From above, the vast Tala Residence stretched like a celestial monunt upon the city of Pagadianara. A city of veiled mysticism and grandeur, its streets teed with life as rchants bartered under sunlit awnings, mystics wove faint spells into their fabrics and potions, and warriors sparred beneath banners embroidered with cosmic sigils.
Beyond the imdiate bustle, the common folk carried on their daily tasks, unfazed by the turmoil that had rippled through the great Tala Domain.
Yet, for all its normalcy, a silent fracture had settled within the noble estate.
Within the Tala Residence, the air was richer and denser with the scent of dampened soil and dust. The earthy scent, as if the land mourned, now emanated from the once pristine, celestial grounds. The past day’s intrigue had simred, but traces of tension lingered, clinging to the very walls of the domain.
Sweat and dust streaked the robes of the builders and master artisans scattered across the once-proud castles of the noble branches. The Gilded Star, Moonveil, Astral, and Star Scroll castles, once standing as eternal testants to their family’s celestial might, lay in varying states of ruin. So builders carefully reinforced foundations, while others whispered among themselves and were uncertain if these sacred halls could ever truly return to their forr glory.
Yet the Celestial Seal Castle, the anchor of their bloodline’s power, remained untouched. Inspectors circled its towering structure, hands glowing with luminous runes as they assessed its integrity. No cracks, no fractures for now.
But the true wounds were deeper than stone and steel.
At the heart of the Gilded Star Castle, the Eastern Castle, where once cosmic energy coursed through every brick and celestial rune, the weight of reality had set in. The towering spires, though being rebuilt, no longer held the divine shimr that once painted them with starry resplendence.
The Starry Runes etched upon the foundation, the very sigils that had once pulsed with ancestral might, were now hollow remnants, as their radiance had long since extinguished. Builders did their best to replicate them, but their hands, however skilled, could not craft what had been lost.
For all their efforts, the castle was no longer what it was. The ancient runes woven into its foundations snapped, and no one could reweave them.
To the west, Saphira stood at the threshold of the Star Scroll Castle, her fingers lightly tracing the cold, unfeeling stone. She had spent her life within its sacred halls, surrounded by the whispers of the eternal records, the guiding voices of celestial chroniclers who once murmured their wisdom into the minds of those who sought knowledge.
Now—nothing.
She stepped inside, her breath catching as she beheld the desecration. The desecration had completely hollowed the chamber, once an expansive library floating between the physical and divine.
The presence that once guided them, that otherworldly, divine entity, was gone. The floating scrolls, once infused with the will of the cosmos, had crumbled to dust.
She reached out to where a scroll once hovered, waiting for the usual warmth of knowledge to embrace her. Instead, her fingers closed around empty air.
The castle still stood, but it was a structure, nothing more.
For the first ti in generations, the Star Scroll bore no semblance to a legacy born from the stars.
Marcon walked with asured steps, heading to the northern area of the domain and through the corridors of the Astral Castle, his hands clenched behind his back.
The builders restored the foundations by diligently lining the walls.
He approached the Celestial Weaponry, the most heavily protected chamber of their branch, where the family kept their finest artifacts and armants. As he entered, the air was thick with reverence, but sothing was missing.
His fingers trailed over the hilts of ancient blades, over lances and staves, each inscribed with runes that should have thrumd with divine authority. Yet they were silent.
The weapons still shimred with their masterful craftsmanship, and their edges still glead with celestial polish, but they were heavier now, as though burdened by the absence of sothing vital.
Marcon exhaled, flexing his fingers as he picked up a blade that was once sung with celestial resonance. Now, it was just a superior weapon, but it no longer kept a fragnt of divinity that emanated from its edges.
The enchantnts woven into them still functioned, but without the presence and the celestial energy within it, they were only imitations of what they had once been.
Virelio stirred from his rest, his body having recovered from the strain of the previous days. He wasted no ti, as his first order upon waking was the restoration of the Southern Castle.
