Lira carefully closed the book and placed it back on the pedestal. She took a deep breath, letting the hum of the Spirit shard settle in her palm, then turned toward the chamber exit. The faint glow of the shard illuminated the passage ahead, but her attention was fully on the journey she had just completed.
As she stepped through the doorway, a subtle vibration ran through her hands. The shards she had carried—the fragnts of Fire, Water, Earth, Air, and Spirit—shifted slightly against her palm. At first, it was barely perceptible, a gentle tug, as if urging her to pay attention. Then, with a soft click, the shards lifted slightly, rotating and sliding together.
Her breath caught. The fragnts spun and twisted, aligning as if guided by so invisible hand. Each shard glimred in its distinctive color, yet as they rged, they began to shimr together, weaving into a single, multifaceted object. Sparks of elental energy flickered along its edges, illuminating her hand with pulses of red, blue, green, white, and silver.
And then, with a quiet pop of energy, the shards snapped into place, forming a seamless key. It was small enough to hold in her hand, yet radiated imnse power. Its surface glimred like a jewel inlaid with all five elents, shifting subtly as if alive. Lira felt a rush of warmth and clarity, a deep hum resonating in her chest as the key pulsed with life.
She looked back at the doorway through which she had co. Slowly, the stone doors groaned and swung shut, sliding smoothly into the walls. The murals, the books, the pedestal—all the chamber itself—vanished as if it had never existed. Only the key in her hand remained, vibrant and real. Lira’s heart thumped with awe and disbelief.
"This... this is the key," she whispered, turning it over in her fingers. The convergence of shards into one tangible object was more than a culmination of her efforts—it was a physical embodint of everything she had learned, endured, and harmonized. Fire, Water, Earth, Air, and Spirit—all united in her palm.
She held it close, sensing the energy of the multielental users who had co before her. Their lessons, struggles, and triumphs resonated within the key, subtle vibrations threading through her fingertips. A thought struck her: perhaps her past self had hidden the room and its contents, preserving the wisdom and the key until soone capable of understanding—and harmonizing—all five elents arrived.
Serelyth appeared beside her in human form, eyes soft but sharp. "You see it," the dragon murmured. "Not just the key, but the culmination of balance. It is a symbol of responsibility. You have harmonized not only the shards, but the elents themselves, and the chamber recognized your understanding."
Lira nodded, feeling a mixture of awe, pride, and quiet trepidation. "It’s more than power," she said. "It’s... connection. History. Guidance... and now, it’s mine to protect." She turned the key over in her hand again, feeling the subtle currents of Fire and Spirit, Water and Earth, Air and Spirit weaving through each other.
"And yet," Serelyth added, "it is only the beginning. This key unlocks knowledge, paths, and perhaps challenges that even the multielental users could not foresee. Guard it well, and seek guidance when necessary."
Lira exhaled, holding the key tightly. She knew one thing with certainty: this was a pivotal mont, the link between past and future, between what had been preserved in secret and what she was now entrusted to continue. With the hidden hall gone behind her, the key pulsing in her palm, she felt ready to step forward.
"Grandmaster Elion must see this," she whispered, her eyes bright with determination. "He must know... the shards, the secret chamber, and now... the key."
With that, Lira stepped into the sunlight filtering through the academy corridors, the key alive with multielental energy, the secrets of generations resting in her hands, and a new Chapter of her journey beginning.
As the last shimr of light faded and the stone sealed itself behind her, Lira remained still for a long mont, staring at the object now resting in her palm. The shards—once scattered across labyrinths, shrines, and trials—had fused together into a single, intricate key. It shifted faintly in her hand, its form like an otherworldly puzzle of interlocking facets, each etched with faint traces of elental glyphs. The key pulsed softly, as though alive, resonating with her heartbeat.
She exhaled, steadying herself. The secret room was hidden once more, locked away by the stone, invisible to any who did not bear the key. A thought lingered in her mind: Maybe it was ... maybe it was my past self who hid it, who scattered the shards to protect what was inside.
