Vayne's response to our postponent was a masterpiece of passive aggression. She replied with a ssage of perfectly pitched understanding, lauding Lucas' caution and wishing him the best in his Sanctum's "delicate attunent." But tucked into the end was a single, chilling line: "We shall await your summons with great anticipation. The Governor is, of course, keenly interested in the results of such a unique breakthrough." It was a silken threat, a reminder that the clock was ticking, and our bluff had a definite expiration date.
The subtle pressure lit a new fire under all of us. The months that followed beca a focused race, not against an imdiate enemy, but against the clock of our own deception.
The days blurred into a cohesive montage of shared growth and quiet triumphs. Bastion itself was transforming. What was once a gritty, functional settlent was now a thriving, vibrant town. The air was cleaner, tasting faintly of ozone and wild grass from Leoric's atmospheric purifiers. Children laughed in the streets, their cheeks rosy with health from the Essence-rich food that now filled every pantry. The market was a bustling hub of internal trade, where Norenki hunters bartered shimring river-serpent hides for enchanted Dweorg steel, and elven artisans secretly traded intricate wood carvings for Eliza's ingenious self-heating cookware. This was the true pleasure of power — not just the ability to destroy, but the ability to build, to create a space where people didn't just survive, but flourished.
I saw it in glimpses, stolen monts between my own relentless training. I'd walk into the new training hall in Bastion, a cavernous space reinforced with Aethestium ore, and find Lucas working with Silas.
"Faster," Lucas would grunt, his shield a blur as he deflected a series of shadow-infused strikes from Silas. "You're thinking too much about where the shadow is, and not what it is."
"It's an absence of light," Silas would retort, lting into a corner only to reappear behind Lucas a mont later.
"Perhaps," I'd interject, leaning against the doorfra. "But shadow isn't just an absence of light. It's a presence of concealnt. A concept. Stop trying to move through it. Persuade it to move with you. Make reality your own truth." Silas would pause, his eyes widening in understanding, and the next ti he moved, he was not a man in the dark, but a ripple in the very fabric of shade itself.
Later, I would find Lucas in one of the Cradle's quiet ditation chambers. "I can feel the power," he said, frustration etched on his face as a globe of raw mana flickered unevenly in his hands. "But controlling it… it's like trying to hold water in a fist."
"That's because you're trying to command it like a soldier," I explained, sitting across from him. "Your will is your strength, Lucas, but mana isn't a subordinate. It's a partner. Don't order it. Guide it. Feel its flow, and then suggest a new path for it." It was a slow, arduous process for a man of his direct nature, but I watched week by week as his control grew, his power becoming not just a bludgeon, but a finely-honed instrunt. Soon, everyone who reached Tier 4 got to learn and improve more with my direct coaching, slowly and safely grasping at concepts that helped strengthen their souls.
My sister, on the other hand… Anna was a prodigy. She was peaking, a razor's edge from her own breakthrough into Tier 5. Our training sessions had moved beyond simple sparring. We now practiced in a conceptual space within the Cradle, a training room that could manifest ideas as tangible things.
"I can feel it," she said one day, frustration lacing her voice as a thread of pure silver mana unraveled before her, failing to take the arrow-shape she willed it into. "It's right there, the concept of 'piercing.' But I can't... hold it. I can rewind two full hours of mistakes with my skill now, but I still can't get this one second right!"
"You're trying to force it," I told her gently, my mind flashing back to Kharonus' brutal lessons in my own past. His thod was to throw into the fire until I learned not to burn. Mine had to be different. I would show her the way to the water's edge, but she had to choose to drink. "You're thinking of an arrow as a physical object. Forget that. Your soul has an affinity for the permanence of decision. It's why your Rewind ability feels like a paradox, but it isn't. You rewind to find the perfect decision, the one that becos an unchangeable truth. So, don't think about making an arrow. Think about the target. Decide, with your entire being, that its wholeness is forfeit. That the new, permanent state of its existence is one of being pierced. The arrow is just the effect of your decision, not the cause."
I watched as her brow furrowed in concentration. The silver light of her Anima-sapling in the real world seed to resonate with her efforts. Then, her eyes snapped open. "My Soul Strength is rated at S . My Gate Integrity is A. The sa as yours was before… before everything," she stated, not as a boast, but as a diagnostic. "My soul is strong enough to make a decision and have reality listen."
A pang of brotherly pride hit . "It is," I reassured her. "More advancent would always be a plus but your soul is more than capable enough. Now stop trying. Just… decide."
Her eyes closed again. The silver thread of mana reappeared, but this ti, it did not form an arrow. It simply shot forward, a streak of pure intent, and the adamantite target across the room didn't just get a hole in it. It unraveled, a perfectly circular section of it turning to dust as its conceptual integrity was overwritten by Anna's will. She was going to be terrifying.
