A chamber where the air returned to itself, and the presence remained after every closing.
The Record of the Lower Chamber
The chamber appeared on the older plans as storage, though nothing within it suggested a clear purpose beyond enclosure. It lay below the trade houses, reached by a narrow stair that bent once before settling into stone, where the air cooled too quickly and the light from above faded sooner than expected. Those who worked the lower district spoke of it in passing, naming it according to the street from which they entered. Some called it the back cellar, while others referred to it only as the lower chamber, as though withholding a name might lessen their share in it. Across all accounts, one detail held steady and settled into the telling with a quiet certainty. Each time the door opened, the air returned to the same state.
On the first night the record took hold, the room belonged to a merchant of cloth whose stores occupied three adjoining properties above the lane. Bolts of linen rested in the upper rooms, while cheaper dyed stock filled the lower spaces where damp rose through older stone and left a pale bloom along the walls each winter. The chamber itself stood apart from the regular stores, set behind a thick partition and entered through a door whose latch required lifting twice, a small resistance that had endured longer than memory cared to trace.
Edrin came down with the keys after dusk, once the ledgers had been closed and the younger boys sent home with thread still clinging to their sleeves. He carried caution as part of his trade, though he placed trust in what could be weighed and handled. Mould held its place as mould, rot remained rot, and stale air followed neglect. Even so, as he stepped onto the lower stair with the lamp in his hand, his tread softened without his intending it, and the motion settled into him as something he did not question until later.
The sound of the street lingered above him at first, reduced by distance and floorboards into a low, shifting presence. Then the stair bent, and the life of the district withdrew all at once, leaving only his own steps joined by the quiet movement of the lamp flame within its glass.
At the foot of the stair stood Jorren, one hand resting on the iron latch, the other drawn close against his coat as though the cold had reached him before the door had opened. He was a man of figures and measures, known for precision and a reluctance to overstate anything that could be written plainly. That evening, his composure carried a strain that sat uneasily upon him, and it showed in the way he held still when Edrin approached.
“You took your time,” Jorren said.
“The books would not close themselves,” Edrin replied, raising the lamp slightly as his gaze moved over the door. “You sent word as though the wall had given way.”
Jorren stepped aside at once, his movement restrained and deliberate. “Nothing has given way,” he said. “That is the trouble.”
Edrin regarded him briefly, then turned his attention to the door, allowing the moment to settle without pressing it further. “I had not thought sound walls worth a summons,” he said.
Jorren offered no reply, though the silence between them carried more than agreement. He lifted the latch.
The door opened inward with a dull drag, timber pressing close against stone before yielding. The chamber received the light without warmth, and the space within revealed itself slowly as the flame spread across it. It stretched wider than most cellar rooms in that part of the district, though the far end dipped low beneath a beam that carried the marks of long use. Shelves lined one wall, holding a scattering of wrapped bundles and jars left too long without purpose. A table stood near the centre, its surface bare save for a folded cloth and an empty bowl. Nothing lay overturned, and nothing bore the mark of intrusion, yet the absence of disturbance failed to bring any ease.
Edrin paused at the threshold, held there by a resistance that did not belong to the door or the stone. The air pressed gently against the face and chest, settling rather than moving, as though the room had been closed beyond simple enclosure. Something had gathered within it, and that gathering remained, quiet and insistent.
He stepped in, and the smell rose at once, damp plaster and old timber bound too closely together, carrying a sharper trace beneath them, dry and bitter, as though something had been scorched without flame. The lamp flame shortened where it stood, its light thinning at the edges as though the air had lost some willingness to hold it.
“When did you first notice it?” he asked.
“At closing,” Jorren said, entering behind him and closing the door with care. “Mira was below sorting stock. She came up saying the air would not clear.”
Edrin set the lamp upon the table and looked around, taking in the walls, the shelves, and the beam above. The haze lay faint within the chamber, almost absent, though the light struggled to carry fully across it, as though something held it back from reaching the far side.
“She opened the door?”
“She did. Left it wide.”
“For how long?”
“Long enough that it should have eased.”
“And it stayed?”
“It returned.”
Edrin moved to the nearest wall and placed his hand against the plaster, allowing the contact to settle before drawing any conclusion. It held cool and steady beneath his palm, and no fresh damp marked the surface. No seam or flaw offered explanation, and the stone carried its weight as it should.
“Mira thought the dye room carried through,” Jorren said, his voice lower now, as though the space required it.
“And you?”
“I said she should mind her count before naming causes.”
Edrin gave a faint nod, not in agreement, though in acknowledgement that the words had been spoken. “Fetch her,” he said.
Jorren hesitated for a moment, as though weighing whether the request would bring clarity or deepen what had already begun, then turned and left without further word. The door closed behind him, and the chamber settled more fully into itself as the second presence withdrew.
Edrin remained alone, and the silence deepened in a manner that drew his attention rather than eased it. It held between sounds instead of around them, filling the small spaces where quiet should have rested empty. He lifted the lamp and walked the perimeter, his shoulder brushing close to the wall at the narrower end, and there the pressure increased, faint though persistent, pressing inward as though the space drew itself towards a centre he could not see.
He slowed and listened, though no sound answered in any clear fashion. Even so, the room failed to feel empty, and it retained a suggestion of presence, quiet and patient, holding its place without movement or voice. The sensation lingered long enough that it settled into him before he chose to move again.
He turned from the wall and opened the door, leaving it wide and allowing cold air from the stair to drift into the chamber. For a brief moment the weight thinned, and the room seemed to release what it held, though the change failed to carry. The air gathered again, restoring itself as though the opening had been noted and allowed for.
When Jorren returned with Mira, Edrin stood near the table, watching the atmosphere settle back into its earlier form.
Mira paused at the threshold, her sleeves rolled, her hands marked with faint traces of dye. She studied the room before entering, measuring it against memory rather than expectation, and the hesitation in her stance carried a quiet certainty.
“You wished to hear it from me,” she said.
“I wished to hear what you found,” Edrin replied.
She stepped in, her gaze drawn to the chair near the table, as though that simple object held more weight than the walls themselves. “I found nothing,” she said.
“What brought you up the stair?”
“The sense that I had been joined.”
Jorren shifted behind her, though he held his tongue for a moment before speaking. “That is not how you said it.”
She kept her eyes on the chair, her voice steady though her posture held tension. “Before, I was told not to make a story of air.”
Edrin raised a hand, quieting them both before the exchange could take hold. “Begin again,” he said.
Mira nodded, drawing a breath that settled unevenly in her chest before she spoke.
“I came down after supper,” she said. “The room held as it always had. I set the lamp and began sorting the bundles. One had taken dust, so I shook it out, and the dust lingered longer than expected. I thought the air had turned close with the weather, though that thought did not hold for long. After a while, the room changed.”
“In what way?”
“It filled.”
Jorren made a small sound, though Mira continued before he could shape it into words.
“It felt as though someone stood behind me,” she said. “I turned, and no one was there. The door remained shut, though the air had taken on shape.”
Edrin watched her closely, allowing the words to settle before pressing further. “And then?”
“I opened the door. It eased. I closed it. It returned.”
The chamber seemed to receive that answer and hold it, the silence thickening in response.
Edrin drew the chair back across the floor, and the scrape carried further than the movement required. He placed it near the threshold and told Mira to stand where she had stood before. Jorren remained by the stair, his hand resting against the latch, while Edrin opened the door wide and stepped aside.
Cold air entered, and the flame steadied as the space shifted for a moment into something ordinary. The pressure eased just enough to suggest that it might not return.
“There,” Jorren said, the word coming too quickly to carry weight.
The air gathered again, and it did so without haste, returning first at the throat, then along the chest, drawing inward with quiet certainty. Mira lowered her gaze, and Jorren’s grip tightened on the latch as the chamber reclaimed itself beneath the open door.
“It is back,” Mira said, her voice low, as though speaking louder might draw it closer.
Edrin said nothing. He moved halfway towards the threshold and stopped, for from that point the change revealed itself most clearly. The outer air entered, though it failed to take hold, and the room restored its own condition beneath it, steady and untroubled by interruption.
He turned, taking in the walls, the beam, the worn floor beneath the table, and nothing within the space shifted or altered. Even so, the chamber carried a persistence that no simple confinement could account for, and that persistence settled into his understanding with a weight that would not move.
“Leave it open,” he said.
“All night?” Jorren asked.
“All night.”
“And if the damp reaches the stock?”
“Then we lose cloth.”
Mira watched him closely, her attention fixed upon him rather than the room. “And if it remains?” she asked.
Edrin met her gaze, and for a moment the answer held between them before he gave it voice.
“Then the room keeps something of its own,” he said.
The door stood open, and the stair beyond remained clear, while above them the district continued in its ordinary noise, unaware of what held beneath its floors. Within the chamber, the air settled once more, patient and unchanged, as though it required no concealment to remain where it had chosen to stay.
Foundation Register: Lower Chamber Storage Record
The chamber recorded within the lower district plans appears as an enclosed storage space set apart from the primary cellar structures, its construction resting upon earlier stone whose origin is absent from the surviving layouts. What remains within the register refers only to its use as an auxiliary holding room, with no indication that the space held any distinction beyond its position beneath the adjoining properties.
During routine inspection of storage areas, entries began to note irregular conditions within this chamber, where the air was observed to retain its density beyond expected limits, and where the atmosphere failed to clear despite repeated opening of the access door and the introduction of fresh air from the stair above. These observations were recorded without immediate concern and attributed to the enclosed nature of the space, along with the presence of damp within the surrounding stone.
Further entries describe the persistence of these conditions, noting that the atmosphere within the chamber appeared to restore itself after disturbance, returning to a consistent state regardless of the duration for which the room remained open. The effect was recorded across separate visits, with no variation observed between instances, and no external source identified within the adjoining structures that might account for the behaviour.
The condition was entered in practical terms, with recommendations issued for continued ventilation and periodic clearing of the space to prevent the accumulation of stagnant air. No unified cause was assigned within the register, and the matter was treated as a localised issue of storage conditions rather than a structural concern.
A marginal notation, written in a later hand, refers to the chamber as holding “a retained atmosphere”, a phrase left without further clarification and set apart from the primary entry without expansion or supporting detail. The note remains incomplete and is not referenced elsewhere within the record.
