The Council agent's fingers hovered near the glowing seal—its red light pulsing like a coal ready to spark.
The villagers stepped back instinctively, their renewed memories trembling inside them like soft embers in wet paper.
Lira stepped in front of Elric, blade low but ready. "Back away," she warned.
The man's eyes didn't leave Elric. "You're not a doctor anymore. You're a breach in the wall."
Elric stepped forward, slowly. "And what does that make you? A repairman? Or the fire they send to burn what doesn't fit?"
The agent's lips curled faintly. "I'm the fire that keeps the records from rotting."
He raised the seal.
The sigil burned into the air, casting a hot wave that warped the edges of the walls. The villagers cried out—clutching their heads, their restored memories vibrating, threatened.
---
Memory vs Flame
Elric raised his hand—sigil glowing blue in defiance.
The room split in color: red flame versus silver light.
The memory-seed's threads fought to hold their shape as the Council's fire licked through the air like a cleansing wind.
"I warned them," the agent said. "Memory is infection when it isn't controlled."
"No," Elric said. "It's truth. And truth doesn't rot. You do."
The flame surged.
But something pushed back.
The floor cracked—not from heat, but from pressure. From will.
Cai stepped into the room, his golden eyes locked on the agent. "You can't erase us again."
Behind him, the villagers began to speak—names. Dates. Details. Each word spoken aloud re-stabilized the glowing threads in the air. The light held.
The seal's fire sputtered.
---
Countermeasure
The agent gritted his teeth. "You want the flood to return? You want every forgotten war, every betrayal carved back into the people's minds?"
Elric's voice was low, final.
"I want healing. And sometimes, that means reopening the wound."
He reached into his coat and pulled out a final vial—drawn from the bark of the Hollowveil Tree. He uncorked it and let the silver liquid fall onto the floor.
It spread instantly—racing toward the agent's feet.
The man stepped back—but too late.
The liquid curved up his leg, not burning—but remembering.
He stiffened.
Then gasped.
His eyes went wide.
"I… I was a boy in Redhollow."
Elric didn't move.
"You were born here?" Lira asked.
The man fell to one knee.
"My name was Tern. My brother carved our names on the barn wall. The Council… they took us away."
He clutched his head.
"They gave me a new name. Burned the rest."
The flame seal flickered—and died.
---
Aftermath
The memory light in the room dimmed.
Tern sat slumped against the wall, breathing heavily. No longer a threat. Just a man unburied.
The villagers surrounded him. No hatred. Just quiet, shared pain.
Elric turned to them. "This won't be the last time someone tries to silence you. But now you remember. And that's your strength."
---
Later, Outside the Village
Roran stood with his arms crossed. "You think he'll go back to the Council?"
"No," Elric said. "Not after what he remembered."
Cai sat nearby, silent.
Veyra tended to a child who had begun speaking again for the first time in weeks.
Lira stepped beside Elric. "Where next?"
Elric stared out at the horizon—toward the mountains beyond the borderlands.
"Wherever the next name was erased."
He opened his journal.
And wrote down the first one they had recovered:
Tern Halden.
---