed to impress someone.
'Probably herself.'
Ardan moved last. Always last. Quiet and slow like a boulder trying not to admit it had momentum. He checked the doorway, let his eyes linger on the frost outside.
No warnings.
Not yet.
Meren pulled on one boot with both hands, made a small strangled sound, then stood up like it had personally insulted him.
"We leaving or just doing an impression of people who might?"
Ren answered, "You could leave now. We'll catch up when you get eaten."
"I'm wounded."
"Not nearly enough."
Lindarion pulled his scarf higher.
'Same voices. Same cold. But something's different.'
His eyes flicked toward Lira. She still hadn't looked at him.
Not once since accepting.
Which made sense.
It meant it was real now.
Ardan stepped into the frame of the door and held it for a moment. His eyes were on the ridge. The sky had gone pale, but not bright. The kind of light that didn't know what it wanted yet.
"We should move before the wind picks up even more," he said.
Lira followed without a word.
Meren made a small groaning sound and shuffled into motion. Ren gave him a little shove that almost looked like affection.
Lindarion stepped out second to last.
Ardan stayed behind him, just long enough for the door to creak closed.
The path outside hadn't changed. Narrow. Frostbitten. Trees that leaned too close, like they'd learned the wrong lesson from watching people.
Their boots pressed into the snow without sound.
Too cold for that.
He walked with Lira near the front. Ardan took the rear. Meren hovered awkwardly between, close enough to Ren that she occasionally gave him a glare just to reestablish boundaries.
No one asked questions.
Not yet.
Lindarion kept his eyes forward.
But his mind drifted.
'I'm glad she came with us.'
He didn't know what that meant yet.
But it felt like something had shifted.
Not in the air. Not in the path.
In the story.
And he didn't know if that was good or bad.
Not yet.
—
The path bent slightly to the left, where the trees thickened and the frost clung in long, narrow ribbons along the bark.
Someone had walked this trail before them, but not recently. No footprints. Just the feeling. Like silence that had been walked through and never repaired.
Lindarion adjusted his scarf again. It was mostly habit at this point. The cold didn't bother him like it used to. But his fingers liked something to do.
Lira walked beside him. Not too close. Not far either. Just enough space that their steps didn't sync, but almost.
She hadn't said a word since they left.
He glanced at her. Just a flick of the eyes. Not enough to draw attention.
Her coat moved with the wind, but she didn't. Her expression was unreadable. Not the dramatic kind.
Just quiet. Like someone who was thinking about something they hadn't decided whether to regret yet.
Ren walked ahead, boots crunching in a rhythm that was too cheerful for the weather. Meren was talking to himself again. Something about dried meat and betrayal.
Ardan brought up the rear. No surprise there. His footfalls were quieter than they should've been for someone that solid.
Lindarion cleared his throat once.
Lira didn't look at him.
He waited another few steps.
Then said it anyway.
"You could've said no."
Her eyes didn't move, but something in her jaw shifted. Barely. Like she'd just bit the inside of her cheek.
"I know."
"You didn't exactly ask where we're going."
"I don't need to."
That was it. No dramatic pause. No second sentence.
Lindarion looked forward again. The path narrowed up ahead. A fallen tree arched over the trail, split clean through the middle like something had tried to bite it and given up halfway.
The air smelled sharp. Like pine and something older underneath it.
He didn't speak again until they were almost under the arch.
"Why did you come then?"
Lira's voice came quiet. Even.
"You asked."
He blinked once.
'That's it?'
The tree creaked above them as they passed under it.
Ren looked back over her shoulder, one eyebrow raised like she'd heard part of the conversation but hadn't decided if it was worth mocking yet.
Meren was trying to brush snow off his hood without actually stopping.
Ardan didn't speak. He rarely did when they were on the move. But Lindarion could feel him listening.
He kept his voice low.
"I didn't think you'd say yes."
"I didn't think I would either."
More wind moved through the trees now. Less like a breeze. More like the mountain was sighing through its teeth.
Lindarion narrowed his eyes against it. His scarf tugged gently at his neck.
He could feel the weight of the sword at his side. Still new. Still quiet. But steady.
Just like her.
He looked at her again. This time a little longer.
Lira walked like someone who knew exactly how much danger the world could hold, and had chosen to keep walking anyway.
He didn't say thank you.
That didn't feel right.
So instead, he said nothing.
And let the silence be enough.