Subsequent entries indicate that the chamber continued to be used intermittently, with no formal record of alteration or repair entered into the register. The absence of further reports was taken as sufficient indication that the condition had stabilised, and the space was thereafter recorded as functional.
No connection was made between this chamber and other irregularities noted within the lower district, and the record concludes with the structure listed as stable, its condition accepted without further inquiry.
About the Creator
The Mythic Chronicle is written and curated by Simon Phillips, a writer of mythic and speculative fantasy whose work explores the quieter edges of forgotten worlds, where buried structures, fractured records, and lingering presences continue beneath the surface of recorded history.
The accounts preserved within these Chronicles form part of a wider body of work in which cities stand upon older foundations, and events recorded as isolated disturbances are understood, in later tellings, to belong to patterns that were never fully recognised at the time.
One such account survives in a separate record, detailing an incident within a lower district where a death was first dismissed as excess, though the space in which it occurred retained a presence that resisted clearing, and where investigation revealed signs that the disturbance had not been confined to a single room.
This record is preserved in the novella Black Feathers in a Brothel, where the events surrounding that incident are followed more closely, though even there the full nature of what lay beneath the structure remains uncertain.
Readers who wish to examine that account in its fuller form may find the record below.
What follows is taken from later accounts concerning the lower chamber, where the condition of the air was first recorded as returning to a fixed state after each opening. Subsequent entries describe the persistence of this atmosphere across repeated use, where the space was observed to settle into itself regardless of ventilation or disturbance.
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A cold road leads into Bremyra, where the sea wind carries salt through narrow streets and old stone holds more memory than any living court dares to name. In The Unmarked Path, the opening novella of The Veil of Kings and Gods, magic is never treated as ornament. It belongs to law, fear, inheritance, and silence. It lingers beneath castle floors, inside sealed books, in the guarded breath of the Church, and in the hands of a magician who scarcely understands why the world has begun to turn around him.
This is the beginning of The Chronicles of the Spiral Realms, a serious adult high fantasy series shaped by ancient gods, forbidden magic, kingdom politics, fallen empires, and the slow return of truths buried beneath the present age. Ældorra is a world where mortal institutions believe they hold power, yet every crown, altar, and magical order stands upon older ground.
A World Built Over Forgotten Power
The world of Ældorra carries the remains of the Imperium Arcana, a fallen magical empire whose ruins still press through the age of kings. Its laws have decayed into custom. Its divine wounds have hardened into doctrine. Its power survives in fragments, watched over by institutions that remember enough to fear the past, yet never enough to understand it.
The Order of Magicians stands at the centre of that inheritance. Powerful, feared, and separate from crown or Church, the Order preserves magic through discipline and secrecy. Yet preservation is not the same as wisdom. Beneath its authority lies fracture, and beneath its history lies a truth far older than its masters are willing to face.
Opposite it stands the Church of Christiana, sacred and political in equal measure. Its cathedrals offer prayer, order, and memory, yet those memories are guarded by men who understand that truth can unmake authority as easily as war can unmake kingdoms. In this kind of mythic fantasy series, faith and magic are never safely divided. Each claims to serve the world. Each fears what the other might uncover.
Simion and the Burden of Reluctant Power
Simion enters the story as no triumphant chosen hero. He arrives tired, uncertain, and obedient, sent by the Order to Bremyra under instructions he only partly understands. His strength lies not in arrogance, but in restraint. He carries power, yet he also carries doubt, old loneliness, and the uneasy knowledge that magic has never fitted him in the way it fitted others.
That makes him central to the series’ tone. The Unmarked Path is an epic fantasy novella concerned with consequence before spectacle. Simion’s magic matters because it alters rooms, relationships, loyalties, and fear. When he walks through Bremyra, people remember the idea of magicians before they see the man. His black robe is enough to change the air around him.
Yet the deeper pressure comes from what he cannot explain. A hidden book. A seal. A divine whisper. A moment when magic moves through him in silence, beyond the methods the Order taught him. These are not answers. They are openings.
Kingdoms, Churches, and the Shape of War
While Simion is drawn toward buried magic, Prince Patrick struggles beneath the weight of mortal rule. Bremyra is a kingdom under strain, held together by court procedure, family duty, marriage alliances, and the absence of a king whose return grows less certain with every passing day.
Patrick’s world is political fantasy in its most human form. There are borders to guard, letters to answer, marriages to arrange, rumours to test, and enemies to watch. War does not arrive as grand spectacle at first. It arrives through uncertainty, through foreign blades in city streets, through reports from the north, through councils where no one has enough knowledge to feel safe.
Týrnan Valgrim’s northern arc gives that pressure another face. His people move south beneath the command of a High Chieftain whose ambition already carries a shadow. Týrnan is a war leader, yet not a simple raider or clean heroic figure. His path is marked by survival, honour, violence, and doubt. Through him, the series begins to show war as moral corrosion as much as military action.
Why Silent Gods Carry More Weight
The gods of The Chronicles of the Spiral Realms are powerful because they are distant. They do not stride through the mortal world giving simple answers. Their silence hangs over prayer, magic, fear, and memory. When divine presence touches the story, it arrives through pressure, vision, symbol, and burden.
This makes the series closer to ancient gods fantasy than conventional quest fantasy. The divine is not a ladder for characters to climb. It is a cost. Mortals pray into silence, institutions build doctrine around absence, and magicians inherit fragments of power whose origins have been softened by myth.
The Spiral itself belongs to that hidden language. It suggests recurrence, divine memory, forgotten truth, and a pattern returning through the lives of people who believe they are facing isolated crises. In The Unmarked Path, the Spiral is felt before it is understood. That restraint gives the saga much of its force.
Entering The Unmarked Path
Readers can begin the saga with The Unmarked Path, available on Amazon Kindle or paperback.
The novella opens the world without emptying it of mystery. It gives the reader Bremyra’s winter roads, the fear of magicians, the weight of royal duty, the unease of the Church, the first movement of northern war, and the sense that older powers have begun to stir beneath every visible conflict.
This is a fantasy novella series for readers who enjoy slow-burn epic fantasy, ancient gods, forbidden magic, magical orders, political tension, and worlds where history is never truly dead. Its power lies in the way the mortal and divine pressures touch one another. A prince’s council, a hidden chamber, a northern storm, a royal ambush, and a sealed book all belong to the same turning, even before the characters can see the shape of it.
The First Sign of a Larger Chronicle
The cover of The Unmarked Path captures that threshold well: a road leading through dark trees and ancient stones, spiral marks cut into a landscape where ruin and destiny seem to share the same breath. It is an image of entry rather than conclusion. The path waits. The title promises no certainty.
That is the heart of the opening novella. The world has not yet broken, yet the first strain is audible. The gods remain silent, yet something divine has already reached toward Simion. The kingdoms continue their ceremonies, yet war gathers beyond their borders. The Order still believes it controls magic, yet magic has begun to move beyond its rules.
The saga is entered through a road, a castle, a book, and a burden. What waits beyond them is older than any king’s claim, deeper than any archive, and far less willing to remain forgotten.
This is the beginning of a new epic fantasy saga within The Chronicles of the Spiral Realms, a world of kingdoms, forbidden magic, ancient gods, buried histories, and mortal lives caught in the shadow of forces far older than they understand.
Every long fantasy series has a first doorway. For this one, that doorway opens in Bremyra, a coastal kingdom of stone, cold sea air, royal duty, old secrets, and the lingering fear of magicians. It begins with Simion, a magician of the Order who arrives under instruction, though even he has little idea why he has truly been sent.
He is not the kind of figure who strides into the story already certain of his destiny. He is uncertain, guarded, and burdened by the feeling that he stands in the wrong place at the wrong time. Yet around him, the world begins to shift. A hidden mission, a royal court under pressure, a princess bound by duty, northern raiders crossing the sea, and whispers of something sealed beneath the old stones all draw the story into motion.
The Unmarked Path is a slow-burn opening to a larger mythic fantasy world. It is built around atmosphere, character, mystery, and consequence. The story is not only about magic as power, but magic as inheritance, memory, fear, and responsibility.
At the heart of the novella is Simion, a reluctant magician shaped by the Order of Magicians, an ancient institution descended from a broken magical empire. He has been trained in power, discipline, and obedience, though he has never truly felt at home among those who taught him. When he arrives in Bremyra, he carries more than a letter from his superiors. He carries the first pressure of a destiny he cannot yet name.
Alongside him stands Prince Patrick, a royal son forced into responsibility while his father and brothers remain absent. Patrick’s world is one of council chambers, alliances, military pressure, marriage arrangements, and decisions made under uncertainty. His story brings the political heart of the novella into focus. Kingdoms are watching one another. Borders are tense. Peace feels formal rather than secure.
Then there is Týrnan Valgrim, a northern warleader whose people begin moving south across dangerous seas. His chapters carry the weight of iron, salt, storm, clan loyalty, and conquest. Through him, the wider world of Ældorra starts to open beyond Bremyra’s walls.
The novella also introduces Elana, Patrick’s sister, whose role reaches beyond royal duty. She brings warmth, intelligence, and emotional force into the story, while also revealing that the laws of magic in this world may be far more fragile than the institutions around her are willing to admit.
What begins as political unease slowly brushes against something older.
The history of Ældorra has been shaped by the Imperium Arcana, the Order of Magicians, the Church, the fallen god Azaroth, and the death of the God of Magic. Much of that history has faded into myth, yet myth has a way of returning when the world grows weak enough to hear it again.
That is where the Spiral begins to matter.
The Spiral is one of the central mysteries of The Chronicles of the Spiral Realms. In this first novella, it is not explained in full. It appears more as pressure, pattern, memory, and warning. It belongs to ruins, divine silence, forgotten truths, and the sense that history is not finished with the living.
For readers who enjoy fantasy that takes its time to build weight and atmosphere, The Unmarked Path offers the first step into a larger saga. It is not a light adventure or a simple quest story. It is a mythic fantasy opening about a world beginning to remember what it buried.
The story is for readers who enjoy:
ancient magical orders, reluctant magicians, royal courts under pressure, forbidden power, divine silence, old books, hidden chambers, political tension, northern warbands, and the feeling that a larger storm is gathering beyond the edge of the page.
This first novella is only the beginning. It opens the path, introduces the key players, and places the first cracks in the world. Simion does not yet understand what is reaching for him. Patrick does not yet understand how far duty will carry him. Elana does not yet understand the cost of the power within her. Týrnan does not yet understand what his people’s march will awaken.
