His head kept turning, not in the cautious scanning of a wary traveler but as if responding to a sound just beyond hearing.
"There's something..." he began, then stopped, frustration evident in the furrow of his brow. "Can't you feel it?"
Apollo could. Beyond the bow's insistent thrumming, beyond the gold warming in his veins, something pulled at his awareness, a rhythm, faint but growing stronger with each step east. It reminded him of heartbeats, of tides, of the endless pulse of his uncle's domain.
The first sound was so faint that Apollo thought he'd imagined it, a distant rushing that might have been wind through trees. But there was no wind in this strange, still forest. The sound came again, stronger this time, a rhythmic crash and retreat that stirred ancient memories in Apollo's blood.
"Water," Cale whispered, his face transformed with sudden certainty. "I hear water. Like... like waves breaking."
"That's impossible," Thorin began, but his objection died as the sound came again, louder, unmistakable.
The crash of surf against shore.
"I hear it too," Mira said, wonder replacing wariness in her voice. "But how? There's no ocean for a hundred leagues."
For most of them, the sound remained distant, muffled as if heard through layers of forest. But Apollo watched as Cale's entire body responded to it, head tilting, breathing synchronized to the rhythm, feet shifting in the sand as if already feeling the pull of tides.
'He hears it clearly,' Apollo realized. 'As if standing on the shore itself.'
The bow's vibration had become nearly unbearable now, a constant pressure that made Apollo's shoulders ache with its insistence. Whatever waited ahead was close, so close the weapon seemed almost frantic in its urgency.
"This way," Cale said suddenly, changing direction slightly. His voice held none of its earlier uncertainty. "The sound is stronger here."
No one argued. Even Thorin, for all his suspicion, followed without complaint as Cale led them up a gentle rise where the trees thinned further. Sand shifted beneath their boots, making the climb more difficult than it should have been, small avalanches of shells and pebbles sliding back with each step.
They reached the crest together, and as one, they stopped.
Before them lay the impossible.
Where forest should have continued stretching toward the horizon, a vast expanse of water spread instead, endless blue reaching toward a distant sky, waves rolling and breaking against a shore that couldn't possibly exist.
The treeline ended abruptly at a beach of pale sand, as if the forest had decided simply to surrender to this ocean that had no business existing in its heart.
Apollo heard Thorin's sharp intake of breath, felt Mira's hand clutch his arm in shock. His own pulse quickened as he took in the scale of the impossibility before them, not a lake or pond, but a true ocean stretching beyond sight.
"It can't be real," Nik whispered, his voice barely audible above the crash of surf. "We're a hundred leagues from any coast."
But it was real. The salt in the air, the cry of distant seabirds, the rhythmic pulse of waves breaking against sand, all of it tangible, immediate, undeniable.
And rising from the water near the shore, broken pillars and shattered archways jutted like the bones of something ancient and vast. White marble gleamed in the sunlight, columns half-submerged in the rolling surf, steps descending into azure depths.
A temple. A drowned temple to Poseidon.
The bow erupted into violent motion against Apollo's back, no longer merely vibrating but thrashing like a living thing. The pain was sudden and sharp, the weapon demanding not just movement but immediate action. It pulled him toward the ruins with such force that he had to brace his feet to keep from staggering forward.
Apollo clenched his jaw against the sensation, one hand reaching back to steady the bow as if that might calm its frenzy. The gold in his veins burned in response, flowing toward the weapon as if answering its call.
'It wants the temple,' he realized, fighting to keep his expression neutral despite the bow's painful insistence. 'It recognizes Poseidon's sanctuary.'
He felt Lyra's eyes on him, her attention drawn by his subtle struggle with the weapon. Her gaze narrowed, noting the way his hand pressed against the bow, the slight tension in his jaw that betrayed discomfort. She said nothing, but Apollo could almost see her adding this reaction to the catalog of mysteries she was assembling.
Before anyone could speak, Cale moved. Not the cautious step of someone approaching an unknown shore, but the confident stride of a man returning home after long absence. He crossed the boundary where forest met beach without hesitation, his boots sinking into soft sand.
"Cale, wait," Thorin called, but the young man seemed beyond hearing.
With movements that spoke of compulsion rather than choice, Cale dropped his pack on the sand. His sword belt followed, then his boots, shed without breaking stride as he approached the water's edge. The waves seemed to respond to his presence, their rhythm changing subtly, crests rising higher as if straining to meet him.
"What is he doing?" Mira whispered, fear replacing wonder in her voice.
Apollo could only watch as Cale reached the wet sand where waves lapped against the shore. The young man paused there, toes curling into the damp ground, face tilted toward the ruined temple that rose from deeper water.
The ocean heaved once, a swell rising unnaturally high before subsiding, as if taking a deep breath. When Cale stepped forward, barefoot into the surf, the water responded, rising to meet him, curling around his ankles with deliberate gentleness.
Another step, and the waves parted slightly, making way for him as he waded deeper. The water swirled around his calves, then his knees, responding to his presence in ways that defied natural movement.
It clung to him not as water should, but as something alive and aware, recognizing the blood that flowed in his veins.
Apollo felt the bow quiet suddenly against his back, its violent thrashing replaced by a steady, expectant hum. The gold in his veins cooled to matching rhythm, both watching, waiting to see what would happen as Poseidon's descendant approached the ruined temple of his ancestor.
The group stood frozen on the shore, united in stunned silence as Cale continued into the surf. With each step he took, the ocean seemed to lean closer, waves rising and falling in perfect harmony with his breath, as if the vast, ancient sea had found something it had been seeking for centuries.
And found it at last.
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