The morning went on, slow and breathable, as if the Dojo itself had a pulse of its own. The air smelled of damp stone, of extinguished incense, of old wood that still remembered the hands that had carved it. In the corridors, light entered through high cracks and stretched across the floor in thin, golden, trembling bands.
Valentina walked barefoot, holding the blanket Helena had left folded at the foot of the bed. Her steps were small and curious. She touched the walls with her fingers, followed the grooves of the grains, stopped at every corner as if the Dojo were a map she had to learn to read. There was no fear in her movements, only the warm uncertainty of someone trying to understand where she was.
The fire in the central brazier crackled, casting sparks that reflected on the walls. In front of it, Kael Ardom remained seated. He did not look like a guardian, nor a warrior, nor a master; only a man in silence, breathing calmly. His eyes closed, his back straight, his hands resting on his knees. His stillness was so deep that the air seemed to arrange itself around him.
Valentina watched him from a distance. For a while, she observed without daring to come closer. The way he remained motionless did not frighten her; on the contrary, it gave her something unknown, a peace that needed no words. After some time, she grew tired of exploring. Her feet were already covered in dust. She sat on the floor, staring at the fire, and after a few seconds, lifted her gaze toward him.
Kael remained in the same place. But something in his breathing changed: a slight movement, a precise pause. Valentina noticed it and, moved by curiosity, took a few steps toward him. The faint sound of her feet on the wood was enough for Kael to open his eyes.
The daylight crossed his face, revealing the deep blue tone of his gaze. There was no authority nor severity in it; only a serenity that seemed too ancient for the noise of the world.
—Tired of exploring? —asked Kael.
Valentina nodded with a small smile, without speaking. She squeezed the blanket between her hands, as if she still needed to hold on to something that connected her to her safe corner.
Kael tilted his head slightly. —This place is large, but it learns to remain still. —His voice sounded like a stone falling into water.
Valentina looked at him, tilting her head. The question came naturally, without fear:
—Who are you?
Kael replied with the slowness of one who measures the weight of every word.
—I am Kael Ardom. This temple is my home. —He looked at the fire, as if seeking within it the continuation of his thoughts—. I met Virka long ago. Since then, our paths have crossed like roots beneath the earth.
The girl watched him in silence, trying to understand. Kael continued:
—Thanks to her, I also met Sebastián and Narka. We do not share the same paths, but I respect them. We are bound by something stronger than promises: the bond your mother sowed when she chose to trust me. Through her, all of you are part of this place.
Valentina listened without blinking, absorbing the words even if she did not fully understand them. When Kael fell silent, she dared to speak:
—They are my mom and dad and my uncle. They taught me beautiful things… —Her voice rose with sincere emotion—. They taught me to eat at the table, to sleep without fear, to look at the sky at night.
Kael looked at her. The smile that appeared on his face was barely a gesture, but it was enough to soften the atmosphere.
—Then you have learned more than you imagine —he said.
She nodded, happy for his approval, and played with the edge of the blanket between her fingers. There was a brief silence. Then she looked at him again, with a mix of shyness and curiosity that only a child can hold for so long without breaking it.
—So… would you be my grandpa? —she asked.
Kael did not answer right away. He looked at her calmly, observing how the firelight reflected in her two-colored eyes. His expression did not change; he only took one more deep breath before replying.
—If that's what you see in me, little one, I won't deny it. Sometimes families aren't born from blood, but from the choices we make when life asks us to stay.
Valentina smiled, her teeth peeking between lips stained with ash. The fire seemed to flare for an instant.
—Then we're a big family —she said with joy, and her voice filled the Dojo as if the echo had been waiting for it.
Kael held her gaze and, for the first time in a long while, smiled without restraining it.
—We are —he said—. And like every family, we must take care of the fire that keeps it together.
Valentina looked at him with a mix of confusion and curiosity. Kael stood up, extended a hand toward the brazier, and beckoned her closer.
—Come. I want to teach you something.
The girl approached. The fire danced within the circle of stone, breathing like a living being. Kael took a stick and carefully moved the fragments of wood.
—Fire lives if it breathes —he explained—, but if you give it too much, it drowns in its own blaze. If you give it nothing, it dies. The same happens with the bonds between people.
Valentina nodded, though she only understood part of it. She blew gently, and the flame rose, steady, unbroken. Kael watched the gesture closely, then placed a hand on her head for just an instant, saying nothing.
The silence that followed was different from before. It was not distance; it was understanding.
Valentina sat before the fire, watching the flames with fascination. Kael returned to his place, but this time his gaze did not drift into the distance. He kept it on the girl, as one watches something fragile without disturbing it.
The Dojo breathed in calm. Outside, the forest kept moving under the steady light. Inside, a new root had just sprouted between fire and stone.
The man and the girl remained that way, wordless, until the flame steadied.
