Despite a sense of unease, Taesan had no reason to refuse Ainzhar’s invitation. He followed the paladin deeper into the library.
“It’s all thanks to you that I found Lady Levienoff,” Ainzhar murmured, almost humming as they moved. Without Taesan’s hint, Ainzhar would likely still be searching aimlessly for his beloved goddess.
“Since it was you who helped reach her, it’s only fitting you’re given the honor of seeing her.”
“I appreciate it,” Taesan replied, watching Ainzhar with a careful gaze.
The holy knight’s deanor was markedly different from before. Sothing felt off.
“This way,” Ainzhar gestured, leading Taesan toward the library’s edge.
**[Well, old man, congratulations. You finally found her? Took you long enough—you’ve been in this labyrinth longer than I have.]**
The Wraith’s teasing tone made Ainzhar pause, as though only just noticing the Wraith’s presence.
“Ah, hero! You’re here too!” Ainzhar’s eyes glead. “All of this is thanks to Taesan! Because of him, my hope has been fulfilled.”
He laughed as he rearranged several books on a shelf. Monts later, the shelf shifted, revealing a hidden passage.
“Co in. Lady Levienoff awaits within,” he said, stepping into the darkened corridor. Taesan followed.
While the library itself was brightly lit, the passage was dim and shadowed as if sealed off from the outside world. With each step further inside, a strange, warped energy grew stronger.
**[...Wait a mont.]**
The Wraith’s voice wavered as he sensed the sa unease. Taesan’s expression hardened.
‘This energy...’
He couldn’t quite identify it, though he felt it was sothing familiar. This chaotic, twisted force was not the organized energy of a transcendent being but rather sothing mangled, almost tainted.
It felt disturbingly similar to his own boundary power, yet it was different.
‘A corrupted boundary?’
Taesan steeled himself and continued through the passage. Ainzhar smiled, opening a heavy door.
“Behold! Lady Levienoff!”
Beyond the doorway lay the goddess Levienoff, hovering serenely in a vast, empty chamber.
Her face radiated a gentle beauty, her presence soothing to behold, filling the viewer with peace.
But the aura emanating from her was twisted.
From her heart spilled a tainted, decaying energy—sothing vile and rotten that had no place in this world.
**[Ugh.]**
The Wraith instinctively clamped a hand over his mouth. Though he was no longer alive, an impulse to retch overwheld him. Such was the malevolent energy that flowed from the goddess.
**[What... is this?]**
Taesan’s body tensed, reacting to the sight before him. It felt like gazing upon a masterpiece defiled in the most grotesque way.
While Levienoff’s form was still beautiful, there was a profound wrongness to it—sothing that no longer belonged in the realm of gods.
“Kneel! Show reverence to the goddess!” Ainzhar cried, stretching his arms wide, his hollow gaze fixed upon her.
“My goddess, Lady Levienoff!”
**[You have discovered the goddess Levienoff, tainted and corrupted by an elder god.]**
---
**[Old man...]** the Wraith’s voice trembled as he addressed Ainzhar.
**[What happened here?]**
Levienoff’s condition was unmistakably unnatural.
Ainzhar, however, seed unfazed.
“What do you an?” he asked, his voice calm.
**[What else could I an? Look at the goddess! What happened to her?]**
“Ah, you an that.” Ainzhar smiled thinly. “The goddess is simply... unwell at the mont. There’s no need to worry. In ti, she will recover and return to her forr self.”
**[...Return? To her original state?]**
“Of course,” Ainzhar said with conviction, though his tone felt more like he was reassuring himself than addressing the Wraith.
**[If you say so...]** the Wraith muttered, trailing off. As Levienoff’s follower, Ainzhar would know her condition better than anyone, so the Wraith held back further comnt.
But he couldn’t shake the unease in his heart.
Could such a corrupted state truly be healed?
“She seems to be tired,” Ainzhar murmured, leading Taesan out of the chamber with a regretful expression.
“My apologies, Taesan. You ca all this way only to be unable to offer her a prayer. But please, feel free to return anyti. The door is always open to you.”
“...Thank you.”
“No, I should be thanking you,” Ainzhar replied with a hollow laugh.
After parting with Ainzhar, Taesan road the library, yet the words on the pages failed to reach his mind. His thoughts were consud with Levienoff’s state.
The goddess—twisted and corrupted—and the malevolent force emanating from her.
Eventually, Taesan spoke up.
“Valvavamba.”
*Rumble.*
The floor shifted, and Valvavamba appeared.
**[Why have you called ?]**
“Ainzhar. Do you know him?”
**[...So you t him. Co to think of it, you were the one who told him where to find the goddess.]**
Valvavamba clicked his tongue.
**[Perhaps it would have been kinder to let him wander in ignorance. At least then, he could have lived with an impossible dream rather than facing the reality.]**
“What exactly happened to her?”
Within the corrupted goddess, Taesan had sensed the power of an elder god.
Valvavamba hesitated, then responded.
**[Given your current state, you can handle this knowledge. But you, hero... you must step back.]**
**[So this is knowledge I can’t hear? A bit harsh, but fair.]**
The Wraith grumbled but complied, moving out of earshot. Valvavamba summoned a veil of energy around himself and Taesan.
Only then did he begin.