He strode with urgency to the heart of the Moonveil Branch, to the chamber that housed the Lunar Pool. This sacred place had long guided their security, allowing them to observe the vast expanses of their domain, attuning to movents unseen and threats unspoken.
As he entered the chamber, his chest tightened.
Withering and blackening, the aetherlilies, which once drifted across the water’s surface, glowing like miniature stars, showed only husks of their forr selves. The Lunar Pool itself remained pristine, but only in appearance.
It still reflected the starry sky through the crystalline ceiling, still shimred with that translucent, cosmic hue... yet sothing was wrong.
Virelio knelt by the pool’s edge, dipping his fingers into its waters.
Cold.
Not the cool, ethereal touch of celestial purity, but an emptiness and hollowness.
The pool had lost its warmth, its guiding essence. Sothing hadn’t destroyed or corrupted it, but emptied it of its divine essence.
The realization settled in his chest like a stone.
All the activity to restore the domain, for all their efforts to keep everything in order, had begun to erge: the Tala Domain would never be the sa again.
A hush fell upon the Celestial Seal Castle.
The Grand Matriarch stood still in the vast courtyard, her eyes narrowing as she beheld the newly birthed flora that had sprung forth from the divine presence of the Radiant Oracle the day before. Celestial blossoms, their petals shimring with vestiges of cosmic energy, swayed gently in the artificial breeze of the domain. Yet, amidst the tranquil beauty, a deep unease settled within her.
She exhaled, her breath slow and asured. Sothing had shifted.
The air felt heavier, not from weight, but from absence. The castle, though unscathed and untarnished, now felt as if it were drawing in its final breath. She extended her senses, weaving her threads into the structure itself, tracing its lifeblood to its very core.
Her expression darkened.
Without hesitation, she vanished in a swift coalescence of shimring threads, reappearing at the Center Chamber—the very heart of the Celestial Seal Castle.
The vast chamber lood before her, its walls inscribed with intricate sigils of cosmic design, once pulsating with radiant energy. Suspended high above, the Star Core, the domain’s celestial heart, hung like a miniature sun, its light eternal and unwavering. Or so it should have been.
But now, the radiant sphere flickered weakly, its light sputtering like a dying ember in the wind. The Grand Matriarch’s breath caught in her throat as she beheld the impossible.
The Star Core—the very essence of their domain—was failing.
A sharp crack splintered through the chamber as, in a final, feeble pulse, the Star Core’s glow withered and died.
Darkness.
For a fraction of a mont, nothing stirred.
Then—
A deep, chanical thrum resonated through the very bones of the castle, rolling outward like a seismic wave. The sound carried beyond the Celestial Seal Castle, surging through the entire Tala Domain—from the ruined castles of the noble branches to the depths of the grand halls and corridors.
Beneath the land, hidden beneath layers of enchanted stone and ancient foundations, the great chanical constructs stirred. Their slumber was over.
Ancient gears, long dormant, groaned to life, sending tremors through the ground. The subtle hum of celestial energy—the heartbeat of the domain—was no more, replaced instead by the cold, rhythmic pulse of machinery.
In the halls, where once a celestial streak of light wove through the architecture like flowing rivers of stardust, only the flickering glow of electric lanterns remained. The seamless warmth of their divine environnt had stabilized into sothing... unnatural. The shifting climate, once attuned to the very will of the stars, had now rged with a controlled, calculated system.
This was no re malfunction.
The Celestial Seal Castle still stood; the Tala Domain had not collapsed, but it had changed.
The Grand Matriarch’s gaze remained fixed upon the now-empty space where the Star Core once burned.
Sothing had been lost.
Sothing irreparable.
She twisted, her golden robes billowing as she strode toward the outer halls. Outside, she knew the others would have felt it. The elders of the noble branches, the builders, and the scholars. All of them must have sensed the severing of the domain from its celestial lifeline. And if they hadn’t yet, they soon would.
The Tala Domain, a once divine realm woven from celestial power, was now bound to the will of sothing else.
Sothing far more chanical.
Reviews
All reviews (0)