The reader, like them, enters at the point where history begins to turn.
The Unmarked Path is available now on Amazon Kindle.
The cellar door dragged across the stone with a sound that seemed to linger in the wood after the movement had ceased. Merrow kept one hand upon the iron ring for a moment longer than needed, listening into the dark below as though the space might offer some sign of its temper before he trusted his weight to the steps. The lantern in his other hand cast a low amber circle across the threshold, touching the worn lip of the stair and the rough bloom of old damp upon the wall. The smell that rose from beneath carried earth, stale grain, and the faint sour trace of standing water that always gathered under the lower houses once the weather turned.
“You are later than you said,” his wife called from above, her voice softened by the kitchen floorboards and the quiet work of the house settling around her. “If the casks have gone again, leave them until morning. You can mend a hoop in daylight.”
Merrow glanced back over his shoulder, though she remained above and out of sight, somewhere near the hearth where she would be folding the cloths for the next day’s baking. “It is only the latch I came to see,” he said. “Something knocked through the bins after supper. I thought a fox had found a gap.”
“A fox would have made more noise.”
He gave a small breath that might have passed for amusement under easier conditions, then lifted the lantern higher and began to descend. The stone steps were narrow and bowed at their centres from generations of use, and each one received his boot with a dull wet sound that told him the damp had risen further than it should. Their house stood in the lower quarter, where the ground always held the memory of what ran beneath it: old channels and filled hollows, and buried walls that the masons had built across long before Merrow’s father had taken the property. The cellar had never stayed entirely dry through the colder months.
He knew its shapes by habit. He knew where the wall angled inward near the third cask, where the mortar had opened above the eastern shelf, where the timber beam brushed the taller men upon the brow if they forgot to duck.
That knowledge met something altered the moment he reached the foot of the stair.
The room had changed in no obvious fashion. The bins remained in place. The casks stood along the far wall beneath the shelves of winter jars. A bundle of split wood still leaned in the corner where his son had left it. Yet the air carried a pressure that held against the chest, light enough to dismiss if asked, firm enough to feel once one had stepped wholly into it. Merrow paused with the lantern raised as the silence gathered more tightly than the room allowed.
He stood still until his eyes adjusted to the low red dark beyond the reach of the flame. Something moved along the base of the western wall. Then another shape joined it, and another after that, each one small and quick and close to the stone.
Rats were common enough in this part of the district. He had trapped them before beneath the grain sacks and once above the rafters. What made him hold his breath was the manner of their passing. They crossed the floor in a narrow line, nose to tail, with the same measured spacing between them, and where the lantern light touched their backs they failed to scatter or falter, though any rat with sense would have broken for shadow.
Merrow lowered the lantern slightly and took two steps forward. The line continued. From a crack beneath the shelf they emerged one by one, crossed the room in a shallow curve, then vanished through a seam in the opposite wall where the plaster had separated from the stone. More came behind them. The path they followed held with such precision that it seemed laid down before their paws reached it.
“What in God’s name,” he said, and the words sounded wrong in the cellar, too open for the space that received them.
A shape rustled overhead as his wife reached the top of the stair. “What is it?” she asked. “Have the bins split?”
“Come down with the second light,” he said, keeping his gaze upon the wall. “Slowly.”
Her steps followed after a brief pause, careful and deliberate, and when she reached the lower floor with the tallow lamp cupped in both hands, she stopped at once beside him. “Saints preserve us,” she murmured.
The line of rats held its course between them and the casks. A dozen had crossed already. Another six moved from the crack beneath the shelf. Their bodies brushed the floor with a faint dry whisper, and the sound of it drew across the stone like a seam being stitched.
“They should be running from the light,” she said.
“They should.”
His wife moved a little closer, the warmth from her sleeve touching his arm. “There are too many.”
Merrow nodded. He knew that as well. Rats came in bursts where food lay open or rot had reached the beams, and their movement usually carried the scramble of panic, the ugly energy of creatures snatching what they could before danger closed around them. This procession held no hunger he could see. It held direction.
Even where the floor dipped near the centre, where water from the last rain had gathered in a shallow black sheen, the line bent around it with the same spacing as before, then resumed its course toward the seam in the far wall.
His wife drew a tighter grip upon the lamp. “Fetch the spade,” she said. “If they have found a nest in the plaster, I want them out before dawn.”
Merrow set the lantern upon a barrel head and reached for the short grain shovel resting by the wood bundle. He stepped toward the line and brought the flat of the tool sharply down across the stones ahead of the leading animals. The blow rang through the cellar.
Any common rat would have scattered in all directions. These stopped only for the smallest part of a breath, their bodies gathered close as though receiving a signal too slight for him to notice. Then the first shifted aside and continued past the iron edge. The others followed in order. One climbed over the back of another where the path tightened, then settled again into place.
His wife made a low sound in her throat. “They are following something.”
Merrow turned his head. “There is nothing there.”
She kept her eyes upon the floor. “I can see that.”
The reply unsettled him more than the rats. He knew her habits of speech. She was plain by nature and slow to lend fear a shape before necessity demanded it. Now the lamp trembled in her hands, sending a soft ripple through the cellar shadows, while her gaze remained fixed upon the line as though she feared to lose the pattern once it had been seen.
He crouched near the crack beneath the shelf and thrust the shovel blade against the stones. Two rats emerged as he did so and ran across the iron without changing speed. Their fur brushed the metal. Their whiskers twitched. Their eyes gave him no sign of frenzy. They seemed intent upon a route already chosen.
“There is a draught in the wall,” he said, more to steady himself than from conviction. “They have found heat somewhere beyond.”
“Then why do they keep to one road?”
He had no answer worth speaking. He set the shovel aside and pressed his palm to the plaster near the seam where the animals disappeared. The wall felt cold. Beneath that cold lay something else, a soft uneven pulse that might have been water moving through a hidden channel, if it had carried a rhythm so faint and slow that he felt it more as a suggestion than a touch.
He snatched his hand back and looked down at his fingers, anger rising before he understood the cause.
“Did you feel that?” his wife asked.
He stared at the wall. “Feel what?”
She shifted the lamp to one hand and laid her free palm against the plaster where his had been. For a moment she remained still. Then her expression altered, the colour leaving her face beneath the warm lamp glow. “It is like air through a throat,” she said.
Merrow took her wrist and drew her away at once. “Enough. Go upstairs.”
She resisted him for the first time in years, though only by the smallest measure. “Listen.”
He had been listening since he opened the door. He heard the creak of the floorboards above them. He heard the low hiss of the lamp wick and the wet settling sound from the far cask where the hoop had loosened with age.
Yet beneath those familiar things there came another sound, one he had no wish to name. It lay below hearing and inside it at once, a long faint gathering that seemed to move through the wall without crossing the air. While it held, the line of rats thickened.
From the crack beneath the shelf, a fresh stream emerged. They came from somewhere too narrow to contain them in such number. Small ones. Full-grown ones. Grey-backed and brown-backed. A white-scarred creature with half an ear. All of them entered the same curve across the cellar floor and passed toward the seam in the far wall, as though drawn by a breath he could feel upon the plaster.
His wife stepped nearer to him. “Wake Teren,” she said quietly. “Tell him to go for the ward keeper.”
“At this hour?”
“At once.”
Her certainty cut through his reluctance. He turned toward the stair and raised his voice. “Teren.”
For a few moments nothing followed. Then the boards above groaned, and his son’s sleepy reply came down through the open door. “What is it?”
“Dress yourself and fetch Master Veys from the south lane. Tell him there is movement in the cellar walls.”
A pause answered him. “Movement?”
“Go.”
The boy must have heard something in his father’s tone that allowed no further question, for a moment later they caught the quick uneven tread of feet across the kitchen and the scrape of the outer bar being lifted.
The rats continued. Merrow reached for the lantern again and raised it toward the shelves. He expected to find torn sacks or spoiled stores, some plain cause that would return the room to sense.
The barley stood untouched. The turnips lay clean in their crate. Even the hanging herbs above the stair showed no gnawing. Food had drawn none of this. The line passed through the cellar as pilgrims crossed a church floor, intent upon arrival.
His wife had fallen silent beside him. When he looked at her, he saw that she was following the movement with the focused attention of one trying to hear a distant speaker in a crowded room.
“Do you know where that seam leads?” she asked.
He shook his head. “Into old stone. The neighbour’s foundation lies beyond, or part of it. The mason told my father the wall was thicker there than the house required.”
“The line keeps going lower.”
He listened, then heard it too. Beyond the visible crossing and the dry whisper of paws over stone, there came a continued rustle somewhere inside the wall itself, a layered movement descending through hidden channels and narrow breaks in the buried masonry. The sound might have belonged to many bodies passing through one space, or to one motion repeated over and over beneath the floor.
When Master Veys arrived, wrapped in his dark cloak and carrying a lantern of horn and brass, the rats had thinned enough that the first line had already vanished beyond the seam, while a second still crossed from the crack beneath the shelf. He came down the stairs with the guarded tread of a man summoned often to drunk arguments and burst pipes, prepared for nuisance and unwilling to admit concern before he had earned it.
That manner left him when he reached the floor.
“How long has this continued?” he asked.
“Since I opened the door,” Merrow said. “Perhaps longer.”
Veys crouched near the line. He extended two fingers toward a passing rat, then stopped short of touching it. “They keep the same distance.”
Merrow gave a hard little laugh, empty of humour. “So I had noticed.”
The ward keeper ignored the remark. He lifted his lantern toward the far wall and watched the animals vanish into the seam. “No bait?”
“None.”
“No disturbance in the bins?”
“None.”
Veys rose slowly. The horn panels of his lantern threw a steadier light than Merrow’s, and within that clearer glow the wall seemed older than it had a short while before, its plaster stretched thin across shapes the room was never meant to reveal.
“You said they held their course when checked.”
Merrow took up the shovel once more and laid it across the path. The next rat reached the iron edge, paused, and turned along it until the way opened, whereupon it resumed the line at once. Two more did the same. Behind them, the others continued with patient certainty.
Veys remained very still. “Have no one sleep below stairs tonight,” he said.
His wife answered before Merrow could speak. “You believe this carries a cause.”
