Chapter 41: The Stair Beneath The Sun
The stairway behind the broken statue led deeper beneath the palace.
Silas stood at the top step, looking down into darkness that seemed older than the walls around it. The air rising from below was cold and damp, but there was something else beneath it. A faint mineral smell. Wet stone. Old metal. Water that had not seen open air in years.
Elara held her lantern closer to the first step.
The carved symbol waited beneath a layer of dust.
A white stag bowing beneath a black sun.
She stared at it for a long moment. "Please tell me that is only an old family mark."
"It is an old family mark," Silas said.
Elara looked at him.
He added, "I do not know if it is only that."
"That was the part I wanted."
"I know."
She sighed and looked down the stairway again. "You are going to go down there."
"Yes."
"Of course you are."
Silas turned slightly. "You do not have to come."
Elara gave him a flat look. "Do not start that. If you go down alone and something eats you, Lyra will blame me. Ravena may kill me. And worse, I will have to admit you were right about needing someone near you with sense."
"You make it sound unbearable."
"It is."
He almost smiled.
Then the sound came again.
Drip.
A pause.
Drip.
Not quite steady. Not quite random. It echoed from far below, moving through the stairwell like a slow pulse.
Elara’s fingers tightened around the lantern handle. "Water should not sound like that."
"No."
"You are allowed to say something comforting."
"I doubt you would believe me."
"I would really appreciate the effort."
Silas looked down into the dark. "If something terrible lived below us, Father Oryn would not have left so calmly."
Elara considered that. "That is not comforting at all."
"It was the best I could do."
"That worries me."
They descended.
The steps were narrow and uneven, carved directly into old stone. Dust thickened along the edges, but the center of the stairway had been disturbed recently. Not often. Not by many people. But enough to show that Father Oryn was not the first person to use the passage.
The walls curved tightly around them. Old carvings appeared under layers of grime and limewash. Circles. Stags. Crowns. Rays of light swallowed by dark rings. Many had been scratched away, but not completely. Whoever tried to erase them had been angry, not careful.
Elara ran her fingers near one of the carvings without touching it. "This is not Radiant Court work."
"How can you tell?"
"The Radiant symbols at the bellhouse were proud. Big. Clean. Like they were meant for everyone to see them from across the street. These are smaller. Almost hidden."
Silas glanced at her. "You have been paying attention very well."
"I would like to live."
"A strong motivation."
"Very strong."
They continued downward.
After several turns, the passage widened enough for them to walk side by side. The dripping grew louder. The air grew colder. Elara’s lantern flame bent toward the lower darkness, though there was no wind.
She noticed it too. "That is definitely not normal."
"No."
"You keep saying no."
"Because it keeps being true."
"Try saying something else you know,"
Silas paused and looked at the flame. "Whatever is below is pulling air inward."
Elara stared at him. "That’s even worse."
"You asked for something else."
"Did I?."
At the bottom of the stairway, they reached a stone arch half sunk into the wall. The arch was carved with words in an old script Silas could not read. Some letters had been chipped away, but enough remained to form a circle of meaning around the entrance.
Elara lifted the lantern. "Can you read that?"
"No."
"Lyra would."
"Yes."
"We should have brought her."
"She has the parchment."
"We should have brought two Lyras."
"That would make the palace impossible to manage."
Elara’s mouth twitched. "Knowing her she would agree and still be offended."
Beyond the arch lay a long underground hall.
The ceiling was lower than the palace corridors above, supported by thick pillars carved with sun disks and stag horns. Water ran in narrow channels along both sides of the floor. It was dark, almost black beneath the lantern light, and moved without sound. At the far end of the hall stood a sealed door made of pale stone.
The door was not large.
That made it stranger.
Most royal secrets announced themselves with height, gold and guards. This door was plain. Waist high iron rings. No jewels. No banners. Only one symbol carved at its center.
A sun with a hollow center.
Elara slowed. "That is the mark."
"Yes."
"The First Eclipse mark."
"Or it could be where they drew inspiration from."
The words left his mouth quietly.
Elara looked at him.
Silas kept his eyes on the door. "The old symbols came first. The faction borrowed them later. That means they are not inventing a cause. They are digging one up."
"I liked them better when I thought they were just fanatics."
"Fanatics with history are harder to dismiss."
"They are also more annoying."
They approached the door.
The floor before it was covered in old stains. Not blood, or not only blood. Mineral residue had dried in dark rings, spreading outward from the stone like something had leaked through and been cleaned badly. The iron rings on the door were cold when Silas touched one.
Too cold.
Elara stepped closer. "Do not pull it."
"I was not going to."
"Why are you touching it.."
"Touching is not pulling."
"In this palace, touching things often leads to trauma."
Silas released the ring. "Fair."
The sound of water changed.
Drip.
Drip.
Drip.
This time it came from behind the door.
Elara went very still.
"Silas."
"I hear it."
"Good. Then we can leave."
He looked at her. ƒrēewebnoѵёl.cσm
She stared back, completely serious. "No, I mean it. We found a hidden stair, old symbols, a sealed door, and creepy water. That is enough discovery for one night. We do not need to open the ancient death door because a suspicious priest gave us half a story."