And for an instant, the world —despite the war— seemed to remember itself: that even in the deepest silence, family can still be born.
The light of midday fell upon the Dojo like a warm breath. In the inner courtyard, the leaves swayed slowly, pushed by a wind that seemed to rise from silence itself. Kael walked slowly, resting a hand on the polished wood of the corridor. Valentina followed him, her curiosity intact in her eyes and her steps stumbling with the clumsiness of her age.
Sometimes, the man stopped to show her simple things. He pointed to a leaf spinning on the water of a small channel, or showed her how the sunlight filtered through the branches, creating golden paths on the ground. Valentina listened intently, not fully understanding his words, but sensing in his voice the calm that taught without trying.
—Look —said Kael, lifting a dry leaf—. If you let it fall, the wind decides its fate. But if you hold it too long, it withers between your fingers.
Valentina watched without blinking. Then she let the leaf go, and both followed it with their eyes as it fell into the water and floated, spinning in circles.
For a moment, they said nothing more. Only the sound of the air filled the space between them. Kael lifted his gaze; something in the horizon of the forest had changed. A faint tremor in the surroundings, a familiar echo.
—They're coming back —he murmured, barely audible.
He did not say it with anxiety or surprise, but as one confirms a whisper of the world. Valentina looked at him, not understanding, and the man gave her a half-smile.
—Come with me —he said then.
He led her down the corridor to a small side chamber. There, in a chest covered with old fabrics, he kept the traditional clothes of the Dojo. They were neither ceremonial nor for combat: they were garments of rest, light, with the muted color of clay and edges embroidered with red thread. Kael lifted a folded piece, small, made for young bodies that had once trained there.
—This was your mother's —he said softly—. If you want, you can try it on.
Valentina blinked, surprised. —My mom?
—Yes. —Kael nodded—. In the days when she was learning to be at peace.
The girl smiled. She set the blanket aside and stretched out her hands impatiently. Kael helped her dress carefully, tying the knots at her shoulders and folding the sleeves. The fabric, a little large, settled on her body as if it recognized the shape of her blood.
—Was my mom like this when she lived here? —she asked, turning to see herself.
—Like this. —Kael smiled—. And this is how she will see you when she arrives.
The man stood and walked toward the main door. The sound of the latch opening was deep, almost an ancient sigh. The light of the forest burst in, bathing the corridor in green and golden tones.
—Come —said Kael.
Valentina approached until she was beside him. From the threshold, the landscape spread out like a sea of breathing trees. In the distance, the wind carried echoes of footsteps, the murmur of metal and mud beneath feet. Kael, without taking his eyes from the path, spoke with the serenity of one who names the inevitable.
—They're close now. Virka, Sebastián, Narka… they're coming with Selena and Helena.
Valentina crouched down, resting her arms on her knees. Her eyes widened, alert, searching among the trunks. In the distance, she saw them.
Sebastián came first, walking along the stone path. He wore a light blue sweatshirt with white accents, his hair damp and his fists closed as if he still carried the weight of the road. His figure looked different—not because of his clothes, but because of the exhaustion the war had not yet managed to take from him.
At his side, Virka moved with a firm stride. She wore red shorts and an oversized jacket of the same tone, her black hair tied in a low ponytail, her eyes alight with sunlight. There was something animal in her gait, restrained, yet more human than ever. Her sneakers raised dust, and each step seemed to push the air around her.
Behind them, Helena and Selena walked together.
Selena wore functional clothing: gray fabric pants, a dark blue denim shirt, clean sneakers. The air around her was different, more relaxed, yet still precise.
Helena, on the other hand, kept her discreet elegance: a crossed coat, black pants, comfortable shoes, her gaze alert though her face remained expressionless.
And finally, Narka, who moved with the tranquility of a mountain. His reduced form rested on Sebastián's shoulder, golden eyes watching the surroundings, alert, as if measuring the distance between the heartbeats of the world.
Valentina watched them with her heart clenched. She stood up but didn't run right away. The wind moved her hair; her fingers trembled for an instant before deciding. Then, without thinking further, she let go of the blanket she was still holding and began to run.
—Mom! —she shouted, her voice so pure that even the leaves seemed to stop to listen.
Virka saw her, and her expression changed completely. A smile formed on her face, that mix of fierceness and tenderness only she could hold. She left her slow stride behind and moved faster. When Valentina reached her, Virka knelt down, opening her arms. The girl threw herself into the embrace, and the sound of their meeting was soft, almost a sigh the forest itself recognized.
Sebastián stopped a few steps away, watching the scene in silence. Kael, from the Dojo's doorway, observed quietly. His expression did not show visible joy, but his eyes, for an instant, shone with something close to relief.
Selena and Helena stayed behind, respecting the moment. The air smelled of living earth and sweat, of cooled metal and human breath. Narka closed his eyes, as if he too understood that this embrace—this small form of life reborn—was the only thing that justified their return.