The ward keeper kept his gaze upon the wall. “I believe the ground has begun to tell us where it keeps its hidden ways,” he said. “And I believe your cellar sits over one of them.”
The last of the visible rats passed into the seam. Their tails vanished one by one, leaving the stone bare again, though the room felt no lighter for their absence.
Beneath the wall, the faint interior rustle continued, moving downward through the buried foundation as though the line had gone on where sight could no longer follow, and the three of them stood in the cellar listening to that unseen passage, while above their heads the sleeping district held its houses in silence, unaware of the narrow roads that had begun to open beneath them.
Foundation Register: Lower District Cellars
The lower district cellars were recorded across multiple holdings, each structure resting upon earlier stone whose origin remained absent from the surviving plans. What records endured referred only to ground that had been used and enclosed before the present dwellings were raised.
During routine inspection of storage levels beneath several properties, entries began to note irregular activity along foundation walls, where small animals were observed moving in narrow and repeated paths that held their course across the same sections of floor and stone. These movements were recorded without immediate concern and attributed to seasonal change within the ground and the presence of damp conditions below street level.
Further entries describe the persistence of these movements, noting that the animals did not disperse when approached, and that the routes they followed remained consistent across separate properties, even where no direct passage or connection between structures was known to exist. The paths appeared to continue through walls and beneath foundations in a manner that was not accounted for within the existing plans.
The behaviour was recorded in practical terms, with recommendations issued for the clearing of affected areas and the reinforcement of lower walls where necessary. No unified cause was assigned within the register, and each occurrence was treated as isolated, despite the repetition of detail across multiple entries.
A marginal notation, added in a later hand, refers to the alignment of these movements with underlying ground structures not present in the recorded layout. It suggests that the routes may correspond to earlier construction now concealed within the foundation, though this observation remains incomplete and is not expanded upon within the primary record.
Subsequent entries note that the activity diminished in certain locations following clearance efforts, though no formal confirmation of resolution was entered, and the absence of further reports was taken as sufficient indication that the matter had settled without need for continued observation.
The cellars were thereafter recorded as stable, and no connection was made between these movements and earlier disturbances noted elsewhere within the district.
About the Creator
The Mythic Chronicle is written and curated by Simon Phillips, a writer of mythic and speculative fantasy whose work explores the quieter edges of forgotten worlds, where buried structures, fractured records, and lingering presences continue beneath the surface of recorded history.
The accounts preserved within these Chronicles form part of a wider body of work in which cities stand upon older foundations, and events recorded as isolated disturbances are understood, in later tellings, to belong to patterns that were never fully recognised at the time.
One such account survives in a separate record, detailing an incident within a lower district where a death was first dismissed as excess, though the space in which it occurred retained a presence that resisted clearing, and where investigation revealed signs that the disturbance had not been confined to a single room.
This record is preserved in the novella Black Feathers in a Brothel, where the events surrounding that incident are followed more closely, though even there the full nature of what lay beneath the structure remains uncertain.
Readers who wish to examine that account in its fuller form may find the record below.
Chronicle Record: The Lines That Held Beneath the Walls
They came to the lower lanes with the same quiet insistence that had held within the cellar walls, passing from house to house by ways no hand had marked. The first to speak of it did so in passing, as though the matter would settle if left without weight.
A cooper set down his tools to watch them cross his floor in a thin line that held from the back wall to the door. When he stamped his heel beside them, the bodies shifted and closed again, their spacing preserved with a care that belonged to craft rather than hunger. The man stood with the mallet in his hand and found that he could not bring himself to strike.
“Drive them out,” his neighbour said, leaning in the open frame with a cloth thrown over his shoulder and the smell of boiled hides clinging to him. “You will have the whole quarter under your boards by week’s end if you leave them.”
“I tried,” the cooper replied. “They keep to a line. Watch how they pass the crack. They turn as one.”
The neighbour bent to look, his brow drawing tight as the lantern light caught the sheen of the worn floor where the animals moved. “There is a draught,” he said after a moment. “You have a hollow beneath you. They follow warmth.”
The cooper gave a slow shake of the head. “Then why does the warmth take a straight road through the stone?”
The question lingered between them, and the neighbour stepped back with less certainty than he had carried in. He left the doorway open, and the line of rats crossed through it without pause, as though the space held no boundary worth their notice.
Across the lane, a woman in the dye house stood over her vats and watched the same passage take form along the base of her wall, where the brick had opened with age and the mortar had drawn back from its join. She saw how the colour in the water shifted as the animals passed, a pale thread moving through the deeper stain, as though something beneath the surface had drawn it aside, leaving a mark that held for a moment before it settled again into the whole.
“You see that,” she said, turning to the boy who tended the fire beneath the vats.
He wiped his hands upon his apron and came to stand beside her. “It is the light,” he said, though he leaned closer as he spoke. “It plays upon the surface.”
“It moves before the light reaches it.”
The boy said nothing more. He watched the line continue along the wall, then turned back to the fire with a care that held his hands too still for a man at his work.
In the baker’s cellar, the flour lay smooth across the stones until the first of the rats crossed it, leaving a narrow track that held its shape even as the man swept it aside. The white line returned by the time he turned back to look, drawn again from wall to wall as though the floor itself had taken the measure of it and set it down once more.
“This is wrong,” he said to his brother, who stood with the door bar in his hand.
“It is vermin,” the brother replied. “We have had worse.”
“We have had hunger,” the baker said. “This carries no hunger.”
The brother looked at the floor, then at the wall where the line vanished into the stone, and he set the bar in place without another word.
The ward keepers were called, and they came with their measures and their small brass instruments, tapping along the foundations and marking the walls with chalk where the tone altered beneath the strike. In each place, the marks formed a path that matched the movement seen upon the floors above, though no plan held those paths within its lines. The men who set the marks spoke in low voices that held more thought than they allowed to reach their words.
“You hear it,” one said in the narrow space beneath a counting house, where the ceiling brushed the crown of his head and the air pressed close around the lungs. “The strike returns to the hand.”
“It settles within the wall,” the other replied, lifting his lantern so that the light slid across the mortar lines and showed the fine dark seam that ran from one corner to the next. “As though the stone holds its own reply.”
They marked the seam and moved on, leaving the chalk to dry against the surface. The line of rats passed across it later that same evening, their bodies carrying the mark forward in a faint broken trail that faded as the movement continued.
Children followed the paths where they could be seen, for children kept their eyes upon the ground where others looked ahead. They laid small sticks across the floor and watched how the line would meet them, and each time the sticks were moved aside, set back into place without force or haste, and the line resumed its course as though the interruption had been measured and allowed for before it arrived.
A boy pressed his ear to the wall where the movement ended and drew back with a look he could not name. When his sister asked what he had heard, he told her only that the wall had held a sound that shaped itself and then was gone, leaving nothing he could carry back into words.
The priests came in the third week, and they stood within a brewer’s cellar where the line had been seen to pass for three nights running. Their robes were held clear of the damp, and their hands were set with the care of men who had been called to restore order where it had slipped beyond the reach of common work. The brewer placed a small table between them with a bowl of water and a single flame, and the eldest among them raised his hand above it and spoke the words that had settled such spaces before.
The water lay still. The flame held. The line of rats entered from the rear wall and crossed the floor between them and the brewer. The eldest watched them pass with a steadiness that did not alter as the animals moved within arm’s reach.
“This is a matter of infestation,” he said, and the words carried the weight of use. “The ground has opened to them.”
“They follow a road,” the brewer answered, his hands set flat upon the table. “I have lived here these twelve years. There is no road where they walk.”
The second priest stepped forward and laid his palm against the wall where the line vanished, holding it there as though the stone might yield something under the pressure. When he drew it back, his expression held a measure that had not been present when he entered.
“There is a current,” he said. “It runs below.”
The eldest inclined his head. “Then we close what we can reach.”
They set their marks upon the wall and floor, small signs placed where the line had been seen to pass, and they spoke their words again. The brewer stood with his hands upon the table and watched as the work was done. When they had finished, the eldest told him that the matter would settle and that he should keep his stores raised from the ground until the season turned.
That night, the line passed again, touching the marks and moving through them as water moves through a narrow place, parting and closing without loss of form. In the morning, the brewer found a pale thread drawn through the water in the bowl, a line that held for a moment before it broke and settled into the whole.
Entries were made in the ledgers, each one set down beneath its own heading, and those who kept the records gave to each a cause that allowed it to stand alone. Damp. Settlement. Infestation. Old work beneath new. The words held in place. The lines beneath the city held elsewhere.
A mason opened a section of wall that had begun to bow inward, expecting to find the rot of timber or the failure of a beam. Instead, he found a narrow space behind the plaster where the stone had been set back from itself, a shallow run that curved downward beyond the reach of his lamp. As he raised the light, a line of rats passed along the hollow, their bodies brushing the inner face of the stone, and he felt a movement beneath his hand that matched their passing, a soft pressure that rose and fell in time with the unseen depth of the space.
“Close it,” he said at once.
“With what?” the apprentice asked, his voice thin within the narrow room.
“With whatever holds,” the mason replied, already reaching for the mortar.
They sealed the opening by lamplight, packing the gap until the wall returned to its line. When they stepped back, the room held its shape, though the mason kept his hand upon the stone as though he expected it to answer him again.
Across the district, similar repairs were made. Cracks were filled. Seams were bound. Floors were lifted and set down again where the boards had worn thin. Each act held its place within the work of a day, and each was set down in the small notes kept by those who tended to such things, entries that spoke of maintenance and care and the usual demands of a city that rested upon older ground.
Yet the lines continued.
They moved through cellars and along walls, across floors and beneath thresholds, appearing where they had been seen before and where they had not, holding their course with a precision that refused to loosen. Those who watched them began to mark their passage with chalk and ash and thread, laying lines across the floor to test where the movement would turn. In each case, the path held to itself, bending where it must and resuming its course beyond the reach of sight.
A clerk in the lower offices gathered the reports and set them side by side upon his desk, drawing a map from the fragments as best he could. His pen moved from one account to the next as he traced the routes described in the margins and the brief notes left in the ledgers. When he had finished, he sat for a long time with the page before him, for the lines he had drawn formed a pattern that held beyond any single house or street, a network that ran beneath the district in a shape that had not been set down in any plan he knew.
