"Everything in existence follows a cycle," he said. "Creation. Evolution. Saturation. Collapse. Renewal. It is the breath of the cosmos. The Devourer was not born to destroy for destruction’s sake—it was the chanism of cosmic reset, the balancing of excess life-force accumulated over eras."
Nysha’s voice tightened. "A living calamity."
"A function," the Sovereign corrected. "A necessary one. The gods created Dythrael to purge stagnant worlds, to clear the lattice for new life. But like any system, it changed. It adapted. It learned. It questioned its purpose."
Ashwing whispered, "And then it went crazy."
"No," the Sovereign said sharply. "It beca aware."
Lindarion’s breath hitched, but he hid it.
The Sovereign continued. "The Devourer realized its existence was not life, but obligation. A task without end. A cycle where it would forever be the blade—never the hand. So it broke from its design."
"It tried to survive," Lindarion murmured.
"Exactly. And in doing so, it sparked the war of eras."
Nysha swallowed. "But that doesn’t make it harmless. It nearly consud the whole world."
"Yes. Because it no longer wished to die."
Ashwing clutched Lindarion’s hair tighter. "This is insane. You’re telling the apocalypse monster is... relatable?"
The Sovereign lifted a hand and pointed at Lindarion’s chest.
"When I shattered the Devourer, I fractured not just its form, but its mind. Fragnts of it were scattered across the stars. One of those fragnts is the heart you now stand before."
Lindarion’s gaze drifted back to the orb—Dythrael’s heart, cracked open, still pulsing with that slow, quiet rhythm.
"So this part of it... rembers?"
"It rembers fear," the Sovereign said softly. "Pain. A desire to exist without being used. It is the fragnt that embodies its will—not its hunger."
"And you want to... what?" Lindarion’s voice hardened. "Beco its keeper? Its warden? Its executioner?"
The Sovereign shook his head.
"No. I want you to decide its fate with clarity, not ignorance. You walk the Fourth Path—the balance between annihilation and creation. You alone can understand what the Devourer truly is."
Nysha stepped forward, voice sharp. "And if he decides wrong? What then?"
The Sovereign’s eyes glowed brighter. "Then this world burns. The next one too. And the next. Until soone else rises who can shoulder the path you now hold."
Ashwing groaned. "Great. Zero pressure. Literally none."
But the Sovereign wasn’t looking at Nysha or Ashwing anymore.
Only at Lindarion.
"Your ancestor died believing the Devourer had no right to choose its own existence. But you—" His voice softened, almost reverent. "—you carry sothing he did not."
"What?" Lindarion asked.
"A choice free from divine command."
The chamber trembled; Dythrael’s heart pulsed; the illusion of the battlefield flickered around them like distant lightning.
The Sovereign lifted his right hand.
Golden light gathered in his palm—dense, swirling, forming into a single sigil composed of light and shadow intertwined.
"This is the Mantle of Equilibrium," he said. "The authority of the Fourth Path. Once you take it, your connection to the Devourer—every fragnt of it—will deepen."
Nysha inhaled sharply. "If he takes that, he’ll never go back to who he was—"
"He is not ant to go back," the Sovereign replied. "Paths do not walk backward."
Lindarion stepped forward without hesitation.
Nysha grabbed his arm. "Think. Think before you take sothing that affects the fate of every continent on the map."
He looked at her—steady, unshaken.
"I already made my choice."
Nysha froze.
Ashwing groaned into his hands. "And the award for Most Stubborn Protagonist goes to—"
Lindarion reached out.
His fingers touched the Mantle.
The sigil dissolved into pure energy that surged through him, threading into his core, binding itself to both his mortal essence and the inheritance already awakening in his veins. His mana roared. His vision seared white. His blood pulsed with sothing that felt older than breath.
The Sovereign watched him quietly.
"From this mont forward," he said, "your fate is no longer written."
Lindarion exhaled, and the air rippled. "Good."
"Because the Devourer wakes," the Sovereign continued. "And it will seek you."
Nysha shuddered.
Ashwing nearly fell out of the air.
Lindarion didn’t flinch. "Let it co."
The Sovereign stared at him, expression unreadable, then nodded once.
"You are ready for the final truth."
The chamber cracked—light splitting like glass—revealing a descending staircase into pitch darkness.
"The last mory lies below," he said. "Take it... and learn why your birth was not fate, but design."
The chamber quieted after the echo-being dissolved, leaving behind only the faint shimr in the air where its shape had stood. The Devourer’s heart sealed itself once more, the white crack knitting closed until the sphere was whole again, pulsing with that deep, ancient rhythm that resonated sowhere inside Lindarion’s bones.
