A new world revealed itself around him.
The ground beneath his feet was cracked and blackened, its surface resembling cooled ash that had once known unbearable heat. Thin fractures ran across it in endless patterns, glowing faintly from within as though sothing beneath the surface still lived and breathed. The air felt ancient and tiless.
He lifted his gaze.
Before him stood a tree.
It was enormous beyond comprehension, its trunk rising so far upward that its crown vanished into darkness. Its bark was black. It did not appear dead, nor did it resemble any living tree he had seen.
It stood in a state between both, as though it had burned countless tis and yet endured beyond destruction. Its branches spread outward and upward in vast formations, each one holding fruits that burned with steady fla.
The flas did not consu the fruits.
They sustained them.
Hundreds of them hung across the lower branches, each one glowing faintly, their light gentle and restrained. Higher above, fewer fruits existed, but those that did burned with greater intensity, their presence heavier even from a distance. And at the highest reaches, barely visible through the darkness above, three fruits remained, their flas unlike the others. They burned like glowing sun through the darkness.
He did not question how he knew what they were.
He understood.
They were possibilities. They were paths his instinct could take form through.
They were skills.
He remained at the base of the tree, staring upward, aware that the distance between him and the branches was impossible to cross by ordinary ans. Yet the mont that thought ford, sothing within him answered.
His body grew lighter, and without effort or movent he began to rise from the cracked ground. There was no wind and no force that he could perceive.
The lower branches approached first.
As he drifted near one of the burning fruits, its fla responded to his presence, its light growing slightly stronger. Before he could reach out, the fruit answered him without contact. A vision unfolded within him.
He felt heat gather within his chest, not as pain but as pressure, dense and volatile. The heat surged outward in an instant, erupting from his body in all directions. Fire burst from him in a perfect circle, expanding violently across the ground. The flas did not drift or scatter; they struck outward with force, consuming everything within their reach before fading just as quickly as they had appeared.
He felt the purpose of this skill.
A defensive eruption.
A burst of destruction that protected its origin.
The vision ended, and the fruit’s fla returned to its steady burn. It was power ant to repel, ant to create space where none existed, ant to ensure survival through overwhelming force.
He did not reach for it. His ascent continued.
He rose beyond the lower branches and entered the middle reaches of the tree, where the fruits burned brighter and fewer. Their presence pressed against him more heavily, their instinctive weight greater. As he approached one, its fla responded as before, and another vision unfolded within him.
He felt himself moving, his body dissolving into ash before reforming elsewhere. He felt evasion without motion, survival without resistance. The instinct was clear.
Escape.
Preservation.
Avoidance of destruction.
The vision faded, and again he understood.
It was stronger. It was more refined. But still, he did not reach for it.
He continued upward.
The air grew heavier as he ascended further, the darkness above deepening until only the highest branches remained visible. The fruits there did not flicker like those below. Their flas burned steadily, their presence imnse and unyielding. His ascent slowed as he approached the top of the enormous tree.
There were three.
They hung apart from the others, their distance from one another deliberate, as though no hierarchy existed between these three. They were equal.
He drifted toward them.
As he approached the first, its fla stirred faintly, but no vision ca. He felt its presence, vast and distant, but it did not open itself to him. He understood instinctively that it lay beyond what he could claim.
He moved toward the second.
Its fla burned brighter than the first, yet it too remained closed, its nature unreachable despite his proximity. He felt no rejection, only the feeling that it did not yet belong to him.
Then he turned toward the third. The fruit at the center. As he approached it, the fla parted, revealing what lay within.
It was not a fruit.
It was a seed.
Small.
Golden.
Unremarkable in size, yet infinite in presence. The mont he beheld it, the vision ca.
He saw the seed resting in darkness, alone and unchanged. Ti passed around it, yet it remained. Then, slowly, it cracked. From within it, a root erged, followed by a fragile sprout. The sprout grew, its form strengthening as it rose. It beca a sapling, then a tree, its branches spreading outward endlessly.
The vision shifted.
He saw a small creature, weak and vulnerable, struggling against forces greater than itself. It endured, it fell, and it rose again. Each ti it rose, it had changed. Each ti it fell, it returned stronger. Its form grew larger, its presence greater, until it no longer resembled what it had once been.
It had evolved.
The vision shifted again.
He found himself standing in complete darkness. There was nothing beneath his feet that he could feel, nothing in the air that he could sll, and nothing before his eyes that he could see. The darkness was absolute, stripping him of every sense he had relied on. He could not hear his own breath. He could not feel his own body. For a mont, it was as though he did not exist within a world at all.
Then sothing moved. It ca from within him.
A faint ripple spread outward from his position, expanding slowly into the darkness. Wherever the ripple passed, the void began to change. Faint outlines erged, not made of light, but of presence. The ground appeared first beneath him, its surface rough and uneven. Then shapes ford farther away. Objects. Broken structures. Uneven terrain.
He could see them clearly, even though there was still no light.
The ripple continued outward, and more appeared.
A figure erged in the distance. It was moving toward him, its form becoming clearer as it entered the range of the ripple. He could see its limbs shifting, its posture leaning forward as it ran. Its movent was slightly slowed, as though he could observe each motion separately instead of all at once.
Another ripple spread, and he saw more.
He could see the air itself moving. Thin currents shifted around objects, bending and flowing naturally. He understood without needing to think that it was the wind. He had never seen wind before, yet here it was visible, its movent clear and undeniable.
The figure rushed closer.
He knew exactly where it was. He knew exactly how it moved. He knew exactly when it would reach him. The vision held for a mont longer, allowing him to experience it fully, and then it faded.
He was back before the burning fruit. He understood now what it offered. It was awareness.
A sense that did not rely on sight, sound, or touch. A sense that revealed the presence and movent of everything around him. It would allow him to know his surroundings even in complete darkness. Even without seeing.
He also understood sothing else.
The earlier vision of the seed growing into a tree, of sothing small becoming sothing far greater, had not been separate from this. This fruit did not offer only a sense. It offered sothing that could grow. Sothing that could evolve beyond what it was now.
The other two fruits did not open to him yet, but this one did. It offered both evolution and sense. Ivor remained floating there, thinking it through carefully. The old man’s ssage about setting good foundation was still clear in his mind. He was at the very top of what was available to him. There was nothing else beyond this point. This was the best choice he had.
Having decided, he raised his hand and grabbed the seed.
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Note: One bonus Chapter will be released for every 100 GTs. An additional bonus Chapter will be released for Castle.
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