Primordial Heir: Nine Stars-Chapter 336: Date in the mountain/Nightmare

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Chapter 336: Date in the mountain/Nightmare

The investigation had hit another wall. A full day of searching the perimeter, interviewing anxious villagers, and scanning for magical residue had yielded nothing but frustration and tired feet. The ghostly threat was dormant, the mysterious observer remained unseen, and the waiting was a heavy weight.

As evening painted the sky in soft watercolors of peach and lavender, Nero found Khione sitting on the steps of their villa, staring silently at the distant mountain peaks. He sat beside her, their shoulders touching. He didn’t ask what she was thinking. He knew.

He reached into his spatial ring and pulled out a simple, checkered cloth. Then, he produced a small basket he’d quietly commissioned from a villager that afternoon—filled with fresh, crusty bread, soft cheese, cold slices of roasted meat, and a few pieces of dark chocolate.

He held it up, raising an eyebrow.

Khione looked from the basket to his face. The cold tension in her shoulders, the focused sharpness from the investigation, slowly melted away. A faint, real smile touched her lips. She nodded. She loves moment like this.

Without a word, they stood. He took her hand, and they walked away from the villa, away from the village with its lingering fear, away from the mission. They followed a narrow, winding path that led up the gentler slopes behind Oakhaven, into the quiet embrace of the pines.

They walked in a comfortable, deep silence. The only sounds were their footsteps on the needle-strewn path, the distant call of an evening bird, and the sigh of the wind in the high branches. He carried the basket. Her hand remained in his.

They found a perfect spot—a small, flat clearing of soft grass and moss, perched on the edge of a bluff. Below, the village was a tiny, twinkling cluster of lights in the gathering dusk. Above, the first bold stars were appearing. The air was cool and clean, scented with pine and earth.

He spread the cloth. She knelt and began unpacking the simple food with a quiet, deliberate care. They sat cross-legged, facing each other, the food between them, the vast, quiet world spread out below.

There was no need for conversation. The silence was their language. He broke the bread and handed her a piece. She took it, their fingers brushing. He sliced the cheese. She arranged the meat on a shared plate. They ate slowly, savoring the simplicity.

A look was enough. He’d glance at the horizon where the last light was fading, and she’d follow his gaze, a shared appreciation passing between them. She’d offer him the last piece of chocolate, and his grateful smile was his thank you.

When they finished, he put the things away. She moved to sit beside him, leaning back on her hands. He lay down on his back, hands behind his head, looking up at the emerging starfield. After a moment, she lay down next to him, close enough that their arms touched from shoulder to elbow.

The universe wheeled silently above them. A satellite, a tiny moving star, traced a slow path across the black. The Milky Way began to dust the sky with its faint, luminous cloud.

He turned his head to look at her profile against the stars. She felt his gaze and turned her head to meet it. In the starlight, her eyes were not ice blue, but liquid silver, deep and calm. He reached over and gently brushed a strand of white hair from her cheek, tucking it behind her ear. His fingers lingered for a second against her skin.

She didn’t pull away. She turned her face slightly, pressing her cheek into his palm for a brief, breathtaking moment. Then she shifted, rolling onto her side to face him, propping her head on her hand. He did the same.

They lay like that, nose to nose in the grass, under the infinite sky, saying everything without uttering a single word. The fears, the threats, the political games, the unseen watchers—it all shrank to insignificance under the silent, ancient witness of the stars. Here, on their mountain, on their patch of cloth, there was only this. This peace. This connection. This quiet, absolute certainty in each other’s eyes.

He leaned in slowly, giving her every chance to pull back. She didn’t. She met him halfway. The kiss was soft, lingering, and spoke volumes more than any declaration could. It tasted of chocolate and cold mountain air and promise.

When they parted, they simply went back to looking at each other, a new, profound softness in their gaze. Eventually, she rested her head on his outstretched arm, and he wrapped the other around her, pulling her close against his side. They lay intertwined, watching the stars turn, listening to each other’s heartbeat, until the moon rose and bathed their mountain clearing in silver.

The date had no words, no grand gestures. It had bread, cheese, stars, and silence. And for them, in the middle of the gathering storm, it was everything.

°°°

That night, Khione had a dream, no calling it a nightmare should be more accurate, she was facing an horde of monsters trying to eat her, her normal spell weren’t working when suddenly the Khione in the dream smiled before executing a brand new spell.

Then something shocking happened when cast this spell.

The monster soaring through the air.

The maw baring its sharp teeth.

The creature lunging forward with intestines trailing behind.

All of them turned pure white.

But that wasn’t all.

Every monster within the range of Khione’s magic also oxidized into pure white.

Ssshh—

They scattered.

It wasn’t a flashy spell.

There wasn’t an earth-shaking explosion.

It wasn’t tyrannical either.

Nor was it overwhelming.

They simply scattered.

Like snowmen slowly melting at the arrival of spring.

Every monster within her magical domain became nothing more than drifting snowflakes.

Monsters.

Maws.

Creatures.

Even the tree that ceaselessly birthed them.

It was beautiful yet deadly.

’’Gasp!"

Khione woke up in the real world gasping for breath, even she felt overwhelmed by this spell, she began to forget what she had seen, she immediately went out to train, to try this new spell or something closer to it, it would become her biggest trump card.