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Chapter 128

CHAPTER 128

GRAZYNTH, GUARDIAN OF THE FAR END (III)

Years passed swiftly . . . then it was decades . . . and centuries . In a single mull, a single blend of colors, a single blur, a single blink of an eye, tens of years flashed before Lino’s eyes . It felt both breathtaking and terrifying, how quickly can life escape you unless you pay attention to it . All the while, nothing had changed; Grazynth fought, over and over again, obtaining more and more scars on his quickly aging body .

From robust, black hair, he went wholly gray; from handso, chiseled face of a middle-aged man he’d beco a wrinkled, wholly exhausted elder . From a voice brimming with authority, with defiance, with pure passion and desire, he’d beco a silent soul, his words scarce and low . From a warrior hellbent on diving into the fray, cleaving apart his foes with reckless abandon, he’d grown slower, more cautious, eker, wary of it all .

Lino, however, couldn’t grasp the depth of that change, no matter how hard he tried; what he was witnessing was a wholeso isolation of a man for thousands of years, forever beset on fighting foes and forr friends every day, watching the world he was once a part of die out slowly, bit by bit, bleeding like a gashed animal . Just how lonely Grazynth felt? Lino couldn’t say . All he saw was a man slowly waning before his eyes, outliving the tragedy of mankind’s — or, in his case, angelkind’s — existence .

" . . . hey, little one . " Grazynth suddenly spoke as the wind blew his now waist-long hair sideways . "Yer’ still here, ay?"

" . . . "

"Ay, you are . I can feel ye . " a rare and faint smile crept upon Grazynth’s face as he took a deep breath . "I can’t say what ye shall take from my little story . . . but, at least, I wish to thank ye . For being here . With . Sticking it out . Bearing witness to my little story . I have been buried in the sands of ti for so long . . . now, I feel I can finally breathe . ’Cause of ye, little one . I should be ashad . . . ashad of seeing my successor witness my blade growing duller, my heart eker, my soul losing its fla . But I ain’t . I’m glad yer here . " Grazynth loosened his muscles, as though he was freeing himself of a burden that had been weighing over him since the dawn of tis .

"I’ven’t always been the sharpest of tools," he said . "And it would always take a long ti to comprehend what Ataxia was teaching . Chaos . . . Order . . . Void . . . Eldritch Realms . . . the Beginning . . . Singularity . . . these concepts, till this day, elude . For a long while, both of us knew I ain’t the man to fulfill his dreams . I wasn’t strong enough . I wasn’t clever enough . I wasn’t driven enough . " I get it now . . . Lino thought, faintly smiling inwardly . "But . . . he stuck with . Through thick and thin . Through the lows and the true rock bottom . He accompanied all the way here . . . to stand atop this platform and overlook the Edge of the World . The Far End of it all . Of all our desires, all our dreams . "

" . . . " Grazynth grunted lowly and slowly got up, barely standing .

" . . . till the day I died," he said, his eyes growing slightly moist . "He was here . " he clutched at his left-side chest . "Always . Right here . " he bumped it as his voice grew coarser . "I didn’t care about what he wanted to do with the world . What he wanted to do with Angels, with Gods, Devils, Humans, Dragons, Gaia herself and what have you . " Yes . . . this is it . . . "I’d done all he asked not because I believed in what he believed . . . not because I knew what he knew . . . not because of any of that crap . I’d done it all . . . simply for a friend . " Grazynth smiled freely, almost as though he was once again a young man who was cast out of his land and was befriended by an strange entity . "He reached out his arm to and grabbed from down below and pulled up and every ti . . . every ti I began falling back down . . . I’d feel his hand pressing against my back, pushing up . If you take anything from my little story, Empyrean, take this: what you give him . . . he’ll repay . More than you can ever imagine . "

Grazynth leapt off the platform one last ti as only six people arrived at the far edge of the valley . All six were clad in different armors, yet all seed as old and as exhausted as Grazynth himself . Four were won and two were n, and they walked slowly as they approached toward the central point where Grazynth was waiting for them .

