The ancient dragon’s massive head turned to regard the tiny void dragon, and when it spoke, its voice resonated through space itself, carrying weight that made reality tremble.
"So you finally made it here."
The words carried layers of aning Aether couldn’t quite grasp, as if each syllable contained compressed information his consciousness couldn’t fully unpack.
"Finally made it where? Who are you, mister big dragon?" Aether asked with innocent curiosity, tilting his small head. "And how co you ca out of Aether’s tummy? Did Aether eat you by accident? Aether is really sorry if that happened!"
The ancient dragon’s expression remained unreadable, its stellar eyes betraying no emotion. It spoke again, but this ti the words were even more cryptic.
"The cycle approaches completion. What was fragnted seeks unity. The origin rembers itself through you."
"Huh?" Aether blinked rapidly. "Aether doesn’t understand the big, confusing words. Can you use smaller, easier words, please?"
The ancient dragon didn’t respond to the question. Instead, it turned its massive head to observe the cosmic expansion still occurring around them, watching stars form and die with the sa detached interest Aether had shown monts before.
"Mister big dragon! Aether is asking questions! It’s not nice to ignore people!" Aether flew closer, his small form barely registering against the ancient dragon’s enormous scale. "Are you here to help Aether with the trial thingy? Winter Beast friend said there would be trials, but he didn’t ntion big anie dragons."
Still no response. The ancient dragon simply continued watching the universe unfold, its presence both overwhelming and strangely passive.
Aether puffed out his small chest with determination. "Fine! If you won’t answer Aether’s questions, then Aether will just figure things out alone! Aether is super smart, you know!"
But then, unexpectedly, the ancient dragon moved. One massive claw gestured toward the expanding cosmos, and suddenly Aether’s perception shifted dramatically.
He could see more now. Not just the physical formation of stars and galaxies, but the underlying structure. The fabric of space itself, the dinsional frawork that allowed matter and energy to exist. The invisible threads connecting everything to everything else in an incomprehensibly complex web.
"Ooh..." Aether’s voice carried genuine awe as new understanding flooded his consciousness. "Everything is connected by invisible space-strings! Even when things are super far apart, they’re still touching through the bendy-space!"
The ancient dragon’s claw moved again, directing Aether’s attention to a specific region where a star was forming. But this ti, Aether didn’t just see the star—he perceived the spatial distortions its gravity created, the way it warped the dinsional fabric around itself, creating curves and valleys in the fundantal structure of reality.
"The big heavy things make space go all wonky and curvy!" Aether exclaid, his understanding deepening. "That’s why things fall toward them! They’re not pulling, they’re making the space-fabric have slopes!"
The ancient dragon remained silent, but continued guiding Aether’s perception through subtle gestures. Each movent revealed another layer of cosmic truth, another aspect of how space and dinsions actually functioned beneath the observable surface.
Aether watched a black hole form from a collapsed supergiant, and for the first ti truly understood what he was seeing. Not just a powerful gravitational well, but a point where space-ti itself curved so severely it created a boundary—an event horizon where the dinsional fabric beca so distorted that even light couldn’t escape its geotry.
"Space can be stretched and squished and twisted!" Aether realised with growing excitent. "And Aether’s talent lets Aether do that! Not just teleporting, but actually changing how space works!"
The ancient dragon’s stellar eyes flickered with what might have been approval, though it still offered no verbal confirmation. Instead, it gestured toward the cosmic web of connections Aether had perceived earlier.
This ti, Aether noticed sothing new. The connections weren’t static—they flowed with energy, with information, with possibility. Every point in space was connected to every other point through these dinsional threads, and manipulating those connections allowed for instantaneous travel, for impossible feats of spatial magic.
"That’s how Aether teleports!" the small dragon chirped with sudden comprehension. "Aether isn’t moving through space, Aether is using the connection-strings to just... be sowhere else! Because everywhere is actually connected to everywhere!"
The ancient dragon’s massive form began to shimr, as if satisfied with Aether’s progress. It spoke one final ti, its voice carrying finality:
"Understanding dawns. The fragnts recognize their wholeness. Continue, small one. The path reveals itself through sight."
Before Aether could ask what that ant, the ancient dragon dissolved back into energy, flowing back into Aether’s small body in reverse of how it had erged. The spatial power returned to its source, leaving the tiny void dragon alone once more in the cosmic expanse.
But Aether wasn’t the sa as before. His perception had fundantally changed. He could see the dinsional frawork now, understand the spatial connections that allowed his talents to function. The trial was teaching him not through combat or challenges, but through revelation—showing him the fundantal nature of space itself.
"Aether gets it now!" the small dragon announced to the empty cosmos. "This trial is about learning how space actually works! Not just using it, but understanding it!"
A notification appeared before his eyes, confirming his breakthrough:
[Space Talent: 4%]
Progress. Real, asurable advancent toward comprehending his domain. And Aether had a feeling the ancient dragon—whatever it truly was—would return to guide him further along this path of cosmic understanding.
The universe continued expanding around him, each stellar birth and death another lesson waiting to be learned.
Aether floated in the expanding cosmos, his perception fundantally altered by what the ancient dragon had shown him. The universe continued its grand display—stars forming, dying, galaxies colliding—but now he saw beyond the surface spectacle to the underlying truth.
Space wasn’t empty. It had never been empty.
"Everything is made of space!" Aether exclaid with sudden realization. "The stars, the planets, even Aether—we’re all just space that got twisted into different shapes!"
His small form darted through the void, experinting with his newfound understanding. He focused on a nearby region where matter was coalescing, and for the first ti truly perceived what was happening. Space itself was curving inward under gravitational attraction, folding and compressing until matter precipitated from the dinsional fabric like water condensing from air.
[Space Talent: 6%]
Reviews
All reviews (0)