He carried the page to his superior and laid it upon the table, and he spoke of the movement in careful terms, avoiding any suggestion that would place the matter beyond the common run of maintenance and repair.
“These are reports of vermin,” the superior said, after a brief glance. “They follow food.”
“They follow a line,” the clerk replied. “The line passes through walls.”
The superior turned the page slightly, as though the change in angle might alter what it showed. “You have drawn this from separate entries.”
“I have set them together.”
“And in doing so, you have made a shape that suits your concern.”
“The shape is present whether I draw it or no.”
The superior scattered sand across the page to dry the ink. “Leave this with me,” he said. “I will see it placed within the proper file.”
The clerk withdrew. When the page was entered into the record, it was entered under the heading of seasonal infestation, and the lines were reduced to notes within the margin, each one assigned to its place without reference to the whole.
Toward the end of the fourth week, the movement lessened in several houses at once, and those who had seen it took this as a sign that the matter had passed, that the ground had settled and the animals had moved on to other quarters where the stores lay open and the walls gave easier passage. The ward keepers marked their notes accordingly. The priests spoke of patience and the virtue of ordered space. The ledgers received their final entries.
In certain places, however, the sound beneath the walls continued, a faint interior rustle that moved through the stone without crossing the air. Those who listened for it found that it held a direction that led downward, away from the reach of the cellars and the rooms above, into depths that the city had long since covered and forgotten. When the nights grew still and the houses settled into their quiet, the walls carried that movement in a manner that suggested it had found a road it would keep, whether watched or left to itself.
Rats were observed moving in narrow lines along the foundation walls, maintaining their course even when the path ahead was disturbed.
The Idea Behind the Chronicle
The lower districts of any city carry a different kind of history, one that settles beneath daily life and gathers within the spaces that remain unseen. Cellars, storage rooms, and foundation corridors often extend beyond their original purpose, shaped over time by repair, extension, and quiet neglect. These spaces hold the marks of earlier construction, where walls have been altered, passages closed, and ground reworked in ways that are no longer fully recorded.
This Chronicle draws upon that layered nature of built environments, where what lies beneath continues to influence what stands above. Movement within such spaces is often attributed to natural causes. Animals follow scent and warmth, water shifts through unseen channels, and structures settle under their own weight. These explanations hold in most cases, though there are instances where behaviour within these environments carries a consistency that exceeds simple cause.
Accounts of unusual animal movement appear across historical records, particularly within dense settlements where food, waste, and shelter draw them into close proximity with human habitation. In many of these accounts, the behaviour follows expected patterns. In others, it reflects something more structured, where movement occurs along fixed routes that persist even when disturbed. These routes sometimes appear to correspond with earlier construction, suggesting that what has been built over may still guide what passes through it.
The Whispering Foundations series explores this relationship between structure and persistence. In these accounts, the environment itself carries behaviour that cannot be easily attributed to any single source. Movement follows paths that hold their form across separate locations. Surfaces respond in ways that seem to retain what has passed over them. Spaces that appear enclosed reveal connections that exist beyond visible design.
In this Chronicle, the movement of rats serves as the visible layer of a deeper pattern. Their behaviour is recorded as practical observation, noted in the same manner as any infestation or disturbance within a working district. Yet the consistency of their paths, and the way those paths extend beyond the limits of individual structures, suggest an underlying continuity that remains unrecognised within the official record.
What is preserved here reflects only what was seen and written at the time. The records remain grounded in explanation, attributing the events to conditions within the ground and the structures built upon it. The possibility that the movement followed something more enduring is left without confirmation, held only in the repetition of detail across separate accounts.
The lower districts continue to function as they always have, their foundations supporting the weight of the city above. Beneath them, the earlier layers remain, carrying the forms and spaces that were set down before the present walls were raised. The Chronicle preserves a moment when those layers made themselves known, though only through the movement of what passed along them, leaving the deeper cause to remain within the ground itself.
From the Author’s Desk
Thank you for continuing into this Chronicle.
This account was shaped around the idea that movement can reveal what structure conceals. In many places, the first sign of change arrives through behaviour rather than form, where something small begins to follow a path that should not exist. That path holds long enough to be seen more than once. The lower districts offered a natural setting for this, where foundations overlap and earlier work remains beneath the visible world.
The movement of the rats serves as the surface layer of this Chronicle, a detail that can be recorded, explained, and set aside within practical terms. Yet what interested me most was the persistence of the line itself, the way it continues and the way it appears across separate spaces without clear connection. That sense of continuity becomes the focus, rather than the animals that carry it.
As this series develops, each Chronicle will return to similar moments of early observation, where something is present before it is understood, and where the records reflect only what could be seen at the time. These accounts remain incomplete by design, shaped by the limits of those who encountered them, and by the tendency of the record to settle upon explanation even when something remains unresolved beneath it.
Beyond the Chronicle, my work continues across a range of fantasy and speculative writing that explores these same ideas from a closer distance, where events unfold more directly and the underlying structures begin to take clearer form. Those stories exist alongside these records, offering a different view of the same world.
From the lower district registers, compiled across multiple holdings. The script varies in form, suggesting entries gathered from separate hands and later combined within a single record.
Initial reports of movement were entered during routine inspection of cellar levels, where animals were observed passing along foundation walls in narrow and repeated lines. The entries describe the behaviour in practical terms, noting the presence of damp and the likelihood of underlying channels within the ground, though no single source was identified within the early record.
A subsequent entry, written in a tighter hand, records that the movement remained consistent across separate properties, and that the paths taken by the animals appeared to align where structures stood apart. The writer noted that the routes held even where no passage was known to exist, and that interruption of the movement failed to disperse it beyond the immediate point of contact.
Later annotations describe attempts to clear the affected areas, including the sealing of visible cracks and the reinforcement of lower walls. The entries remark upon the return of the movement following such work, with the lines reappearing along the same routes, and no alteration in their course recorded despite repeated disturbance.
One entry, less formal in its structure, refers to the behaviour as following “a line within the ground”. The phrase is set apart from the main record and carries no further explanation, leaving the note preserved without clarification or expansion.
The final entries record a reduction in visible activity across several locations, and the matter is thereafter marked as resolved within the register, though no definitive cause is assigned beyond reference to seasonal conditions and underlying structural variation.
Marginal Notes & Interpretations
Collected from later annotations added to the same register, appearing in varied script and ink.
One annotation attributes the movement to established animal behaviour, suggesting that the consistency of the paths reflects known patterns of travel through confined environments, where scent and environmental memory guide repeated routes. The writer frames the observations as exaggerated by close conditions within cellar spaces.
A second note challenges this explanation, observing that the alignment of the routes across separate structures suggests a continuity that extends beyond individual environments. The persistence of spacing and direction, as recorded in multiple entries, indicates a pattern that is maintained independently of visible pathways, though the writer leaves the observation without further conclusion.
A third annotation, faint and partially obscured, records that those who observed the movement most closely remarked upon a sensation within the walls themselves, described in uncertain terms as a pressure or passage beneath the stone. The note breaks off before the thought is completed, and the remainder of the line is lost to damage along the edge of the page.
World Notes
Lower District Cellars Subterranean storage spaces constructed beneath residential and trade buildings, often extending beyond their original design through successive modification, and frequently resting upon earlier foundations whose structure is no longer fully recorded.
Foundation Alignment A term occasionally used within structural records to describe correspondence between features of separate buildings, particularly where underlying construction predates current layouts, and where such alignment may influence movement or stress within the ground.
Recorded Movement Entries within municipal and trade registers noting the presence and behaviour of animals within built environments, typically attributed to natural causes. In certain cases, however, the consistency of such movement is recorded without clear explanation, and remains preserved only within the repetition of detail across separate accounts.
Next Chronicle
In the days that followed the reports of movement beneath the lower district, attention shifted toward a chamber recorded in earlier plans as storage. Later entries describe the space as holding a presence that remained after each night’s closing, where the air settled in a manner that did not clear with use or passage, and where those who entered remarked upon a weight that returned even after the room had stood empty.
These accounts were entered without formal concern, attributed to damp conditions and poor ventilation within enclosed spaces. Several notes refer to the persistence of the atmosphere, which appeared to restore itself despite efforts to clear it through light and air.
No connection was made to the movement previously observed within the surrounding structures.
Next Chronicle:The Room That Would Not Clear
The lower district returned to its ordinary rhythm, the cellars cleared and the walls repaired, while the records marked the disturbance as settled and the movement as passed. Beneath the foundations, the paths remained where they had formed, holding their course beyond sight, and within that unseen ground something continued along them, unchanged by their disappe
Some stories begin with war. Others begin with prophecy, a fallen kingdom, or a blade drawn at the edge of an empire.
The Unmarked Path begins with a quieter disturbance.
A magician arrives in a coastal kingdom under sealed orders. A prince governs in the absence of his father and elder brothers. A northern war leader crosses the sea with warriors at his back, uncertain whether the conquest ahead will preserve his people or carry them into something far darker. Beneath these movements, older powers begin to stir. The world has shifted before any of them fully understand what has changed.
This is the opening movement of The Veil of Kings and Gods, my upcoming fantasy novella series, and the first book, The Unmarked Path, will be released soon.
To mark that approaching release, I have created a short animated promotional video offering a first glimpse of the stakes surrounding the story. It is not a full trailer in the traditional sense, and it is not meant to explain every strand of the plot. It is a mood piece, a visual opening into the pressure gathering around the novella: ancient danger, royal uncertainty, invasion from the north, and one magician beginning to stand too close to forces far older than he realises.
At the centre of The Unmarked Path is Simion, a magician of the Order who has never thought of himself as exceptional. He returns to Bremyra, the kingdom where he once lived as a kitchen boy, carrying private instructions from the Council of Five. Three magicians vanished there years earlier while investigating disturbances tied to the ruins of the ancient Imperium Arcana. Simion has been sent to discover what became of them, even as the court around him grows increasingly unstable.
Bremyra is already strained when he arrives. Prince Patrick, third in line to the throne, has been left to manage the kingdom while his father and elder brothers remain absent on a distant expedition. Border tensions are rising. Marriage alliances carry more weight than comfort. The Church watches the Order’s return with suspicion. Every part of the court appears to be functioning, yet uncertainty has settled beneath it.
Then the threats begin to move closer.