"Yer’ ca . " Grazynth said with a faint smile, rising up his ax which by now had one blade entirely gone, the other being clipped in half . "Ye all look like shite . "

"You don’t look much better yourself, old fart . " a woman replied, stepping forth . Though Lino was unable to distinguish any of the facial features of six, for so reason he was fairly certain this woman was Elana that Grazynth ntioned .

"Ha ha, always with the flowery tongue," Grazynth laughed innocently . "I’m goin’ to miss you the most . "

"You don’t have to . " Elana said, drawing back slightly .

" . . . but I do," Grazynth grinned . He reminded Lino very much of Q’vil when the latter was at the far end of his own life as well . Both . . . so readily accepted their reality without showing a shred of doubt in their choice . "I was bested . . . but ti shall co . . . it shall co . . . "

"Every one of you says the exact sa thing . "

"And by gods do we all an it! Ha ha ha!"

" . . . "

"Cheer up lads," Grazynth said, taking a battle stance . "How many tis in yer lives will you get to say ye felled an Empyrean?! Once, ay . . . once is more than enough . "

The battle did not last long; rather, it was better to say that there was no battle . Unlike Q’vil, Grazynth didn’t go out like a dying star, in one final blaze . He barely managed to stand on his own two feet before Elana slowly walked over and stuck a sword through his heart . He fell down, by all accounts looking like an old, enfeebled man, onto his knees . Yet, he was smiling . Broadly . Wholly . Innocently .

" . . . isn’t it beautiful, Empyrean?" he mumbled ekly into his jaw, drawing one last, final breath . "To be able . . . to die . . . for a friend . . . "

With his fall, Lino felt as though a strange arm reached from the nether and grasped at him, pulling him back from the dream into reality . He once again found himself back in the familiar tunnel, surrounded by ghastly things trying to eat away at his mind . He felt slightly dulled for a mont as he tried to recollect himself . He then smiled bitterly and shook his head . That sort of heroism while standing in the face of death . . . Lino was certain he didn’t have it . He very much feared death, though he never openly admitted it; there was an ocean of difference between braving a front . . . and being brave .

Both Grazynth and Q’vil were simply two brave n who faced death in the eye and then welcod it with smiles of readiness and acceptance . Lino didn’t believe for a second that it was because the two of them had nothing worth living for any longer . It was simply that their Wills were strong enough to overco the fear of death . Lino’s . . . wasn’t . Not yet, at least, he thought .

"Master?" Felix’s voice jolted him from his brief dream as Lino looked sideways at the curious expression of this youngster . "Why’d you suddenly stopped?" he asked .

" . . . just rembered sothing . " Lino said, smiling lightly . "Sorry, let’s move on . "

"What did you rember?" Felix asked, still curious .

" . . . an old friend," Lino said . "And how he died . "

" . . . oh . Sorry . " Felix said, feeling guilty over asking . "I didn’t know . . . "

"Don’t worry about it . He died . . . happy, I suppose . "

"Eh? Is . . . is that even possible?"

"Apparently," Lino shrugged . "If you’re dying for a friend . "

" . . . oh . "

"Eh, his friend’s kind of a dick, though . " Lino added with a faint grin .

"M-master . . !!"

"You really need to take that stick out of your ass . " Lino said, rolling his eyes . "You take everything too seriously . "

" . . . "

"Or maybe it’s actually , making jokes out of anything and everything?! No, it’s the young that are wrong!"

"You were having a mont, Master . . . " Felix said, sighing .

"What do you an? I’m having a mont right now . And now . And what do you know, even now! Monts are everywhere and everyti!"

" . . . "

"What? I think it’s funny . Laugh you bastard!"

"Ha . . ha . . . "

"Yeah, no wonder you couldn’t make it as a proper Noble," Lino said . "You suck at small talk . You should learn a thing or two from your Master . As the matter of fact, while these ghastly morons are trying to scare us, let your Master teach you the art of tongue-lashing, the art so beautiful there are no official books to teach you because it needs to be acquired via, you guessed it, tongue-lashing! Isn’t that just a beauty? Anyway, so, it goes like this . . . " and thus, in less than two hours, Felix would co to know that his Master . . . really liked tongue-lashing .

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