Valentina spoke through laughter and tears, her words muffled against Virka's chest:
—I missed you, Mom…
Virka held her tightly, caressing her hair, and answered in a tone half growl, half whisper:
—And I missed you, little one. Always.
The Dojo behind them seemed to breathe again. The inner fire burned with a soft murmur. Kael remained for a moment longer at the threshold before slowly closing the doors, letting the sound of the forest and the reunion merge into one.
The day went on, suspended, as if the whole world waited before turning again.
The air had stopped for a few seconds after the embrace.
Virka remained kneeling, holding Valentina against her chest. The girl breathed unevenly, her face buried in her neck, clinging to her as if the world might collapse if she loosened even a single finger. Sebastián approached in silence; his shadow covered them both. Without saying a word, he placed one hand on Valentina's head and the other on Virka's shoulder. There were no promises, nor any need for them. The simple union was enough.
Behind them, Helena and Selena approached with soft steps. The first kept her gaze fixed on the horizon line, assessing the routes left behind; the second exhaled slowly, relieved to see them unharmed. Narka, on Sebastián's shoulder, watched the landscape in silence, and in his golden eyes the scattered light of noon was reflected.
Kael, still standing by the threshold, looked at them all with a stillness that bordered on solemnity. Then he spoke in a deep, steady voice:
—Come in. This place is still home.
The group crossed the doorway. The Dojo received them with its breath of stone and wood. Inside, the air was cooler; the fire in the central brazier still burned, like a heart that had not forgotten its purpose. Virka led Valentina by the hand. The girl clung to her new clothes, proud to be wearing the Dojo's attire.
The sound of footsteps filled the corridor until Kael guided them to the main hall.
—Sit —he said, without needing to raise his voice.
They settled around the fire. No one spoke at first. The calm was so dense it seemed like an invisible wall. Sebastián was the first to break it:
—The depot fell. There's nothing left they can use anytime soon.
His voice held no pride, only statement.
Virka, still keeping her breath steady, added:
—But what we saw wasn't just a control point. They had bodies… tied to the machinery. They're creating something more than weapons.
Selena nodded, opening a portable panel on her knees. Lines of code flickered across the screen.
—I detected traces of energy that don't correspond to human materials. And the transmissions I intercepted came from a frequency that doesn't belong to the original Smiths. Someone else is behind it.
Helena crossed her arms.
—Or something else. —Her eyes searched Kael's—. There are no consistent biological signals, but the spiritual energy is merging with electricity. It's… unstable.
Kael listened without interrupting. His expression didn't change, but each word left a mark in his mind. When everyone fell silent, he spoke:
—I've felt that disturbance. Not only here. The Dojo has sensed it for days. As if the balance of the planes were bending.
The fire in the brazier crackled, sending a spark into the air.
Sebastián watched it for a moment, frowning.
—Are you talking about an energy collapse or a manifestation?
Kael shook his head slowly.
—To speak of collapses or manifestations is to limit what we don't understand. But there is something breathing from within the ruins, something that feeds on destruction.
No one answered. Virka lowered her gaze to Valentina, who was still sitting beside her, playing with a twig, drawing lines on the floor.
Kael looked at them all.
—I know the war pushes you to move, to keep destroying, but remember this: when violence stops protecting something, it begins to consume whatever it touches.
The words floated in the air like ash. No one dared to answer. Only the crackle of the wood and the faint hum of Selena's device could be heard.
A few seconds passed before the smallest voice in the room broke the silence.
Valentina lifted her head, looking at the fire.
—If the fire goes out… you'll be sad, right?
The comment was so simple that everyone turned to her.
Sebastián barely smiled. Virka stroked her hair. Kael watched her with that mix of gravity and tenderness that needed no disguise.
—Yes —Kael said at last—. That's why we take care of it. Even if it hurts to keep it alive.
Valentina nodded and blew softly on the flame again, as if her breath alone could protect them all. The fire answered with a brighter flicker.
Helena remained silent. Selena closed the panel. Narka shifted on Sebastián's shoulder and murmured in a low voice:
—Balance… always returns to those who seek it. But there are those who no longer know what that is.
Kael heard him and replied calmly:
—Then we must remind them. Even if it costs us.
The group stayed around the fire. No one spoke further. The air of the Dojo was dense but calm; outside, the light was beginning to yield to the evening.
Valentina yawned and rested her head on Virka's lap. The woman covered her with her jacket's fabric and held her, caressing her hair in silence.
Sebastián leaned back, staring at the wooden ceiling. Helena and Selena exchanged a silent glance that meant rest, but not surrender.
Kael watched them all.
—Rest today —he said softly—. Tomorrow you'll decide where the next step will turn. The war is still listening.
The last embers crackled, marking a slow rhythm.