An ambush inside Bremyra reveals attackers whose weapons and clothing belong to no familiar neighbouring realm. A royal journey turns violent. Ancient magic hidden beneath the castle awakens to Simion’s touch. A sealed book comes into his possession. A voice beyond mortal understanding warns that the balance is failing and that an old binding is beginning to weaken.
At the same time, far to the north, Týrnan Valgrim leads his people across storm-torn seas. He is a war leader, disciplined and respected, yet already troubled by the cruelty growing within the wider invasion. His arrival on southern shores widens the novella beyond Bremyra’s walls. The world is not facing one contained crisis. Several pressures are beginning to converge, each still distant enough to be misunderstood, each moving towards consequence.
That convergence is what drew me most strongly to this opening book.
I wanted The Unmarked Path to begin at the point before the central conflict becomes fully visible. The story is not about heroes already prepared for destiny. It is about people standing inside ordinary duties, court work, political obligation, military command, magical service, before realising that the ground beneath those duties has started to give way.
Simion does not arrive knowing that his life has entered a larger design. Patrick does not yet know that his temporary stewardship of Bremyra may demand far more than governance. Týrnan does not understand what the southern campaign will truly become. Even Princess Elana, whose presence carries an emotional warmth through the first novella, begins the story on a path chosen for dynastic duty rather than personal freedom.
Each of them is caught at the edge of change.
That was the feeling I wanted the animated promo to carry. Not a summary. Not a sequence of plot revelations. A sense that several lives are moving towards the same gathering storm, and that once they cross the threshold, the world they understood will no longer be enough.
The Veil of Kings and Gods is a long-form fantasy novella series concerned with power, belief, memory, empire, and the individuals drawn into histories they never asked to inherit. The Unmarked Path opens that wider arc through political tension, magical mystery, northern invasion, and the first signs of an ancient danger pressing once more against the world.
The book will be released soon, and I will share the publication details once the final launch is ready.
For now, this animated preview offers the first public look at the tone and stakes of the story.
A record of the chapel beneath which the stone first answered, though no account agrees on what was heard within it
The Record of the Lower Chapel Stair
The steps beneath the chapel had been sealed long before any of them were born, while the stone held the memory of passage and the air carried a stillness that belonged to use long since withdrawn.
Brother Halven paused at the threshold where the last of the daylight reached, his lantern held low as though the flame itself might disturb what lay below, and he remained there for a time as his eyes adjusted to the dimness and the quiet settled more firmly around him. The stairwell curved away in a narrow descent, worn smooth by a passage that had once seen frequent use, even if no record within the chapel spoke of its purpose, and the marks left by that former movement seemed to linger with a presence that had not entirely faded.
“Are you certain it begins here?” he asked, the words drawn out more from a need for sound than from doubt, as though the act of speaking might steady the space itself.
The man beside him, a stonemason by trade, though called here under a quieter instruction, shifted his weight and looked down into the dark as though it might answer before he did, his gaze lingering in a way that suggested he had already measured what could be seen and found it insufficient.
“It is where it was closed,” the mason said after a moment, his voice carrying without strain into the confined space. “Where it begins lies further in.”
Halven held his gaze on the stair, taking in the shallow curve of the walls and the faint marks left by hands long gone, each one catching the lantern light in ways that suggested presence lingering in absence, and he found that his attention returned to them again and again, as though they carried some trace of what had passed through here before the sealing had taken place.
Behind them, the chapel doors had been drawn shut, leaving the world above reduced to a distant sense of structure rather than sound, while the faint trace of incense lingered along the stone as though unwilling to fade, and the memory of it seemed to press downward with them as they stood at the edge of the descent.
Halven stepped forward, committing his weight to the stair with a measured motion that carried him from the threshold into the enclosed passage, and the change in the air came at once, subtle though unmistakable.
The first step took his weight with a dull shift that travelled further than it should have, and the dust that rose beneath his boot hung for a moment in the air as though held in place before it settled again, while the faint sound of the movement seemed to linger longer than its cause.
He raised the lantern, allowing the light to press outward into the space ahead, where it thinned as it reached forward, fading into the darkness without meeting any clear boundary, and as he watched it, he became aware that the walls seemed to draw closer as the stair descended, rough where the stone had been cut and smoother where time and touch had worn it down.
“How far?” he asked, his voice lowered by the space itself, shaped by the closeness of the walls and the weight that seemed to rest within them.
The mason followed a pace behind, his own lamp casting a second shadow that moved against the first in a slow and uneven rhythm, the two shapes crossing and separating as the descent continued.
“Only a short distance,” he said. “The break lies near the base. The stone there carries through the wall.”
Halven let the words settle, the phrasing holding without opening, and he moved on as the stair drew them further down.
They continued step by step, the passage narrowing in feeling, if not in measure, while the air cooled as they descended and pressed against the chest in a manner that belonged to confinement rather than depth, and Halven became aware of his breathing as it moved through him with a faint resistance that had not followed him from above.
At the turn of the stair, he slowed and then came to a stop, his hand tightening around the lantern’s handle as he listened more closely to what lay ahead.
“Do you hear that?” he asked, keeping his voice low as though the space itself might answer if given cause.
The mason inclined his head, listening with a stillness that suggested familiarity with such moments, his attention fixed on something that lay beyond the reach of sight, and he remained in that posture long enough that the silence around them seemed to deepen in response.
“It is within the stone,” he said.
Halven frowned, his eyes narrowing as he strained to place the sound, which seemed to rest in the space rather than move through it, and each attempt to follow it only caused it to slip further from clear perception.
“This carries no shape,” he said. “It holds itself in place.”
“It requires no path,” the mason replied, his voice quiet though steady.
The sound lingered, a low and layered presence that rose and fell without direction, slipping from any attempt to follow it and leaving only the sense that it had been there at all, while beneath it a faint scent threaded through the air, turning slowly as it settled, something sweet that had been left too long in stillness.
“We should leave this place,” Halven said, though he remained where he stood, his grip tightening slightly on the lantern as the thought failed to carry him back.
The mason gave a small nod, his attention still held ahead, and together they continued downward until the stair ended at a narrow landing where the passage met its closure.
The wall ahead had been reinforced with heavy stone blocks set at a later time than the passage itself, their edges uneven and their placement hurried, as though the act of closing had mattered more than the manner of it, and the join between them held a tension that had not settled into age.
Halven stepped forward and placed his hand against the surface, feeling the cold of the stone beneath his palm, while within that cold there lay a faint movement that passed into him, slight at first though it held once it reached him, as though something shifted deep within the wall.
He drew his hand back, his fingers tightening slightly as he looked to the mason, the sensation lingering in his skin even after contact had been broken.
“This was done in haste,” he said, allowing the words to settle into the space between them.
“Years ago,” the mason replied, his gaze still fixed on the wall. “The marks remain.”
Halven lifted the lantern closer, bringing the light across the surface where scratches ran along the blocks, shallow and uneven, as though something had pressed against them from the other side, each line catching the light before fading back into the roughness of the stone, and the repetition of them suggested a persistence that had not eased.
“Tools would leave a cleaner edge,” Halven said, his voice quieter now, shaped by the closeness of the space and the weight of what lay before him.
The mason shook his head once.
“No tool reaches through stone from the far side,” he said.
The sound came again, and this time it gathered for longer, a layered murmur that seemed to rise through the wall itself, holding for a breath before breaking apart into something that slipped away again, leaving a trace that lingered in the air.
Halven felt his throat tighten as he stepped back from the surface, the space around him seeming to shift with the movement.
“There are people below,” he said, though the words failed to hold as they left him.
The mason remained still, his attention fixed beyond the wall.
“There is something below,” he said.
The lantern light flickered, its flame bending without any movement in the air to disturb it, and Halven steadied it with his hand, watching as the shadows shifted along the walls in a slow and uneven motion.
“We must break through,” he said, forcing the words into shape as the pressure within the space grew harder to ignore. “If anything remains.”
“There is nothing left to reach,” the mason said quietly.
Halven turned to him, searching his expression, though the man’s gaze remained fixed beyond the wall, as though the stone itself held more than its surface revealed.
“How can you speak with such assurance?” he asked.
The mason remained still, his attention held by what lay unseen.
“Because this was sealed to hold something in place,” he said.
The sound returned once more, and it held longer this time, gathering into something that almost took shape before slipping away again, while the scent in the air deepened and settled between them.
Halven felt the space thicken around him as the lantern light dimmed without losing its flame, and the words came as though they had been spoken before.
“We close it again,” he said.
The mason remained where he stood.
“It was never closed,” he said.
Halven held his breath for a moment, the weight of the stair rising behind him and the chapel above reduced to something distant, while before him the wall remained steady in a way that grew less certain with each passing breath, and the presence within the stone seemed to settle more fully into the space.
The sound faded, and the silence that followed carried it more fully than any echo could have done, settling into the stone as though it had always been there.
Foundation Register: Chapel of Saint Veyne
The chapel stood upon an earlier foundation whose origin was absent from the surviving register, and what remained of the record held only passing reference to structures that had once occupied the ground before the present walls had been raised.
During restoration of the lower chamber, structural surveys recorded a void beneath the western section, reached by a narrow stair that descended into the foundation and was later sealed at its base, the entry noting the closure as completed following disturbance encountered within the stone during inspection of the wall.
The nature of that disturbance was left without description, though a separate notation, set apart from the main record, referred to the presence of sound within the structure, described only as persistent and unaffected by movement within the passage, and no attempt was made within the register to assign cause or meaning to what had been heard.
The stair was marked as secured, though later annotations suggested further work had been required after the initial closure, and the absence of any formal record of its completion remained without correction, leaving the entry incomplete in a manner that was neither revised nor removed.
No subsequent references to the passage appeared within the register, and the foundation beneath the chapel was thereafter recorded as stable.
About the Creator
The Mythic Chronicle is written and curated by Simon Phillips, a writer of mythic and speculative fantasy whose work explores the quieter edges of forgotten worlds, where buried structures, fractured records, and lingering presences continue beneath the surface of recorded history.
The accounts preserved within these Chronicles form part of a wider body of work in which cities stand upon older foundations, and events recorded as isolated disturbances are understood, in later tellings, to belong to patterns that were never fully recognised at the time.
One such account survives in a separate record, detailing an incident within a lower district where a death was first dismissed as excess, though the space in which it occurred retained a presence that resisted clearing, and where investigation revealed signs that the disturbance had not been confined to a single room.
