The emotional tidal wave that had shattered my composure slowly receded, leaving behind a shore littered with a thousand disbelieving questions. I stood before him, the raw, untad power of my Tier 6 state a stark and jarring contrast to the simple, grey-robed man who felt more real to than the very ground beneath my feet. His hand on my shoulder was a solid, grounding weight in the swirling vortex of my confusion.
"You… you were always here?" I asked, the words feeling clumsy and inadequate. "But… Anna said she saw them take you. The Kyorians. The blinding lights, the teleportation. You were ill, your heart…" My mind reeled, trying to reconcile two utterly contradictory realities. I had spent years of my life driven by the guilt of that mont, by the mory of his pained breathing and the desperate, futile search for dicine. All of it had been fuel for the pyre of my rage and ambition.
He looked at , his ancient eyes filled with a deep, sorrowful understanding. "I know what you saw, Eren. And from your perspective, it was all true." He guided gently towards the base of the colossal, silver-barked tree, to a simple stone bench that seed to have been grown from the living earth itself. He sat, gesturing for to do the sa. "The truth, my boy, is… complicated. Especially for our family."
He looked up at the vast, sprawling branches of the great tree, at the shimring, chaotic portals that hung from them like strange fruit. "What you knew as Arthur Kai, your grandfather, was one part of a much larger whole. A single leaf on a very, very old tree." He raised a hand, and from his palm, a gentle, golden light blood, a warm, soothing energy that felt like the essence of ho. "I am not a man, Eren. Not in the way you are. I am a Sanctum bound Anima. A guardian, bound to our bloodline since long before we fled our first world, long before we even called ourselves Kai."
My mind, still reeling, struggled to grasp the enormity of what he was saying. "An Anima? Like… the soul-bound Sanctum Anima?" The words sounded alien on my tongue in this sacred, ancient place when referring to my grandfather.
"In a sense," he said with a small smile. "Though I am of a slightly different design. My function has always been the sa: to watch, to guide, and to protect the family. My true na is not Arthur. My designation is… irrelevant. To you, I have always been your grandfather. That is the truth that matters." He saw the lingering disbelief in my eyes and sighed softly. "I am unique in that I am an Anima with my own Soul Ability, obtained through countless evolutions with my master at the ti. My Soul Ability is… duplication. Not a physical illusion, but a true, spiritual echo. I can project a fragnt of my own soul, my own consciousness, into a mortal shell. That fragnt can live, breathe, feel… love… just as any man can. The man you grew up with, the man who was taken, was one such fragnt. Real in every way that mattered. But his purpose was to watch over you and your sister, to guide you towards this place."
The puzzle pieces in my mind began to violently shift, rearranging themselves into a new, impossibly vast picture. "The illness…" I whispered, the mory a fresh, painful wound. "Your heart condition. The reason no dicine would ever work…"
"There was no dicine that could have saved that body, my boy," he said, his voice laced with a genuine, sorrowful regret. "You must believe when I say I felt every mont of your pain, your desperation. But the 'illness' was not a sickness of the flesh. That fragnt was dying because it was an existence tied to Essence. For it to live, to thrive, it needed to be bathed in it. This world, until recently, has been in an Essence-drought for millennia. It was withering on the vine, cut off from its power source. I tried to tell you, in my own way. When I told you to focus on your training, on your own inner strength, it was because I knew that your awakening would be the key. I needed you to find your own fire, not waste your life trying to save a man who was already a fading echo."
I stared at my hands, rembering the grueling boxing sessions, the scent of sweat and leather, the single-minded focus he had demanded of . It hadn't been a distraction from his illness; it had been the cure all along. Not for him, but for . For the future.
"Then what is here?" I asked, looking around at the magnificent, impossible chamber. "Why settle on this world? Why lead us to this one place, if it just delayed our inevitable death?"
"Because of a prophecy," he said simply. "When our ancestors arrived on this world as refugees, fleeing the galactic purges, they were led by a Matron nad Kerana. She was not a warrior or a leader in the traditional sense, but she possessed a powerful precognitive Soul Ability. She saw the future not as a single road, but as a great, branching river of possibilities. And in every single branch, every possible future she could see, she saw the end of our bloodline." His expression grew grim. "Total annihilation. The last remnants destroyed by the hands of the Empire you now know as the Kyorians, or from sothing worse, a creeping, silent decay into nothingness. The majority of her viewed paths led to extinction… but then she found one."
He looked up at the great tree. "She had a single, fleeting vision. A path so narrow it was barely more than a spider's thread. It showed our descendants, generations later, taking refuge in a place of great, hidden power, a place the Pri System could not properly map or control. A place she called the 'Heart of the World.' This place. And so, for centuries, the sole mission of our family, and my purpose, has been to remain here, in this small corner of a quiet, forgotten planet, and wait."
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A new thought struck , cold and clear. "Anna," I said. "Her Soul Ability lets her rewind ti. And mine… mine lets Glimpse a path. We can also glimpse the river of ti, just like she did."