The Dojo breathed, as if it understood. In that small circle of light, they all seemed, at last, part of the same pulse: the improvised family that chaos had formed.
The fire was not just warmth. It was memory.
And for the first time in a long while, it burned without devouring.
A faint pulse, a heart burning without haste. Kael stood. The reflection of the fire ran along his white robe as the others followed him with their eyes.
—The rooms are ready —he said in his serene voice—. This place asks for nothing, only silence. Rest; the mind also fights when it sleeps.
He guided them through the stone corridor to a side gallery where the doors opened to simple cells: tatamis, a jar of water, blankets, a bowl of light. Before leaving, he placed his hand on the doorframe.
—Rest is defense —he added—. And not every enemy comes with a face.
No one replied. Kael walked away toward the eastern pavilion, where the dimness swallowed him without a sound.
The afternoon began to turn golden. Rays of sunlight filtered through the cracks, forming lines of light that crossed the corridors like slow blades. Valentina walked barefoot, touching the walls with curiosity, as if measuring their temperature. Virka followed her calmly, until the girl became lost in the gleam of a mosaic and stayed there, contemplating her reflection.
In the main corridor, Helena and Selena were preparing a low table with portable instruments. The metallic surface of the equipment reflected the light of dusk. Narka, reduced, watched from the edge, golden eyes fixed on the screens.
Selena turned on the monitor. Waves, records, and electric traces unfolded like a rain of symbols.
Helena spoke bluntly:
—The projectile that hit you wasn't a conventional shot. The energy was compressed to a point that shouldn't be stable.
Virka turned her face.
—It wasn't just power. The air warped before the impact.
—Exactly —Helena replied—. The compression was strong enough to fracture reinforced steel armor. If it had hit directly, nothing would've been left.
Sebastián stood by the threshold, his back straight, his face sunk in shadow.
—Then —he asked without taking his eyes off the fire—, could that kind of weapon hurt me too?
Narka lowered his head slowly.
—Not yet —he replied—. But the danger isn't the harm it can cause you now; it's what it represents. If they've managed to compress energy to that level, they can perfect it. The risk lies in their progress.
Virka narrowed her eyes.
—They're trying to match strength without understanding it.
Narka replied gravely:
—They don't need to understand it. Only repeat the correct pattern.
Selena enlarged an image on the screen.
—There are no traces of nuclear radiation or known plasma —she said—. What they used seems to be a hybrid source: synthetic materials with extreme thermal compression properties.
Helena added:
—And the propulsion system has no visible control channel. Everything indicates it was autonomous, designed to react on its own.
Sebastián spoke slowly:
—Then where do they get that technology?
Helena leaned back in her chair, eyes still on the data.
—We don't know. The Smiths' blueprints don't appear in any archive. No country, no corporation. It's as if their inventions are born complete—without prototypes or intermediate tests.
Narka murmured:
—Science, when it forgets its limits, ends up replacing its creator.
Virka listened in silence. Her eyes remained fixed on the screen, but her mind replayed the flash of that shot, the vibration of the ground, the sound that wasn't sound but pressure breaking the air.
—The first time we saw them —she said— I thought they were just men with metal in their hands. But this… is different.
Sebastián added:
—Now they don't seek to destroy. They seek to erase the difference between a body and a machine.
Helena watched him for a second.
—And they're succeeding.
The silence that followed was thick, almost physical. The sound of the wind outside barely reached through the walls. In the middle of the discussion, Valentina approached slowly, holding a dry flower she had picked from the ground. She kept it in her palm, watching them closely.
—Why do you fight so much if everyone gets hurt? —she asked.
The words were so simple they disarmed the air.
Virka lifted her and sat her on her lap.
—Because some things are worth the pain —she said softly.
Valentina nodded slowly, as if she understood. Then she rested her head on her chest and went still.
Helena and Selena closed the equipment. The lights went out one by one. The corridor filled with shadow again.
Sebastián remained standing, looking toward the entrance of the Dojo. Narka perched on his shoulder.
—The world builds and destroys itself at the same pace —murmured the ancient being—. And sometimes, what it fears most is seeing that someone still resists without machines.
Sebastián didn't answer. His silence was answer enough.
Night stretched like a blanket over the Dojo. Outside, the insects began their language of echoes and clicks.
Virka covered Valentina with her cloak. Helena and Selena lay down near the fire.
The heat was faint, but constant.
From the eastern pavilion, Kael opened his eyes. He hadn't slept—he meditated, feeling the pulse of every being under his roof.
"This is how the earth breathes when it doesn't bleed," he thought.
The Dojo sank into a deep calm. No one spoke again. The technology was turned off, the danger suspended for a few hours.
Only the wind and the fire remained awake, sharing an ancient secret:
that even in a world of steel, there were still hearts that burned by their own choice.
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