This record is preserved in the novella Black Feathers in a Brothel, where the events surrounding that incident are followed more closely, though even there the full nature of what lay beneath the structure remains uncertain.
Readers who wish to examine that account in its fuller form may find the record below.
They returned to the chapel before dawn, when the streets above still held the quiet that came before trade and prayer reclaimed the day, and the doors were opened only far enough to admit those who had already been told what they would find within, the hinges giving a low sound that carried briefly before settling into the stillness of the nave.
Brother Halven stood at the front with two others drawn from the order, men who carried themselves with the restraint expected of their station, while their attention moved often toward the western wall where the stair lay concealed beneath stone that gave no outward sign of what rested below. The air within the chapel held its usual scent of wax and incense, while beneath it a faint sweetness lingered, settled so lightly that it might have passed unnoticed had it not already been known.
“You heard it clearly?” one of the brothers asked, his voice kept low so that it remained within the space between them and did not travel further into the chamber.
“It held within the stone,” Halven said, keeping his tone even, though the memory of it remained present as he spoke, resting within him with a weight that had not lessened since the night before. “It carried no distance.”
The second man, older and marked by years of quiet service, inclined his head in a slow acknowledgement, his gaze fixed upon Halven with a steadiness that measured more than the words alone.
“And the passage remains sealed.”
“It was sealed when we left it,” Halven replied, his eyes shifting briefly toward the wall before returning. “Whether it holds is another matter.”
The older brother turned slightly, his attention moving toward the wall as though he might read it through the stone alone, and after a moment he spoke again, his tone steady and contained, shaped by long habit rather than hesitation.
“We will leave it,” he said. “The work below has been concluded. There is no purpose in opening what has already been set aside.”
Halven held his silence, the memory of the sound resting within him with a persistence that gave the words little weight, and the stillness of the chapel pressed more firmly around him, as though it held that same memory in place.
“It remains active,” he said after a moment, his voice quiet though certain. “Whatever lies below has not settled.”
The older man’s expression remained unchanged, though his eyes sharpened slightly as he regarded Halven more closely, weighing what had been said without allowing it to alter his stance.
“Then it will settle,” he said. “Such things pass.”
Halven lowered his gaze, the answer meeting the weight of the space and falling short, and he turned his attention toward the wall once more, where the stone held its place with an ease that felt too steady to trust.
“We should confirm the seal,” he said, the suggestion carried with quiet insistence, though it held the shape of something already decided.
The two men exchanged a brief glance, and the younger shifted his stance as though preparing to object, though the older brother raised a hand and the motion ceased before it took form.
“You will confirm it,” he said to Halven. “You will do so with care, and you will record that the foundation remains stable.”
Halven inclined his head, accepting the instruction without further word, and turned toward the western wall, where the covering stone had already been prepared for removal.
The stair was opened again, the slab drawn back and the narrow descent revealed once more, while the air that rose from it felt heavier than before, as though it had settled deeper into itself in the hours since they had left it, carrying with it the same faint sweetness that had no place within stone.
Halven took the lantern and stepped down, the others remaining above at the edge of the opening where the light did not reach, and as he descended the silence below deepened into something that held rather than waited, enclosing the space around him with a steadiness that resisted change.
Each step carried him further into that held space, and the marks along the walls seemed more pronounced, the worn stone catching the light in ways that suggested movement long after it had ceased, and his gaze returned to them again and again, as though they held some trace of what had passed here before the passage had been closed.
At the turn of the stair, he slowed, listening for the sound that had lingered before, though it gave no immediate answer, leaving only the weight of the air and the scent that had deepened into something more difficult to ignore as it settled within the passage.
He continued downward, the stair giving way to the narrow landing where the reinforced wall stood as it had before, its surface marked by shallow lines that caught the lantern light and faded again, though the pattern of them suggested a persistence that had not eased with time.
As Halven approached, he felt the faint movement within the stone before his hand reached it, the vibration passing outward with a presence that required no contact, and he stopped a short distance from the wall, holding himself still as he listened.
The sound came then, filling the space at once, a layered murmur that held within the stone and pressed outward without direction, and as Halven listened, he felt it settle into him, received and held.
He drew a breath and stepped closer, raising the lantern so that the light moved across the scratches, where they seemed to shift as the flame moved, though no change held once his gaze fixed upon them.
“Brother Halven.”
The voice came from above, distant though clear, and he turned his head slightly, though his stance remained, the sound within the wall holding his attention even as the call reached him.
“It holds,” he said, his voice carrying upward through the stair. “The stone remains set.”
“Then return,” the voice replied. “The record will be made.”
Halven remained where he stood, the sound within the wall gathering again, holding longer this time, and within it there came a pattern that gathered toward shape before slipping away again.
“Brother Halven.”
The call came again, sharper now, and he drew a breath, forcing his attention back toward the stair, though the sound lingered within him as he turned away from the wall.
“I am returning,” he said, and stepped back, the movement breaking something in the air so that the sound shifted with it, thinning for a moment before gathering again, though it no longer held with the same weight as before.
He began the ascent, the stair rising before him in a slow curve that seemed longer than before, and with each step the air grew lighter, the pressure remaining with him as he moved upward, settling deeper with each step.
When he reached the threshold, the light from above pressed down, and the presence within the passage fell away enough that he drew a full breath, though the faint trace of sweetness lingered still.
“It holds,” he said as he stepped into the chapel once more, his voice steady, though the memory of the space below remained with him.
The older brother watched him, his gaze measuring more than the words alone, and then inclined his head in quiet acceptance.
“Then it will remain so,” he said, and the covering stone was returned to its place, the stair sealed once more beneath it as the chapel resumed its usual order.
Halven remained for a time after the others had gone, standing near the western wall where the stone gave no sign of what lay below, and his attention returned to that place again and again, where the wall gave nothing back.
The day passed in its accustomed rhythm, the chapel filling and emptying as it always did, though the memory of the stair remained close, held without fading as the light shifted and the hours moved on.
As evening fell, Halven returned to the lower chamber, carrying no lantern, allowing the dimness of the space to remain undisturbed as he stood before the sealed stair, his breath steady as he listened into the stillness that held there.
For a long time, the space remained quiet, though the quiet itself held a weight that pressed gently against the ear, and when the sound came again, it rose slowly from within the stone, gathering into a layered murmur that held in place and pressed outward without direction.
Halven stood without speaking, feeling the presence settle into him once more, deeper now, and he remained there as it gathered and shifted, pressing toward shape before slipping away again.
When it faded, the silence that followed held its shape, settling into the stone as though it had always been there, and Halven remained for a time longer before turning away, leaving the wall as it stood.
The chapel above remained unchanged, the record would carry the foundation as stable, and the stair would remain sealed, while beneath it the sound held its place without need of witness.
A stair reopened beneath the chapel revealed a passage that held its silence too closely, where the stone carried a presence that remained unchanged by time or touch, and where those who descended found that the quiet itself did not remain empty for long.
The Idea Behind the Chronicle
Many cities are built upon ground that has been used and reshaped across generations, where each new structure rests upon what came before, and the earlier layers are seldom removed entirely. Foundations remain, passages are sealed, and spaces that once held purpose are left beneath the visible world, their presence acknowledged only when something disturbs them.
The Chronicle of the lower chapel draws upon this quiet layering of place, where construction does not erase what lies beneath, though it conceals it within stone and time. In such environments, the boundary between past use and present structure becomes uncertain, and what has been closed away does not always settle into stillness as expected.
Throughout history, records of sealed passages, hidden chambers, and disturbed foundations appear in fragments rather than complete accounts. Repairs uncover voids where none were expected, walls reveal markings that hold no clear origin, and spaces once considered secure are revisited only when something alters the behaviour of the structure itself.
The Whispering Foundations series explores this idea of persistence within built environments. Rather than presenting corruption as something that arrives from outside, these accounts suggest that it exists within the structure, moving through stone, settling within walls, and remaining present even when the spaces it inhabits are closed.
In such places, sound behaves differently. Air carries traces that do not disperse. Surfaces hold impressions that resist removal. Those who encounter these conditions often record what they observe, though their accounts remain incomplete, shaped by what they can perceive rather than what fully exists.
The chapel in this Chronicle stands as one such place. Its foundation supports the structure above, while beneath it the earlier construction remains, carrying with it a presence that is neither fully understood nor entirely absent. The record preserves only what was noted at the time, leaving the rest to remain within the stone.
From the Author’s Desk
Thank you for continuing into this Chronicle.
This first account was shaped around the idea that a place can change long before anyone understands that it has, and that those early moments are often recorded in fragments that carry more uncertainty than clarity. The lower chapel passage sits within that space, where observation comes before understanding, and where what is noted at the time rarely reflects the full extent of what is present.
Across this series, each Chronicle will return to similar spaces beneath the city, where structures hold traces of disturbance that were once dismissed, misread, or left unresolved. These are not complete accounts, though fragments preserved from different points of contact, each one adding to a pattern that was never fully recognised.
Beyond the Chronicle, my writing continues across a range of fantasy and speculative work, including short stories and novellas that explore the same underlying themes from a different perspective. Some of those accounts follow events more closely, while others remain at a distance, allowing the world to emerge through what is recorded rather than what is explained.
Readers who wish to explore further may find additional work through the links included in this publication.
From the sealed folios of Saint Veyne, origin uncertain. The script shows signs of partial erasure and later correction.
The lower passage was first entered during repair of the western foundation, where the stone gave way beneath inspection and revealed a void that held no place within the earlier plans, and those sent below recorded no immediate hazard, though the air within the passage carried a stillness that resisted disturbance, while the light failed to travel far beyond the first stretch of descent.
A second entry, written in a different hand, records that those assigned to the work began to remark upon sound within the walls, though the accounts remain inconsistent in their description, some referring to a low murmur, others to a pressure that settled within the space, and one entry, less steady in its form, describing the sound as remaining even when no movement was made and no voice was raised.
The passage was ordered sealed after a short period of inspection, and the method of closure is recorded in detail, though the reason for that decision is absent from the primary entry, leaving the act preserved without the cause that required it.
A later annotation, set within the margin in a tighter script, states that the sealing required reinforcement beyond the original instruction, and that further work was undertaken after the first attempt failed to hold, though no full account of that failure remains within the folio.
