One mont, I was standing in a hall of oppressive heat and ancient brimstone, the mocking laughter of a demon lord echoing in my consciousness; the next, I was back in the damp, cool darkness of the forest, my heart hamring a frantic rhythm against my ribs and the phantom sting of incinerated pride burning on my soul. The Glimpse was over, but the experience was branded into my mory with perfect, terrifying clarity. A Domain. A Bloodline. Kharonus hadn't just given answers; he had handed a new lexicon of power, a dictionary whose every definition was a mountain I now had to climb.
My legs trembled as I forced myself to stand, the mundane reaction of my muscles a grounding sensation against the mory of cosmic pressure. I couldn't afford to be shaken. I had my intel. I had the demon's price. The next step was execution.
"To enter the demon's actual presence with a Glimpse available for imdiate reconnaissance of this 'forbidden vault' would be a far more prudent application of your unique asset than to simply repeat your previous reconnaissance mission," Jeeves comnted coolly a few hours later. His dispassionate voice was a welco anchor in the storm of my thoughts as I paced the cold, tallic floor of the Sanctum's central hub.
"So we wait," I said, forcing the adrenaline from my system. My gaze was fixed on the shimring, unstable curtain of energy that marked the entrance to the Gauntlet. Every instinct scread at to charge back in, to capitalize on the montum, but Jeeves was right. My Glimpse was now on its five-day cooldown. To walk into Kharonus' hall now would be to simply replay the scene I'd just scouted. It was a waste of a trump card.
"Indeed, Master," Jeeves replied, a data-slate materializing in his hand as he began running silent projections. "Impatience in the face of a Master-Tier entity who considers tornt a form of pedagogy would be... sub-optimal. The intervening five days can be utilized for strategic consolidation and personal recalibration."
He made it sound so simple, but the waiting was an agony of its own. My mind was a pressure cooker of new information and rising dread. The most gnawing feeling was the vulnerability of Bastion. I activated one of the Sanctum's remote sensory relays, and an image of the settlent blood in the air before . From this high, unseen vantage, it looked so fragile. The simple log palisade was a ring of toothpicks against the monsters of this world. The flickering lights of the communal fires were tiny, hopeful sparks in a vast, predatory darkness. I could see the townsfolk moving through their routines, could almost feel their earnest hope, and it was a physical ache in my chest. They were living on a knife's edge, completely unaware that a guild like the Crimson Blades could be contracted to co and 'pacify' them at any mont.
A dozen plans burned through my mind. I could have Leoric draw up schematics for superior fortifications, for basic siege weapons, for more efficient forges. I could sneak into the settlent as 'Jack' and 'discover' another forgotten pre-Confluence data-slate, a third miracle in as many months. But the risk was imnse. How many tis could a quiet healer get lucky before the wrong people started asking questions? A Kyorian analyst, a guild scout, anyone with a lick of sense would see the pattern and start digging. My protection would beco a spotlight, and the mont it illuminated , it would incinerate them and my family. The weight of that decision was a cold, hard stone in my gut. I was their secret guardian, but my very power forced to keep them weak. To let them fend for themselves, ard only with their courage, while I pursued the power needed to kill the wolves circling their flock. It was a lonely, bitter kind of leadership, and I hated it.
On the third day, the churning in my mind beca too much. I needed a reminder of what I was fighting for, a piece of reality that wasn't born of grim calculation. I made my way to the section of the Sanctum's Veiled periter that the Sylvandell had claid as their own. The transition was always jarring. One mont, I was walking on sterile, resonating tal; the next, my boots were silencing on a carpet of thick, erald-green moss. The air changed, losing its filtered neutrality and taking on the rich scent of living pine, damp earth, and a hundred blossoming, alien flowers. A small stream, redirected from the Sanctum's water purifiers and enriched by Leoric, gurgled over smooth grey stones.
Here, the elves were not refugees; they were gardeners, shaping their new ho with an innate grace that was both humbling and beautiful. The Whisperwind Seekers and Verdant Vanguards trained in a clearing, their leaf-green armor gleaming with silver filigree under the soft glow of the Sanctum's simulated sky. There was a new sharpness to their movents, a lethal grace that hadn't been there weeks ago. Their arrows flew faster, their blades sang a more confident tune. They were growing. They were becoming stronger.
"They have reclaid their fire, Lord Eren," Elder Valerius said, appearing silently by my side. His voice was the soft rustle of ancient leaves, but there was a new strength in it, a spine of steel beneath the velvet. His sorrowful eyes held a glimr of sothing I hadn't seen before: pride. "Your Sanctum has given them a place to heal. Your resources have given them the ans. They are becoming the people I rember from before the Edict Fell."
"You and your people honor our agreent, Elder," I said, my voice quiet. "You're building sothing good here. Sothing that will last."
"We build on the foundation you provide," he said, and the simple, earnest gratitude was a balm to my raw nerves. "We owe you a debt that cannot be easily repaid." He fell silent, his gaze shifting to Kaelen, who sat patiently at my feet, his dark, starlit fur absorbing the soft light of the grove. The Elder's usual composure seed to falter for a mont. "There is... another matter, if I may be so bold. Forgive an elder's curiosity."
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"Of course, Valerius. Ask anything."
