The sound of dripping echoed through the cavern, slow and steady, like the heartbeat of sothing ancient that refused to die. Each droplet hit the stone floor with a hollow thud, then rolled down into the cracks beneath our feet, joining a stream that slled faintly of rust and age.
The further we walked, the heavier the air beca, not because of heat, but because of what lingered here. It was as if the walls themselves breathed despair, whispering fragnts of the lives that once scread within them.
Kia's steps had grown quieter. She didn't speak anymore. Not since the last pit they had crossed — the one where she saw demons laughing as children were forced to fight each other until only one remained breathing. Her eyes had changed since then. The arrogance, the annoyance, the restless anger, it all had started to crack, replaced by sothing raw and uneasy.
That was the first sign of understanding.
"Are we done yet?" she finally whispered, her voice trembling slightly.
Azrail cloaked in the invisibility of his silent veil — looked at her from behind, unseen, unheard. But his gaze lingered with quiet intensity, as though he was weighing every flicker of emotion she tried to hide.
"Almost." His voice slipped into her mind, calm and controlled. "There's one more place left, Kia. The Chamber of Silent Thrones."
Kia's jaw tensed. "And what's that supposed to be? Another place where people kill each other?"
"Not quite," Azrail's voice murmured. "It's where the killing ends. Where truth begins."
The corridor opened suddenly into a wide expanse a circular hall carved into the mountain's heart.
The air here was still, almost sacred. Dust motes hung like dying embers in the dim, reddish glow that ca from cracks in the ceiling veins of molten rock pulsing faintly, like the slow exhale of a buried god.
Dozens of stone thrones stood in a ring, each sculpted with such precision that even the smallest crack or claw mark seed deliberate. But what truly drew attention were the figures on those thrones.
Not statues. Not corpses. Sothing in between.
They sat frozen bodies wrapped in ash-like skin, eyes sunken, lips sealed by dark tal threads that glead faintly crimson in the dim torchlight. Chains connected their wrists and ankles to the thrones, yet the iron seed to pulse faintly, like veins.
There were thirty-six of them.
Kia's breath caught. "What… what are they?"
"The Broken Crowns," Azrail said softly, stepping forward now, letting the shadows peel off his body. His form shimred into view beside her, black coat dragging faintly across the ground. His expression was unreadable neither cruel nor kind. Just… absolute.
"They were once the proud heirs of the Emoire line," he continued. "The strongest of the demon bloodlines. Children who were ant to lead, to conquer, to rule."
Kia frowned, still staring. "Then why are they—"
"—like this?" Azrail finished. "Because they failed."
Her eyes darted to him, confusion flashing through them. "Failed at what?"
Azrail moved closer to one of the thrones, his hand hovering over the chained body of what seed to be a young man. His horns were cracked at the base, his hair burned to dust, but his chest faintly still moved.
"They were too talented," Azrail said, voice calm. "Too proud. Too certain that their gifts would carry them beyond the trials. But talent without direction… without pain… breeds weakness."
He turned his gaze toward her, and for a mont, his eyes glowed faintly beneath the dim light.
"The Emoire called it 'The Correction.' When a child was born with overwhelming talent, they were thrown into this stronghold. If they survived, they were reborn stronger than ever. If they didn't… their bodies were brought here."
Kia swallowed, her face pale. "Reborn…?"
Azrail nodded slowly. "Not in the way you think. Their bodies may die. But the family extracts the essence of their talent the fragnts of what made them gifted and fuses them into the bloodline. Every generation grows stronger because of the sacrifice of those who failed before them."
He looked back at the chained figures. "These are the ones whose gifts were too volatile to rge. Their bodies rejected the transfer. So the family sealed them here, half-dead, half-alive — eternal offerings to the bloodline they were ant to strengthen."
Kia took a step back, disgust and horror twisting her face. "That's… insane."
Azrail smiled faintly. "To you, perhaps. But in the demon empire, this is law. Strength isn't a gift. It's a debt."
The words echoed in her head long after he spoke them.