The final notation marks the passage as secured, and no further entries refer to the lower chamber, leaving the record complete in form, though lacking in explanation.
Marginal Notes & Interpretations
Collected from later annotations found in the outer margins of the same folio.
One annotation suggests that the reports of sound arose from strain within the foundation, attributed to age and shifting weight from the structure above, and the writer dismisses the accounts as the result of confined air and heightened awareness within a closed space, though no supporting detail is offered beyond the assertion itself.
Another note, written in a firmer hand, disputes this interpretation, stating that the persistence of the sound, as described in the earlier entries, does not align with movement within the structure alone, and that the absence of variation between positions within the passage suggests a source that does not correspond to natural cause, though the writer leaves the statement without further conclusion.
A third annotation, faint and partially obscured, records that those assigned to the sealing spoke little after the work was completed, and that one requested reassignment without offering reason, the line ending before the thought is fully set down and the remainder of the note lost to the damage along the edge of the page.
World Notes
Saint Veyne Chapel A modest structure built upon an earlier foundation whose origin is not preserved within the surviving records, the current chapel serving the surrounding district, while the lower construction beneath it belongs to an earlier phase that has not been fully accounted for
Foundation Passages Subterranean spaces uncovered during repair or expansion of older structures, often absent from formal plans and recorded only at the point of discovery, after which they are commonly sealed, particularly where their origin or purpose cannot be determined with certainty.
Recorded Disturbance A term found within limited ecclesiastical records, used to describe irregularities within structure or space that resist immediate classification, where official entries tend to assign natural cause, though marginal annotations sometimes preserve alternative observations that remain unresolved.
Next Chronicle
In the weeks following the sealing of the passage beneath Saint Veyne, brief reports began to appear across the lower district, noting unusual rat movement within cellars and along foundation walls, where the animals were observed moving in narrow, repeated paths that did not break when disturbed.
These movements were recorded without further inquiry, attributed to changes within the ground beneath the city, though several entries remark upon the consistency of the routes, which appeared to hold their place even where no passage was known to exist.
No connection was made to the earlier disturbance beneath the chapel.
Next Chronicle: The Rats Beneath the Walls
The chapel of Saint Veyne remained as it had been, its walls steady and its records complete, while beneath its foundation the sealed passage held in silence, and within that silence something persisted, unchanged by its concealment and untouched by the certainty recorded above it.
Zone Thirteen stood at the edge of human order, though order had become a generous word for what remained there. The roads held their shape through habit more than repair. Pylons leaned into the wind with stripped frames and tired wires. Habitation shells endured by patchwork, scavenged metal, old clamps, and the quiet discipline of those who had learned to survive among systems already past their intended life.
For a mythic sci-fantasy novella, this kind of place matters. Power rarely begins inside palaces or temples. It begins where nobody expects consequence to gather. It begins in forgotten ground, beneath broken infrastructure, among salvage routes and old machines that still carry a faint memory of function. In Zone Thirteen, the opening movement of The Chronicles of Aeloria, the world does not announce itself through prophecy. It presses against the skin first.
Aeloria’s world is built from edges. The edge of roads. The edge of notice. The edge of value. The edge of systems that still respond in fragments. His life among salvage, tokens, failed conduits, and old relay units places him inside a fractured worlds fantasy series before the wider realms are ever named. The science fantasy pressure is already present in the environment itself, where broken technology carries something older than machinery and where dormant crystal behaviour waits beneath practical survival.
Zone Thirteen is not simply a damaged settlement. It is a pressure space. Every surface suggests previous use, previous collapse, previous hands stripping away whatever could still be sold or made useful. The people living there have inherited failure without receiving explanation. They cross unstable ground because the ground still allows them to cross. They use systems because enough of those systems continue to answer. They survive without believing survival has larger meaning.
That is why the shard matters before it is understood.
Power Before Understanding
In many fantasy stories, power arrives as revelation. In Zone Thirteen, power arrives as misalignment. The hum changes. The ground delays its response. Pylons flare when no working line should carry current. A storm gathers around an object whose shape and behaviour exceed every category available to the boy who finds it.
This is where the novella’s strongest discovery language sits. Aeloria does not step into mastery. He is pulled into pressure. The shard responds to him through heat, weight, resistance, and bodily consequence, making power feel like an event before it becomes a destiny. It is a magical crystal world fantasy without the comfort of clean enchantment. The crystal does not explain itself. It enters the body’s awareness through pulse and strain.
That restraint gives the world its force. Ancient systems remain present, yet their purpose has thinned into fragments. Relay units, pylons, conduits, machines, and scanning beams all belong to a technological order, while the shard and surge belong to an inheritance older than human control. The result is fantasy with ancient technology shaped through use, decay, and response. Nothing feels decorative. Nothing exists only to signal wonder. Every object carries function, failure, or threat.
The Zone teaches Aeloria how to read surfaces. He knows which paths draw attention, which structures still offer cover, which salvage holds value, and which movements might leave traces. That training becomes crucial once the world itself begins acting like a system that can notice him. He has spent his life avoiding attention in a place where attention costs. Once the shard wakes, hiding becomes more difficult because the environment responds before people do.
This is one of the deeper tensions inside atmospheric sci-fantasy fiction. A broken system can remain survivable for years, even generations, until something returns meaning to it. Zone Thirteen has survived through neglect because neglect is predictable. The surge changes that. It reminds the Zone of older pathways, older connections, and older power. What once failed quietly begins answering in fragments, and each answer draws the attention of forces trained to contain rather than understand.
The figures who arrive after the surge carry a different kind of fear. They are clean where the Zone is worn. Their machines move with coordinated precision through a place that usually belongs to improvisation and adaptation. They speak in controlled signals: contact, containment, grid. Their presence turns Aeloria’s home into an operational field, reducing lived ground into a map of detection and response.
That shift matters because The Awakening of Power is a series about misreading. Institutions see signal before person. Systems see anomaly before fear. Power is classified before it is understood. Aeloria becomes dangerous to others the moment the world reacts to him, even though he remains the one least able to explain what has happened.
Entering Zone Thirteen
Zone Thirteen is Book 1 of The Chronicles of Aeloria, and it functions as the first contained movement in a slow-burn fantasy novella series shaped around pressure, displacement, and awakening. Its focus remains intimate. It holds close to one boy, one settlement, one guardian figure, one shard, and one rupture that changes the scale of everything.
The novella’s surface is survival. Aeloria moves through salvage routes, trades recovered parts, returns to the shack he shares with Larn, and measures value through tokens, repairs, and risk. Beneath that practical rhythm, the world begins to reveal its deeper instability. The ground shifts by fractions before larger distortions arrive. Systems respond in brief fragments before the surge takes hold. The storm grows from environmental pressure into something that feels almost structural, as though reality itself has begun to move out of alignment.
The experience of entering Zone Thirteen is the experience of entering a world already strained past comfort. It does not rush to explain its history. Instead, it lets the reader feel the shape of life inside its failure. Salvage is labour, habit, economy, and concealment. Larn’s shack is shelter, base, repair space, and emotional centre. The shard is discovery, wound, inheritance, and signal. The rupture is departure, threat, and threshold at once.
What makes this opening work as a science fantasy novella series entry is its refusal to treat awakening as triumph. Aeloria gains no clean victory from the shard. He loses stability. He loses the safety of being overlooked. He sees Larn threatened. He feels the world answer him without consent. By the end, the Zone itself tears open, and the familiar ground beneath him gives way to motion, light, and the unknown.
The result is a beginning that feels complete in emotional pressure while leaving the larger mythic system unresolved. The novella closes the life Aeloria knew. It opens the passage into everything his world had buried.
The First Pressure of the Fractured Realms
Beyond Zone Thirteen, the larger movement of The Awakening of Power rests on fractured realms, ancient crystal systems, separated races, weakened pathways, and a forgotten inheritance that each civilisation understands only in part. The first novella keeps that larger architecture mostly beneath the surface, which strengthens its mystery. The reader senses scale through reaction rather than explanation.
The shard’s behaviour suggests inheritance before history names it. The surge shows that dormant systems can awaken through contact with the right presence. The glider introduces the possibility of non-human craft without turning the scene into exposition. The machines and external operators reveal that human authority has already developed methods for detection and containment, perhaps long before Aeloria ever became visible to them.
This layered approach allows the series to grow without feeling sudden. Zone Thirteen becomes the first pressure chamber of the wider fractured worlds fantasy series. It shows the human edge of a broken order: poor infrastructure, procedural enforcement, salvage economies, survival routes, and old systems degraded into partial function. Later realms may bring temples, pathways, crystal harmonics, elven vessels, ancient ruins, and political fear, yet their foundation is already present in the way Zone Thirteen behaves.
The fractured realms are living systems rather than simple locations. They remember through infrastructure. They answer through instability. They preserve old connections in damaged forms. When Aeloria touches the shard, he does more than activate an object. He forces the hidden relationship between body, crystal, environment, and old design into motion again.
That is where the mythic weight begins. Power in this world is neither prize nor weapon in its first expression. It is pressure. It changes footing. It changes sound. It changes how machines move and how people speak. It turns a scavenger into a signal and a home into a containment zone.
The cost of that awakening lies in the way no one present can fully interpret it. The Zone cannot explain itself. The operators act through procedure. Larn understands enough to recognise danger, yet even his protection cannot hold against the scale of what has begun. Aeloria feels the truth physically, long before he can name it. That gives the series its strongest continuity thread: understanding always arrives late.
What the World Remembers
Zone Thirteen remains behind, though it does not vanish. Places like that never vanish cleanly. They remain in the body through habit, caution, and the memory of ground tested before each step. They remain in the way a person watches doorways, listens to hums, weighs silence, and understands that attention can become a form of danger.
Aeloria leaves the Zone through rupture, yet the Zone has already shaped the way he will move through every realm that follows. He has learned broken systems before he learns ancient ones. He has learned survival before inheritance. He has learned that value is always judged by those holding power, and that being useful can become another kind of trap.
The world beyond the rupture waits with its own temples, pathways, ruins, and crystal pressures. Other races will carry their own partial truths. Other systems will claim older authority. The fractured realms may speak of balance, restoration, fear, and unity, yet the first lesson remains grounded in dust, salvage, and failing pylons.
A forgotten place answered first.
A shard woke inside a boy who had spent his life avoiding notice.