This story originates from Royal Road. Ensure the author gets the support they deserve by reading it there.
Our alliances blood. I made a point to visit Sylvandell once a month. The Elves were transford. Their new alliance with the reford kingdom — now known as Al'thor, a na that ant 'First Unity' in their old tongue — had revitalized them. Fear was replaced by a quiet, determined pride. Elder Valerius and the young Lord Faelan greeted now not as a savior, but as a respected peer, discussing new trade routes and sharing tactical information about Kyorian troop movents obtained by their scouts. The golem we had gifted them, now nad Argent, had beco the village's silent guardian. I saw it once, standing perfectly still as a group of children wove flowers into the plates on its gigantic leg, its crystalline head slowly turning to follow a flitting bird. The strange behavior made realize that simple, nascent consciousness was possibly taking root.
It was Nyx who brought us the most sobering news. She returned from a month-long deep-cover operation. She had impersonated a mid-level Kyorian logistics officer, using one of Leoric's more esoteric inventions — a personalized chrono-stasis field generator that held the real officer in a harmless, mory-wiping loop. For thirty days, Nyx had walked the halls of Nexus Delta-7.
"They are afraid, Eren," she said, her true voice a low, serious whisper. "Truly, deeply afraid. All this talk of a galactic plague… it's a cover. A partial truth. There is another threat. Sothing they are actively, desperately fighting on other fronts."
"What is it?" I asked.
"I don't know," she admitted, frustration clear in her tone. "It's the one thing that is never written down. When the officer's mind I was borrowing brushed against the subject, there was only a profound, reflexive terror. A conceptual horror so deep it's like a hole in the universe they refuse to look at. They don't have a na for it. They just call it… the Static."
The Static. The word sent a cold chill down my spine. The Kyorians weren't just conquerors. Perhaps they were refugees, like us, running from sothing so terrible they couldn't conceive it. Nyx's intelligence, combined with our alliance's progress, made my own path crystal clear. We were getting stronger, but I was the tip of the spear. It was ti for my own conceptual leap. The countdown for the Cradle's dungeon was now under five months. I had to be ready.
"Kasian," I called, standing before the Nexus. The vortex of knowledge swirled into existence.
"I seek the best way," I clarified. "How do I ensure it goes well?"
Kasian imparted.
It was as I suspected. This wasn't a battle of power, but of will and understanding. Still, preparation couldn't hurt. I accessed the Sanctum shop, its upgraded interface glowing, showing a — now much larger — variety of options. I poured a veritable dragon's hoard of QS into purchasing three items: a [Shard of Unbound Possibility], a pulsating orb of liquid light that would destabilize my Domain tempering my control; a vial of [Startal Locus], a liquid so dense it felt like holding a neutron star, ant to ground my physical body; and the blueprint for the [Altar of Becoming], a focusing construct Leoric would have to build.
He took the blueprint and the materials, and within a day, he presented with not only the Altar, but a dozen glowing phials.
"Catalyzing agents," he explained. "Derived from the Starlight Nectar. They will soothe the friction between your Body, Mana, and Spirit as they attempt to harmonize on a higher conceptual level. I do not believe you require them. But, they cannot harm the process."
I accepted them with a grateful nod.
It was all ready. The Altar was constructed in the deepest, most stable chamber of the Cradle. My friends and allies were stronger than ever, our web of secrets holding fast. The sky of Tier 5 had beco a ceiling, and I could feel the imnsity of what lay beyond. I looked at my own status, a final check before the plunge.
NA: Eren Kai
STAGE: 2 (Tier 5)
CORE ATTRIBUTES:
SOUL STRENGTH: S
SOUL GATE INTEGRITY: Grade S
ESSENCE MANIFESTATION:
BODY: 598
MANA: 599
SPIRIT: 599
SYSTEM SKILLS (8/10 Slots Available):
[Domain of the Ashen Phoenix] (Mythic)
[Pri Axiom's Nullifying Veil] (Mythic)
[Phoenix Rebirth] (Legendary)
[Predator's Gaze] (Epic)
[Armory of the Ashen Soul] (Epic)
[Mana Sovereign] (Epic)
[Ember's Leap] (Epic)
[Blink Echo] (Rare)
SOUL ABILITY:
[Glimpse of a Path]
The numbers told the story. I was at the absolute peak, the precipice. Every attribute was screaming, ready to break the final barrier.
I took a deep breath, the air of the Cradle calm and cool around . I gave Kaelen a final scratch behind the ears, sent a ssage of reassurance to my friends, and walked towards the chamber containing the Altar of Becoming. It was ti to break the sky.
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