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The torches in the dungeon had burned low, their flas reduced to flickering embers. Shadows stretched across the damp stone walls, shifting and twisting as if alive. The air hung heavy with ancient dust and the scent of old parchnt—an oppressive stillness that felt almost deliberate. As though the stones themselves listened, waiting.

Aurelia knelt before the artifact, her knees pressed against cold stone. Her hands hovered inches above its dark, pulsating surface, fingers trembling from more than just fatigue. The relic exuded a steady rhythm—slow, powerful, like a heartbeat echoing through the void.

It was old. Older than anything she had ever seen. Older, perhaps, than the gods themselves.

The inscriptions carved into its obsidian-like skin shimred faintly in the low light. Lines of impossible language twisted into runes she could not read, yet sohow she could feel them—like whispers curled around the edge of understanding.

You should not be looking at it.

The thought echoed in her mind like a prayer turned to ash.

But she didn’t move.

The divine-abyssal energy that surrounded the relic should have repelled her. It should have scorched her hands, burned her very soul. Her whole life had been devoted to fighting the abyss—to purging its corruption from the world. She had been a sword of the gods, a beacon of divine judgnt.

And yet…

Her fingers twitched. Inches closer.

She had prayed.

She had begged.

She had bled.

And the gods had not answered.

Aurelia clenched her jaw, trying to still the racing in her chest. Her breaths ca unevenly, broken by the weight pressing on her spirit.

“Why?” The question escaped her lips, soft, raw. “Why does it still hold power?”

She was not supposed to ask that.

For centuries, the Church had declared the abyss a sickness—a lie, a perversion. They had said it was a wound in the world that must be cauterized with holy fire.

But the relic was alive.

And power, true power, does not die.

It only changes.

Aurelia shut her eyes, shaking her head. No. No, I will not think like him.

But she already was.

The thought itself was blasphemy. And yet it persisted.

Above the dungeons, atop the high balcony of the Shadow Keep, Kael stood with the wind whispering around him. The air was cold and sharp, carrying the scent of iron, magic, and distant rain. Below, the stronghold stretched like a black claw across the mountainside—reforged under his command, fortified by spells and steel.

His shadow stretched long behind him, cast by the moonlight that broke through the clouds. He held a goblet in his hand, though the wine inside remained untouched.

He didn’t need the drink.

He was savoring the silence.

Then—soft steps behind him. A familiar presence.

"You’re enjoying this too much," Seraphina said, her voice smooth as silk and twice as dangerous.

Kael didn’t turn. "Enjoynt is a luxury. This is… purpose."

She ca to stand beside him, her black and crimson robes catching the wind like the wings of a raven. Her eyes scanned the keep below, taking in the movent of guards, the flicker of wards etched into stone, the faint glow of rituals.

"You’ve caged a lioness and now watch her slowly devour herself," she said, tone unreadable. "Most would have killed her."

Kael sipped his wine at last. “Most are impatient.”

Seraphina tilted her head, studying him. "And she’s beginning to question?"

"She’s listening," Kael answered. "That’s all that matters. Doubt is the doorway. Once opened, it cannot be closed."

Seraphina’s lips curved. "You speak as though you've walked that path."

Kael glanced at her. "We both have. You just rember it more fondly."

She smirked. "Oh, I rember the pain. The betrayal. The silence of the gods when I needed them most." She paused, her voice lowering. "But I also rember the power I gained when I stopped asking for their permission."

Kael looked back toward the horizon. "And that is why you understand what’s coming."

Below, Aurelia sat alone in her cage of stone and silence.

Her wrists ached from the divine-abyssal shackles that bound her, etched with runes that neither god nor demon would touch. The magic was neutral, ancient, and absolute.

Yet it was not the pain that tornted her most.

It was the silence.

She had called out. Scread. Wept. Pleaded.

And there had been no reply.

Not even a whisper from the gods she served. No warmth. No vision. No dream.

Nothing but cold stone and darkness.

Her golden eyes locked onto the relic once more. That cursed thing. That impossible thing.

It should not still hold power.

And yet, it pulsed.

Not violently. Not cruelly.

Just... alive.

Why hasn’t it faded?

The thought drilled into her mind. Slowly, relentlessly.

Her breath ca shallow. She rembered Kael’s words, burned into her mory like a brand.

“The gods did not save you. They let you fall.”

“What is faith, if it grants you neither strength nor purpose?”

“What if the enemy you’ve fought all your life… was the only one who ever listened?”

She squeezed her eyes shut, trying to push his voice out of her skull. But it lingered like a scar. Like truth.

"No," she whispered. "No, he’s wrong. He’s always been wrong."

But her hand moved again.

She reached out.

The relic pulsed in answer, its glow soft and strangely welcoming. As though it knew her. As though it had been waiting for her touch.

Her fingers brushed the surface.

Warmth surged into her palm.

Aurelia gasped and yanked her hand away, stumbling back. Her chest heaved. Her pulse raced.

But the pain she expected never ca.

She was still alive.

Her body unscathed.

Her soul... untouched.

Why?

She stared down at her hand. It should’ve been blackened. Broken. Judged.

But the gods did not strike her down.

The heavens remained silent.

Again.

Tears welled in her eyes. Not from pain, but confusion. Betrayal. Terror.

Had she spent her life fighting shadows cast by her own ignorance?

Was Kael not poisoning her mind—but revealing what had been hidden?

She stared at the relic.

And for the first ti…

She did not look away.

High above, Kael walked the central corridor of the keep, the black marble reflecting his stride.

Seraphina walked beside him. “She’ll touch it again.”

“She already has,” Kael murmured. “The first touch is fear. The second is curiosity. The third… devotion.”

"And then?"

Kael's eyes glead. “Then she will listen.”

From the shadowed rafters overhead, a faint shift in the air. Kael paused, glancing upward.

"Still watching?" he said aloud, voice calm.

Silence answered.

Seraphina’s hand brushed her dagger. “Shadow Broker’s agents?”

Kael shook his head. “Not just his. The Veiled Ones are watching too. And soone else.”

"You should kill the next one that cos."

"No," Kael said, smirking. "Let them watch. Let them see what it looks like when faith dies… and sothing stronger takes its place."

Back in the dungeon, Aurelia paced the confines of her prison, her steps uneven. Her mind was a storm. Her faith cracked like ice underfoot, each thought another fracture.

She could still hear Kael’s voice. That calm, insidious certainty.

“The truth sets you free—but not the truth you were given.”

She stopped walking.

Staring at the relic once more.

She was tired. Tired of silence. Tired of begging.

Tired of being ignored.

Slowly, she knelt again before the artifact.

Not as a servant. Not as a prisoner.

But as soone… searching.

Her hand hovered once more over the relic. It did not recoil. It did not resist.

It pulsed.

And this ti, she did not pull away.

To be continued…

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