His eyebrows rose in genuine, profound surprise. "Two of you?" he murmured, a look of dawning comprehension on his face. "Both in the sa generation… Anna has awakened, then? Your sister is well?" A flicker of genuine, grandfatherly concern shone in his eyes.
"She's more than well," I said, a proud smile breaking through my confusion. "She's strong. A true Tier 4, with a tier 5 evolution in the horizon, and an Anima of her own now. I wish… I wish you could see her now. She'd… she wouldn't believe it."
A warm, genuine smile lit up his face. "Oh, my boy, there is nothing I would want more. Anna was always a firecracker." But then his smile faded, replaced by that sa, weary sorrow. "But it is not possible. Not yet. I am bound to this place. To this Tree."
"What do you an, bound?" I asked. "Can't you just co with ? I can maybe set up a portal to the Cradle, since this is its dungeon can I not? You could see her today!"
He shook his head slowly. "My core consciousness cannot leave this chamber. My duty is not just to wait for the family, Eren. It is to be the gardener of these branches." He gestured to the shimring, unstable portals. "The Tree is a nexus, a crossroads between realities. Most of its pathways are dormant, sealed. But these… these are active. Their seals were weakened by the sa recent surge in ambient Essence that allowed you and Anna to awaken your full potential. They are… unstable."
His expression beca serious. "There are things, Eren, in the deep, dark spaces between worlds. Entities of imnse power and malevolent will. They can sense these weak points, these cracks in the veil. Sotis, they gather enough power to force their way through. My task is to be here, to feel that pressure, and to reject their intrusion before they can fully breach the gateway."
"What happens if one gets through?" I asked, my own power tingling at the thought of a new, unknown threat.
"Catastrophe," he said, his voice grim. "The last breach was a minor one, three thousand years ago. A Mid-Class reality tremor. A Tier 8 Void Leviathan tore its way into the Salt Pans outside. It took a full decade to hunt it down and unmake it, and the battle sterilized a continent."
I thought of the imnse, fossilized skeletons, the graveyard that stretched for miles. That was the result of a minor breach. My excitent turned to a cold, hard understanding of the stakes. My grandfather wasn't just a guardian; he was the warden of an interdinsional portal network.
"This place," he continued, "has an automatic system. It detects when a true heir, one of our bloodline with a fully awakened Soul, enters the Antechamber. When you crossed that threshold, you triggered a final protocol. The Matron Kerana's last, desperate gamble to secure our future."
"A protocol?" I pressed, leaning forward. "What protocol?"
He looked at , his gaze both proud and imnsely heavy. "A test," he said. "A trial, designed by the ancient Architects to prove your worthiness not just to wield your own power, but to beco the new Master of this place. The new Unbound." He smiled, a hint of hope in his eyes. "If you pass this test, you will gain the ability to create a stable, permanent gateway from here to a place of your choosing. A doorway you can use to bring , my full self, to your Cradle. To finally see Anna again. But only if you succeed. Until then, I am bound here, a prisoner of my own duty."
My heart leaped. A way out. A way to reunite my family, truly and completely. And it explained the contradictions, his appearance, the centuries of waiting. But then he looked at the tree again, at the shimring portals, and a deep line of confusion etched itself between his brows.
"There is sothing… wrong, though," he murmured, more to himself than to . "Matron Kerana's prophecies laid out a thousand possible paths for the one who would arrive at this gate. A warrior bloodied by a hundred wars. A scholar who solved the mystery through ancient texts. A desperate refugee fleeing the final fall of humanity. But none of her visions, not a single one, showed this. Not a boy forged into a man by his crucibles and the Pri itself, wielding the very powers of our most ancient Ancestors this young. It's as if… it's as if your own Soul Abilities, yours and Anna's, have injected so much chaotic potential into the river of ti that they have muddied all of her predictions."
He turned back to , his ancient eyes filled with a new, burning curiosity. "Her prophecies are broken. You are a walking, breathing anomaly, my boy. An unforeseen variable in the great cosmic equation. I do not know if that makes you our greatest hope, or if it ends any chances of salvation."
He stood up, his gaze intense, sweeping from to the Great Tree, a sense of gravitas settling over him as he seed to consider the path forward. "But the path forward remains the sa. Your arrival has initiated the test, a series of trials ant to gauge your capabilities and ensure you have what it takes to carry the burden of our lineage."
A thrill, a pure, unadulterated shot of adrenaline and purpose, shot through . This was it. The final challenge. The key to everything. To my family. To my future. Towards understanding the full scope of my inheritance.
"What is it?" I asked, my voice steady, my own power thrumming in anticipation. "What is my test?"
Arthur turned his gaze from the impossible, cosmic tree and fixed it on . His expression was a mixture of grandfatherly pride, ancient weariness, and a profound, bone-deep seriousness.
He pointed a single, steady finger not at one of the shimring, chaotic portals, but at the largest, darkest, most dormant branch of them all.
"Your test, Eren," he said, his voice echoing in the vast, silent chamber, "is through that, but first, you must open it."
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