Silas considered the door.
Then he stepped back.
Elara blinked. "Wait. You agree?"
"Yes."
She narrowed her eyes. "Why?"
"Because if this is the Dawnwell, we are not opening it with one lantern, one dagger, and no one who can read the door."
Elara kept staring. "That was shockingly reasonable."
"I have my moments."
"I do not trust them."
"You should not."
A faint sound came from above.
Not water.
Footsteps.
Elara immediately lowered the lantern and moved closer to the wall.
Silas listened.
One person. Moving carefully. Coming down the stairway they had used.
Elara whispered, "Father Oryn?"
"No. Lighter steps."
"Alistair?"
"Possibly."
The footsteps stopped before reaching the bottom.
Then a familiar voice called softly from above.
"Silas?"
Elara’s shoulders dropped. "Lyra."
Silas looked up the stairwell. "Down here."
A pause.
Then Lyra’s voice returned, sharper. "That is not an answer anyone wants to hear inside a forbidden tunnel."
A minute later, she appeared at the archway with her crystal lamp in one hand and her folder tucked under the other arm. Behind her stood Nessa, thin, sharp eyed and tense, holding a small kitchen knife like she knew it was inadequate but planned to use it anyway.
Lyra took one look at the underground hall, the water channels, the pillars and the pale stone door.
Her face changed.
"Oh," she said.
Elara gave her a tired look. "That is all? Oh?"
Lyra stepped forward slowly. "I was hoping Father Oryn had exaggerated."
Silas looked at the folder. "The parchment?"
"I revealed part of it." Lyra did not take her eyes off the door. "Then it began burning from the edges, so I stopped before the whole thing turned to ash."
"What did it say?"
She finally looked at him.
"It was not a message. It was a route."
Elara frowned. "A route to where?"
Lyra lifted the crystal lamp higher and pointed at the pale stone door.
"Here."
The hall went quiet.
Nessa looked between them. "Miss Elara, should I go get people?"
Elara did not answer immediately. Her eyes were still on the door.
Silas looked at Nessa. "No soldiers. No guards. Find two of Elara’s oldest ghosts and send one to watch the portrait gallery. Send the other to Lady Marrow."
Lyra blinked. "Lady Marrow?"
"She knows the old food stores and emergency tunnels better than most nobles know their family trees. If this place connects to the lower palace, she may know something."
Elara nodded. "And she will probably complain the whole time."
"Good," Silas said. "It will makes things easier."
Nessa nodded quickly and hurried back up the stairs. freёwebnovel.com
Lyra approached the arch and began reading the old script carved around it. Her expression grew worse with every line.
Elara watched her face. "Please do not make that face."
"I cannot help what my face does when people write terrible things on doors."
"What does it say?"
Lyra swallowed. "It is not a warning. Not exactly. It says, Beneath crown and shadow, the first wound sleeps. Let no crowned hand wake it hungry. Let no stag blood touch it grieving. Let no sun priest name it holy."
Elara stared at her. "That sounds very much like a warning."
"It is written like a prayer," Lyra said.
"That is worse."
Silas looked at the pale door.
Let no crowned hand wake it hungry.
Let no stag blood touch it grieving.
Let no sun priest name it holy.
Ravena. House Wren. First Eclipse.
Three keys.
Or three disasters.
Lyra followed his gaze and understood at once. "Silas, if that translation means what I think it means, then all three factions are dangerous here. Ravena because she wears the crown. Wren because of old stag blood. First Eclipse because they still treat this thing as sacred."
Elara looked at the door. "And us?"
Lyra turned to her. "We are idiots standing too close."
"That is what I said earlier."
Silas looked at Lyra. "Can the door be opened?"
"Probably."
"Should it be?"
"No."
"Can someone else open it?"
Lyra hesitated.
That was answer enough.
Elara noticed. "Lyra."
The scribe looked unhappy. "If they have the correct blood and know the old rites, yes. Maybe not fully, but enough to break whatever seal remains."
Silas turned back to the pale stone.
The Perpetual Twilight was no longer only a spell in the sky. It had roots under the palace. In water. In blood.
And somewhere above, a soft spoken noble boy had just left a warm pin under a dead woman’s portrait.
Lyra stepped beside him. Her voice was quieter now. Less sharp. "What are you thinking?"
Silas did not answer at once.
He was thinking of Ravena’s face when she had said trusted queens die young. He was thinking of the way her voice changed when speaking of golden banners at her gates. He was thinking of a hidden well, a dead claimant, and a spell strong enough to murder sunrise.
Finally, he said, "I am thinking Father Oryn wanted us to find this, but not open it."
Elara frowned. "Why?"
"Because now we know what everyone is moving toward."
Lyra looked at the door. "And what is that?"
Silas stared at the hollow sun carved into pale stone.
"The thing Ravena buried."
From behind the door, water dripped again.
This time, the sound came with a whisper.
Not a voice.
Not quite.
But all three of them heard it.
Lyra went pale.
Elara raised her dagger.
The water behind the door whispered once more, soft and broken through the stone.
Crown.
Stag.
Sun.