The veil of light flickered as Kaito stepped through it, and for a mont, it felt as if ti itself paused.
There was no sensation—no sound, no air, not even the thud of his own heartbeat. It was like stepping into the center of a dream that had been frozen in place.
Then everything changed.
The chamber beyond was vast—impossibly vast. More than a chamber, it felt like an entire pocket dinsion, detached from the physical world.
The sky above was a swirling canvas of starlight and void, constantly reshaping, whispering untold truths through its slow motion.
The floor beneath him was a mirror-black obsidian circle, cracked faintly at the edges, as though it had seen battles from forgotten ages.
At the very center of this grand hall stood a towering monolith. Midnight-black stone wrapped in silver vines of flowing script. The runes pulsed in rhythm, like the beat of a living heart.
Kaito took a slow breath, but even the air felt ancient—too heavy to be real.
He stepped closer.
As he did, the runes on the monolith began to shift. The silver light flowed upward, forming shapes—mories, as if the stone was reaching into his mind and displaying pieces of his soul.
He saw flashes: the death of the Guardian, the storm at the edge of the realm, his first encounter with the Abyss, and then... Nyra. Again and again, her image appeared—laughing, crying, fighting, screaming.
But one image stopped him cold.
A much younger Nyra, standing alone in a field of ethereal blue fire. Her body was shaking, her hands drenched in blood, eyes wide in horror as she looked at sothing—or soone—lying at her feet. The body was cloaked in light. Unmoving. Familiar.
Kaito.
His throat tightened. That wasn't his mory. He had never seen this. Never felt it.
"What is this...?"
The monolith pulsed.
"Truth."
The voice ca not from the stone, but from the space around him. It sounded like a chorus—thousands of voices layered into one. Young and old, male and female, angelic and monstrous.
Kaito turned, but the chamber remained empty.
"Who's there?" he demanded.
Silence followed... until the ground beneath him trembled.
The monolith groaned and split down the center, revealing a hidden staircase spiraling down into darkness. It was carved from a different stone—older, veined with red crystals that pulsed like veins.
It beckoned him.
Kaito hesitated, then gritted his teeth. He had co this far. If this place held answers, he would find them. He stepped into the darkness.
Each step downward was colder than the last. The air grew denser, pressing against him, testing his will. He could hear whispers now—voices speaking languages no human could understand. So sounded like they were chanting his na.
After what felt like hours, the stairs ended in a chamber so still it felt like a tomb.
In the center, floating above a circular platform, was a crystal sarcophagus, suspended by chains made of glowing symbols. Inside, wrapped in a white dress stained by dark cracks of magic, was Nyra.
She looked peaceful, asleep—but wrong.
Her hair floated slightly, defying gravity. Her skin was too pale, almost translucent. And her aura... it didn't feel like Nyra. It felt corrupted.
Kaito ran toward her.
"Nyra!"
He reached out, but as his hand touched the crystal, pain ripped through his entire body. It wasn't physical. It was spiritual. Visions exploded in his mind.
He saw a battlefield where ti stood still. Ancient warriors locked in combat with beings made of smoke and mory.
He saw a throne of bones where a child cried alone, and a black sun rising over a city made of screams.
He heard one na, over and over:
"Vael'theron."
A forbidden na. One that echoed like a curse. Then the voice returned.
"You shouldn't have co."
Kaito spun around.
From the shadows erged a figure. Towering. Cloaked in robes stitched from shadow and starlight. Its face hidden behind a cracked porcelain mask—half human, half void. One eye glowed with golden fire. The other leaked shadow.
It floated above the ground, the air around it shattering into fragnts of ti.
Kaito instinctively summoned a shield of light—but it cracked on its own, like glass under pressure.
"Who are you?" Kaito asked, his voice barely stable.
"The echo of balance." The voice was impossibly deep, yet strangely calm. "I am what remains after the first war. After the first betrayal. After the fall of the Rift."
The being extended a skeletal hand.
The chains holding the sarcophagus snapped, one by one.
Kaito's eyes widened. "Don't! She's not ready—"
"She never was."
The sarcophagus began to descend, slowly, like a god's judgnt.
"Why are you doing this?!"
"To awaken her... is to awaken you. The world does not need more light or darkness. It needs truth. And truth is pain."
Kaito clenched his fists. "You're lying."
But even he didn't believe his own words.
The being moved aside. And behind it, rising from the floor, were figures—twisted warriors clad in ancient armor, their bodies half-rotted, half-possessed. Their eyes burned with a cursed fire.
They knelt before the masked figure.
"You were never ant to be the hero," it said.
"You were ant to be the price."
The final chain snapped.
Nyra's eyes opened. One eye glowed violet—the color of her soul. The other... was black as the Abyss. She opened her mouth, and a whisper escaped—not in her voice.
"Kaito..."
Everything shook. The air broke.
A rush of chaotic energy burst from her, knocking Kaito backwards into the wall. His vision blurred. Sparks of shadow crawled across his skin.
He blinked rapidly, struggling to focus.
Nyra was floating now, her hair twisting in the air like tendrils of darkness. Her body was no longer still—it moved with an unnatural elegance, like her bones no longer followed human design.
She looked at Kaito, her expression blank. Then—a smile.
Not hers.
The voice that followed wasn't hers either.
"Thank you for freeing ."
Kaito's heart dropped. "No... It's not her."
He struggled to stand, but the pressure in the chamber was rising like a crushing tide.
Nyra turned, facing the masked figure, who now bowed low.
"Welco back, Empress of the Abyss," he said softly.
Kaito scread, "She's not the Abyss! She's my sister!"
Nyra's head tilted. Sothing flickered in her eye—just for a second. A crack in the mask.
And then...She vanished.
The entire chamber pulsed. The monolith above cracked. Reality trembled.
And from sowhere above, far above, a horn blew—a warning sound across dinsions.
The Abyss had awoken.
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