But the question weighed heavily. Am I the only one left? Do others still walk the world with multielental gifts?
With the key warm in her grasp, she turned and made her way out from the depths of the library, her steps quickening. She knew exactly where she had to go.
---
The Grandmaster’s office was quiet when she entered, sunlight pouring through tall windows, dust motes drifting lazily in the golden beams. Grandmaster Elion sat at his desk, quill poised over parchnt, but the mont he looked up and saw her face, he set it aside.
"Lira," he said gently, his eyes sharp yet kind. "You’ve found sothing."
She stepped closer and opened her hand, revealing the strange, glimring key. The aura it emitted made the air shimr faintly between them.
"There’s... a room," Lira began, her voice low but steady. "Hidden deep under the library. The shards—all of them—were the key. They ford this when I stepped out. Inside were murals, books, knowledge of multielental users... of who they were, how they lived, what they achieved. And now the doors are closed again. Hidden. This is the only key."
Elion rose slowly from his chair, eyes widening as he examined the object in her hand. He didn’t reach for it, only studied it as if afraid to disturb its presence. "So it was true," he murmured. "The records were not exaggerations. The academy has always whispered of a sealed hall, a mory of an age when multielental wielders walked freely. But no one... no one has seen it in centuries."
Lira hesitated. "I don’t want it misused. That room... it felt alive. The knowledge there, it’s ant to be protected. If others found it, I fear it could be twisted or stolen. I want to keep it safe."
Elion’s gaze t hers, steady, weighing her words. Then, with a slow nod, he placed his hands behind his back. "You chose rightly to co to . And you are right—such knowledge must be guarded. Many would crave it for power, not for balance. If the spirits guided you to it, then perhaps you are ant to be its Keeper."
Her chest tightened at the word. "Keeper?"
"Yes," Elion said, his voice quiet but certain. "Not just a wielder, but a guardian of what was lost. If the hall revealed itself to you, if the shards united in your hand, then the burden and honor are yours. Protect it, Lira. Share only when the world is ready."
Lira closed her fingers around the key, feeling its warmth sink deeper into her. She nodded firmly. "I will."
For a mont, silence stretched between them, broken only by the rustle of parchnt in the breeze. Then Elion smiled faintly, a rare softness in his features.
"You have taken another step toward what you are ant to beco," he said. "And when the ti cos, I will stand beside you to protect it."
Lira hesitated before speaking again, the key warm in her palm. "Grandmaster... if there were multielental users before, then maybe... maybe so survived. Or maybe they’re still hiding sowhere, afraid to reveal themselves. What if I’m not the only one?"
Elion’s eyes softened, and he stepped closer. His presence carried the calm gravity of decades of wisdom. Slowly, he placed a hand on her shoulder, steady and reassuring.
"Lira," he said, his voice low but firm, "you are stronger than any other student at this academy. I have seen it in the way you face your trials, in how you balance not just the elents but your heart. I believe in you. If there are others out there—hiding, waiting, lost—you can find them. You can help them."
Her breath caught, and she looked up at him, searching his eyes.
"And know this," Elion continued, his tone deepening with conviction. "If they wish to co under the shelter of this academy, they will be welcod. We shall protect them, guide them, and help them learn more. No hand will rise against them here while I am Grandmaster. That I promise you."
For a mont, his gaze drifted toward the window, as if seeing beyond the walls of the academy, into distant lands. Then he looked back at her, a faint smile tugging at his lips.
"I had a feeling about you from the very first mont," he said quietly. "When I found you in that demon village, I knew. There was a light in you, even in the darkest place. I knew you were ant for more than survival—you were ant to change the way of everything."
Lira felt her throat tighten, a mix of awe and emotion rising within her. She clutched the key closer to her chest, the weight of destiny pressing down but also lifting her with purpose.
"Grandmaster Elion..." she whispered, voice trembling. "I’ll try. No—I will. I’ll find them, if they exist. I’ll protect them."
His hand remained steady on her shoulder. "I know you will."
Reviews
All reviews (0)