The land around Rin was bleak, stretching into a vast emptiness where the sky hung heavy, cracked and broken like the remnants of a shattered mirror. A deep, endless crater yawning before him, ford by a force of nature that could neither be nad nor understood. The ground beneath his feet seed to pulse with an unnatural rhythm, as though the earth itself was trembling in pain, yearning for release.
This was the domain of hunger, the very cradle of devouring emptiness. The air was thick with the scent of ghosts—whispers of souls lost, drifting aimlessly in the void. But they were not alone. In the center of the crater, amid the swirling mist and shadows, there was sothing that moved, a grotesque form of shifting darkness and gnashing teeth. It was no ordinary creature.
It was a beast of the end, a broken being trapped in a cycle of insatiable consumption. Its body, if one could even call it that, was a mass of writhing shadows, jagged bones, and countless gnashing mouths, each one latched onto a different specter, feeding without end. The souls that entered its maw scread for rcy, but their cries were swallowed, devoured by the creature's endless hunger.
But despite its ceaseless feeding, the creature never grew. It never beca stronger. It only fed and fed, yet its hunger was never sated, and its form never solidified.
Rin stood at the edge of the crater, observing the beast. His heart was heavy with a sense of inevitability as he watched the creature consu, only to remain as it always had—neither living nor dead, neither whole nor broken. A monstrosity born of a failed breakthrough.
The beast had once been human.
Its eyes were the only human part left, still faintly recognizable beneath the chaotic mass of death-fueled hunger. They glead with a strange, hollow light, the sa gleam that could be found in those who had long ago lost their way on the path of cultivation. It was a look of eternal, boundless tornt.
The creature paused mid-feed, as though sensing Rin's presence. Its many mouths stilled, and a low, guttural sound rumbled from within it—a cry, a whimper, a plea for release that could not be answered. Its eyes locked with Rin's, and for the first ti in countless years, sothing resembling recognition flickered in them.
It spoke. Its voice was warped, a cacophony of whispers, a thousand voices mangled into one.
"You... do you see ? Do you see what I have beco?"
Rin did not flinch, his gaze unyielding. He could feel the power of the beast in the air, its hunger, its pain, its emptiness. It was a force of nature, but also a tragic tale of a cultivator who had advanced too far, too quickly, into the realm of death without the stability to sustain it. This creature had once sought immortality, but its cultivation had devoured not only its physical form but also its soul. It had beco a hollow thing—a reflection of the danger of surpassing the limits of the self.
"I rember... I was... I was once a man..." the beast whispered again, its voice broken. "I sought to beco more... but I lost it all. Now... I can only devour... But I... can never grow... I can never be whole again."
Rin's eyes softened with a quiet understanding. He had encountered many such souls in his journey, those who had forsaken balance in pursuit of power, those who had been consud by the very ambition they sought to fuel. But what this beast had beco was not simply a monster. It was a failure, a warning.
Rin stepped forward, his steps echoing in the silence. The beast recoiled, its many mouths snapping at him in desperation, but Rin did not retreat. Instead, he spoke in a low, steady voice.
"You are not beyond saving," he said. "Not yet."
The beast let out a low, mournful growl, the words spilling from its fractured mind.
"How? I am nothing but hunger. I am only hunger. All that I wanted was to escape... but I beca this. This endless tornt."
Rin gazed down at the beast with a mixture of pity and resolve. He knew what needed to be done.
He reached into his robes, his fingers brushing the cool, familiar hilt of the Dagger of Final Nas. The blade humd with quiet power, the weight of countless deaths flowing through its form.
"You have consud enough," Rin said, his voice steady but firm. "You have taken and taken, but you have never known release. I will offer you what you could not give yourself. Peace."
The beast's many eyes flickered with what could almost be described as hope—a fleeting, fragile hope. "Peace? I... I am nothing but a monster. I do not deserve it."
Rin's gaze softened further, and he approached the beast without fear. "You were once human. And no matter how far you have fallen, you still deserve to die with dignity."
With a swift motion, Rin raised the Dagger of Final Nas and pressed the tip of the blade against the beast's writhing mass. The air around them shivered, and for the briefest mont, ti seed to stop. The blade thrumd as if in recognition, its edge glinting with the silent promise of finality.
And then, Rin whispered the words that would sever the beast from its endless tornt.
"I give you a na. I give you your final mory."
At those words, the beast scread, a sound that was both terrifying and heartbreaking. Its body trembled, the writhing shadows and gaping mouths falling still as its entire being shuddered under the weight of the na Rin had granted it. The na that would release it from its endless hunger.
"Caleb," Rin said softly. "Your na is Caleb. You were once a man, a cultivator like . You sought greatness, but you lost yourself along the way. Now, I offer you the one thing you have never known—death. A death that is not born of hunger, but of closure."
The beast's form began to crumble, the shadows dissipating, its countless mouths and gnashing teeth falling silent. Its body shriveled, collapsing inward, and with a final, mournful sigh, it dissolved into a cloud of spectral light. The ground beneath it cracked and shattered, but in the stillness that followed, sothing remained.
Rin knelt where the beast had once been, his fingers brushing the remnants of the creature's form. Among the ashes of its body, a single object remained—a crown, forged from the bones of the beast, dark and jagged, but strangely beautiful in its grotesqueness.
The Grave Crown.
Rin reached down and picked it up, feeling its weight settle in his palm. He could feel the power contained within it, the ability to control death spirits, to command the souls that road this land.
It was a powerful artifact, a tool that could bend death to his will.
But as Rin examined the crown, his mind lingered on the creature it had once been. Caleb had sought immortality, had tried to outrun death, but in the end, his failure had consud him. He had beco a monster, not because of what he had sought, but because he had abandoned his humanity in the process. The crown was not just an artifact—it was a reminder of what could happen when one lost themselves in the pursuit of power, when they let hunger and ambition overshadow the very foundation of their being.
Rin placed the Grave Crown in his belt, but as he turned to leave the crater, he felt the weight of Caleb's fate hanging heavy on his shoulders. Power, he realized, was not sothing to be wielded lightly. It was not a tool for ego, for destruction, or for self-serving gain. It was sothing to be tempered, to be held in check, lest one beco like Caleb—lost, empty, and forever hungry.
As Rin walked away, the wind stirred the dust behind him, and the crater fell silent once again, as if the land itself was mourning the death of a creature who had never truly lived.
To be continued...
Reviews
All reviews (0)