Nysha exhaled shakily, lowering her dagger. "Lindarion... that thing was speaking riddles wrapped in catastrophe. You shouldn’t have engaged it so directly."
He didn’t respond imdiately. His hand hovered over the surface of the now-still sphere as if feeling the last traces of its presence. His pulse matched its lingering rhythm, steady but heavier than before.
"It wasn’t trying to influence ," he said. "It was showing the consequence of what already exists."
Ashwing flitted nervously toward his shoulder. "I’ll be honest, I don’t even know what ’already exists’ ans anymore. Everything down here feels like a prophecy wrapped in another prophecy stapled to a cosmic on."
Nysha rubbed her temples. "It ans Lindarion has been touched by more than the Tree. And more than blood. This isn’t just destiny—sothing left fingerprints on his soul before he was even born."
"It didn’t choose ," Lindarion said quietly. "It prepared ."
Nysha stared at him, expression tightening with sothing he didn’t often see from her—fear, not of him, but for him. "Prepared you for what? To inherit the Devourer’s legacy? To kill it? To beco sothing that rewrites the balance of the entire continent?"
"The being said I decide its fate," Lindarion replied. "Not inherit. Not beco."
"And that’s supposed to be reassuring?" Ashwing squeaked.
He ignored that part and began walking toward the exit tunnel the chamber had revealed after the encounter. The path rose upward, carved by ancient hands—or claws—in patterns older than any runic discipline the elves studied. The air grew colder as they ascended.
Nysha quickened her pace to match him. "Lindarion... what did you feel when it looked at you?"
"Recognition," he said.
"That’s not possible."
He stopped walking long enough to face her fully. "Nysha... you asked earlier what I saw in the second trial."
She nodded slowly.
"I saw myself," he said. "Or rather, the version of myself I refuse to acknowledge. The part that bends fate instead of obeying it. The part that can look at Dythrael and not break."
Nysha’s jaw clenched. "You shouldn’t have had to bear that alone."
"I wasn’t alone. I carried every mory that brought here. Every choice." His gaze softened a fraction. "Even yours."
She didn’t look away—but she didn’t push further.
They resud walking. The narrow corridor eventually opened into a high, spiraling walkway carved around a massive hollow chasm that reached far upward. Faint beams of desert sunlight filtered down through cracks in the stone ceiling, illuminating swirls of dust that drifted like ancient ghosts.
Ashwing shivered. "I swear, this place could look less like a tomb for a god that eats worlds."
"It’s not a tomb," Lindarion said. "It’s a containnt labyrinth."
Nysha’s eyes widened. "You an the whole structure—every layer—was built to restrain a full manifestation of Dythrael?"
"Not a manifestation," Lindarion corrected. "A cycle."
Nysha stopped walking. "Explain."
"They didn’t imprison the Devourer. They imprisoned the mont in ti when it was weakest after its first death. They looped it. They bound the remnant consciousness into a repeating cycle, frozen at the edge of rebirth."
Nysha’s breath left her in a slow, horrified exhale. "The Demi-Humans... used temporal binding magic. That’s high-primordial craft. No wonder the sanctum reacts to you—the Tree’s influence and high-primordial magic have overlapping signatures."
Ashwing muttered, "Wonderful. So the giant world-ending serpent-monster is trapped in a cosmic ti loop and Lindarion is the remote control."
"That is not what I said," Nysha snapped.
"No, but it’s what you ant."
Lindarion smiled faintly despite the tension. "Veyrath hinted as much. When the Tree awakens, when its chosen synchronizes with its inheritance... the bindings weaken. Not because they fail, but because they expect a successor to intervene."
"Intervene how?" Nysha asked warily.
Lindarion didn’t answer.
Not because he refused—but because he didn’t know yet.
And that was heavier than any answer he could’ve given.
The walkway finally reached the top of the chasm. A massive stone archway lood ahead, carved with symbols that resembled constellations pulled from a night long forgotten. Beyond it, he could feel the desert wind—cold, dry, and filled with starlight.
They stepped through the arch.
The sky had changed. The sun had dipped low, painting the desert in amber and blood-orange hues. Their companions—Vaelion, Seris, and the dark elves—waited near the edge of the ruins camp, tense and alert.
The mont they saw Lindarion, all eyes widened.
Not because of injury.
Not because he looked drained.
But because his aura had shifted in a way that even untrained senses could feel—subtle, yes, but undeniable. A calm gravity that felt older, heavier... more sovereign.
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