He hesitated, a rare thing for the composed elf. His hands, gnarled like ancient roots, clasped behind his back. "Your companion," he said, his voice soft with reverence. "He is... quite remarkable. I hope you do not mind my saying, but his spirit feels ancient, vast. It is a presence that belies his form."
"He's one of a kind," I said, reaching down to run my hand through Kaelen's silky fur. The glimrfox leaned into my touch with a low, happy rumble of contentnt.
"Indeed," Valerius mused, his gaze becoming distant, as if looking through the veil of years. "It reminds ... there is an old tale, one of the 'hearth-myths' we tell the younglings. From the ti of our world's great champion, Reyna Star-Singer. The stories say she, too, had a companion, a familiar born from the untad heart of the Aethelgardian wilds." He paused, his brow furrowed as he tried to grasp the threads of a faded tapestry. "It was a creature of myth, so the details are... fanciful. But they say its fur was not of any single color, but was like living opalescence, as if it were spun from captured starlight. Shifting with hues of gold, and pearl, and the softest sky-blue with every movent."
My hand froze. The blood drained from my face. Every word Valerius spoke landed like a hamr blow, perfectly describing the impossible creature I had found huddled beside its dying mother on that chaotic, sundered island fragnt of a world.
He continued, lost in the mory of the legend. "And its eyes... the storytellers always emphasized the eyes. Not like the eyes of a common beast, but a warm, liquid amber, full of an ancient and knowing intelligence. They even speak of... of delicate antennae upon its head, like feelers made of moonlight."
My heart hamred against my ribs, a silent, frantic drum. It was him. It was a perfect, detail-for-detail description of Kaelen in his original, un-evolved form. I looked down at the glimrfox beside , his fur now a swirling tapestry of obsidian and diamond-like starlight, a result of his evolution within my Sanctum. But underneath that shadowed grandeur, he was still the sa creature. The sa soul.
I was suddenly, terrifyingly aware that Valerius was watching , his wise eyes catching my stunned stillness. I forced my features into a mask of polite interest, forcing my hand to resu stroking Kaelen's fur, the action feeling stiff and unnatural. My mind was a maelstrom. A creature from Aethelgard's foundational myths — the familiar of their greatest champion — had sohow been on a fragnted rift on Earth to be caught in the Confluence. Was it a descendant? Or sothing more? Was Kaelen's species native to multiple worlds? The questions multiplied, each one more profound than the last, creating a mystery around my closest friend that now rivaled my own.
I couldn't let Valerius see the depth of my shock. To confirm his legend was real, to tell him that the creature he spoke of was not only sitting before him but was my familiar, would raise a thousand more dangerous questions. I had to bury it. For now. Another secret to add to the pile.
"A beautiful story, Elder," I said, my voice comndably steady, though it felt tight in my throat. "It sounds like a truly magnificent creature."
"Indeed," Valerius sighed, the montary flicker of excitent in his eyes dimming as he accepted my diplomatic dismissal. He saw I had no more to offer on the subject. "Just an old man's ramblings."
But as he turned to look back at his people, I shared a silent, locked gaze with Kaelen. His intelligent amber eyes, unchanged by his evolution, held a depth that I was only now beginning to comprehend. Did he know? Did so echo of his lineage, of his people's history, still live within him? He offered no sign, only a quiet, unconditional loyalty that felt more profound than ever.
On the morning of the fifth day, my wait was over. A simple, clinical feeling deep within my soul that told my Glimpse was ready.
It was ti.
The mood in the Sanctum shifted as my resolve solidified. The quiet period of waiting was over. I stood before the Localized Translocation Matrix, a silent monolith humming with contained power. Leoric had presented with my reforged armor just an hour before. It felt different now. Lighter, yet more substantial, it settled onto my fra like a second skin. When I channeled a trickle of my Soulfire, the intricate runes etched into the dark tal plates pulsed with a faint, internal warmth, a golden light that resonated perfectly with my own energy.
My companions assembled around . Kaelen pressed his solid, reassuring weight against my leg, his star-flecked tail giving a single, decisive flick. Rexxar stood to my left, clad in his own massive suit of gleaming plate, practically vibrating with contained energy. His usual boisterousness was banked, replaced by a deadly focus. He slamd a huge fist against his chest in a booming salute. "THEY WILL NOT LAY A CLAW ON YOU WHILE I STAND, MASTER! THEIR BONES WILL BE MY TROPHIES!"
On my right, Jeeves was a pillar of calm efficiency. His tallic form was still, his gaze fixed on the portal. "Master," he stated, his voice even and devoid of emotion, though I could sense his own form of readiness coiling beneath the surface. "All systems are green. Rexxar's… enthusiasm… has been factored into my tactical projections. We are ready to provide support as required."
I t the gazes of my three most powerful companions — my strategist, my berserker, and my ancient familiar. This wasn't a simulation. The risk would be real. The danger would be absolute. Kharonus thought he was luring a desperate little spark into his domain to run an errand for him, but we were ready.
I took a deep, steadying breath, the recycled air of the Sanctum feeling crisp and cool in my lungs for the last ti. My hand fell to the control panel, my purpose as clear and hard as a diamond.
"Alright," I said, my voice resonating with a finality that echoed in the silent hall. "Let's go. To the Crucible."
I spoke the destination with cold, clear command. "Gauntlet Level Four."
The world dissolved. It was ti to pay my tuition.
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