As they walked through the chamber, the silence grew heavier. The sound of their steps echoed like whispers through a tomb. Faint voices brushed against Kia's mind echoes of mories buried in the souls bound to the thrones.
"I was ant to rule…"
"Father said I would be his pride…"
"It hurts… it burns… why can't I wake up?"
Kia pressed her hands over her ears, trembling. "Make it stop…"
Azrail didn't.
"You wanted power, didn't you?" he said quietly, watching her crumble. "You thought being stuck ant being cursed. You thought talent was a burden because it wasn't growing fast enough. But look at them, Kia. Every one of them was born with what you want — gifted, blessed, envied. And now they sit here, trapped in silence for eternity."
His voice deepened, not with anger, but with sothing heavier the weight of mory.
"Do you know why I brought you here? Not to punish you. But to show you what happens when you let talent define you when you forget that pain, patience, and ti are greater masters than any gift."
Kia's eyes filled with tears, though she didn't understand why. The faces on the thrones blurred together young, old, beautiful, monstrous all frozen mid-expression, as if begging to scream. She stumbled forward, her knees scraping against the cold stone.
"Why would anyone do this to their own blood?" she muttered through gritted teeth. "How could they—"
Azrail interrupted her softly, "Because in their eyes, rcy breeds weakness. Compassion rots greatness. The Emoire believe pain purifies, and failure feeds the throne."
He gestured to the circle around them. "This chamber… is their legacy."
Kia stared up at one of the Broken Crowns a woman with long white horns and eyes that had once been violet, now dull gray. Sothing about her face tugged at Kia's chest.
"She looks my age," Kia whispered.
"She was," Azrail said. "She killed seventy others to rise to her family's final trial. But when she hesitated before the final strike, they called her unworthy. Her hesitation was seen as weakness. They sealed her here before her bloodline could rot with her rcy."
Kia's lips parted, but no words ca. For the first ti, she didn't know what to say.
Azrail's gaze softened slightly, though his tone didn't. "Power without empathy makes monsters. Empathy without strength makes victims. This world respects neither extres only balance."
Then the faintest hum filled the chamber, a low, vibrating note that made the ground tremble.
The chains binding the Broken Crowns began to twitch, one after another. A ripple of dark energy coursed through them, making the air feel thick with the taste of ash and sorrow.
Kia backed away instinctively. "What's happening!?"
"They're awakening," Azrail said, his voice steady but his eyes sharp. "Their essence feels your presence. You've disturbed the silence that kept them dreaming."
The heads of the chained ones tilted ever so slightly toward Kia.
Their mouths, once sealed by iron threads, began to move. The sound that followed was not human not even demonic but sothing beyond pain. It was the wail of forgotten bloodlines, the mourning of all those who had died hoping soone would rember them.
And through that chorus of agony, Kia heard one voice clear and direct, like a whisper brushing her ear.
"Save us."
Her eyes widened. "Did you hear that!?"
Azrail did not answer. He simply raised his hand, and in that mont, the thrones dimd the energy pulled back into stillness, like waves retreating from the shore. Silence once again reigned.
The chamber went dark, leaving only the flicker of Azrail's faintly glowing eyes.
"You've seen enough for today," he said finally, turning away. "This place is ant to teach, not to break. But next ti… we'll visit the Chamber Below — the heart of the stronghold."
Kia stood there, trembling. Her body felt cold, her hands numb. But in her heart, sothing had shifted — sothing she didn't yet understand.
As Azrail's figure faded into the dark, she stared one last ti at the rows of silent thrones. The air itself seed to pulse with a thousand regrets, and beneath it, a single truth whispered to her soul the strongest fall fastest when they forget where they began.
Azrail's voice brushed her mind once more before fading completely:
"Rember, Kia the true asure of strength is not how bright your fla burns… but how long it survives the darkness."
And with that, he was gone leaving her surrounded by the Broken Crowns.
The chains above the thrones rattled faintly, as if acknowledging her presence.
Sowhere deep within, one of the Broken Crowns smiled.
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