**[The elder gods are waging war against this universe. In their wake, countless worlds and transcendents have perished.]**
This wasn’t new to Taesan; he had heard similar tales. The God of Evil had once ntioned over two hundred worlds annihilated by the elder gods.
**[Many beings have fallen—mortals, immortals, and even those who had reached the status of transcendent. Levienoff is one of those casualties.]**
“So, she was hard while resisting the invasion of an elder god?”
**[That’s a simplified version of events, but essentially, yes.]**
“Yet her condition seems... more severe.”
Levienoff was in a state far worse than re injury.
Her divinity and the elder god’s essence were intermingled, twisted together beyond recognition.
**[That’s because the elder gods are beings beyond the laws of this universe.]** Valvavamba’s tone was steady.
**[Transcendents, who wield their own domains, cannot die unless their domains are destroyed. However, many have fallen before the elder gods. The reason is simple: the elder gods can corrupt the very fabric of a domain.]**
“Corrupt...?”
**[To a transcendent, their na and domain are their everything. The elder gods have the power to defile that core, destabilizing the foundation of a god’s existence.]**
“...Is that even possible?”
The domains of gods were supposed to be absolute. They couldn’t be influenced or tampered with.
Destroying them through brute force, as the God of Evil might, was conceivable. But corruption? It seed unimaginable.
**[As I said, they are beings beyond the laws. Even domains and divine nas are forms of law.]**
“And just what exactly is this ‘law’?”
Taesan had heard this term repeatedly, but its aning eluded him.
**[Law is the fundantal principle that holds this universe together, an absolute truth that no entity born within it can escape.]**
“...Wait.”
If the law was the foundational principle of the universe, sothing no being born within it could escape...
An idea flickered through Taesan’s mind.
**[That’s as far as I can explain.]**
Valvavamba’s tone turned final.
**[That’s all the information you’re allowed. Given that you’ve transcended mortality, albeit in a limited way, you’re permitted this much. Now, do you understand why I said Ainzhar’s belief was futile?]**
“For the most part.”
The power of the elder gods had tainted Levienoff’s domain, corrupting it. For a god, their domain was everything.
Even other gods couldn’t interfere with such a corruption.
**[The God of Knowledge has safeguarded Levienoff within this library, but even he cannot cure her.]**
Valvavamba’s voice was laced with frustration.
**[To be blunt, I would rather remove Levienoff from this place imdiately. She’s far too unstable.]**
As if to emphasize his point, a violent wave of power erupted.
The sickeningly twisted energy—half divine, half elder god—pulsed through the air.
**[Again...]**
Taesan leaped towards the source, arriving at the secret chamber where Levienoff lay.
Ainzhar was desperately channeling his energy, his face etched with worry.
“Oh, my goddess... please!”
Levienoff’s once-peaceful face contorted, her eyes wide open, streaming black tears.
From her chest
gushed a dark aura, one that seed to corrupt everything it touched.
**[Aaaaaaah!]**
A shrill, tornted scream echoed. Ainzhar flinched at the sound, his expression pained.
Shadows spilled from the wounds in Levienoff’s body, spreading an aura of contamination over everything they touched.
Taesan manifested his divine power, countering the dark energy with purifying light.
**[What a disaster.]**
Valvavamba released a powerful force, attempting to contain Levienoff’s energy within the labyrinth itself.
*Rumble!*
It seed to work. After a tense mont, Levienoff’s eyes closed once more.
**[Ainzhar. Is this really the conclusion you desired?]**
“....”
Ainzhar knelt on the floor, his eyes fixed blankly upon his goddess.
**[Though I intervened this ti, I have no intention of continuing to interfere. In the future, Jorge will handle any issues. But as her only true devotee, would it not be better to grant her peace rather than prolong her suffering?]**
---
“I’m sorry for dragging you into this,” Ainzhar said, looking weary as he apologized to Taesan.
“It’s nothing,” Taesan replied calmly. Then he asked, “You knew, didn’t you?”
“...How could I not?”
Ainzhar’s face twisted in anguish.
He was a powerful warrior, far stronger than Taesan, perhaps even ranking among the upper echelons of the immortals. Soone of his caliber couldn’t fail to notice what Taesan had observed.
But he had chosen to avert his gaze, clinging to denial.
“Lady Levienoff suffers. I wish I could do sothing to help her, but I’m utterly powerless.”
His face was etched with helplessness.
“She sacrificed herself to save , and yet, I can do nothing for her. She endures this tornt on her own... but I have no way to ease her suffering.”
Though Levienoff still resisted the elder god’s influence, her tears and screams made it clear—she was fighting back, even if only barely.
However, as Ainzhar said, there was nothing he could do. The issue was beyond any mortal or immortal ans—a hopeless struggle.
“Perhaps Valvavamba is right...” Ainzhar muttered, clenching his fists so tightly that his nails drew blood.
Taesan contemplated for a mont.
The goddess was resisting the elder god’s corruption, though just barely.
And Taesan did know of a power sowhat similar to her corrupted state.
“Let ask you sothing,” he began carefully.
“Hm?”
“In the unlikely event... that there is a way to cleanse her of that corruption...”
Ainzhar’s eyes widened, a spark of hope igniting within them. Taesan’s voice remained steady.
“What would you do?”
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