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Chapter 121: A Grave Made of Embers

The world shattered around , and I was falling through darkness with no end in sight.

The snow house crumbled into dust, the warmth faded from my skin, and the sound of Mia’s voice echoed in my ears like a song that had been cut off in the middle of its final note. I reached for her, but my hands closed around nothing.

She was gone.

Then I hit the ground.

The cold stone of the laboratory floor pressed against my knees, hard and unforgiving, and the green torches on the walls flickered back into focus, casting their sickly light across the familiar nightmare of Voss’s workspace.

The tal table was still there, stained with old blood and newer mories. The tubes and the vials and the tools were scattered across the trays, each one a reminder of everything that had happened in this place.

But my eyes were not on any of those things.

My eyes were on Tempest.

The blade was buried in Mia’s chest, buried in her heart, and the black fla clung to the blade like hungry vines, dark and silent that lived inside

had spread across the steel like wildfire. They were not burning her body.

They were burning what Voss had made inside her. They were burning her soul. The thing that had stolen her will and turned her into sothing she never wanted to be.

Mia’s eyes were open.

They were not hollow anymore. They were not unfocused or distant or empty. They were back to their original amber, bright and clear, and they were looking at . Tears were streaming down her cheeks, mixing with the blood and the gri, and her lips were moving, but no sound ca out.

Then she gasped.

I pulled the sword free.

The blade slid out of her chest with a sound that I would carry with

for the rest of my life, wet and final, and I threw it aside. It clattered against the stone floor, and the black fla on its edge flickered and died. I did not care where it landed.

I caught her as she collapsed.

Her body collapsed against mine, light and fragile, and I held her carefully, as if she were made of glass and any wrong move would shatter her into pieces too small to gather. Her head rested against my chest, and her hands hung limp at her sides, and I could feel her heartbeat against my ribs. Faint and slowing.

I sank to my knees, and she lay against , and the tears that had been streaming down my face would not stop. I did not try to wipe them away. I did not have the strength.

Her hand moved.

It was barely a movent, a twitch of her fingers, a tremor in her arm. But she lifted it, slowly, painfully, and her palm ca to rest against my cheek. Her fingers were cold, so cold, and they trembled against my skin.

"...Leo," she said. Her voice was slow and weak, barely louder than a whisper. She wiped a tear from my cheek. Her touch was light, barely there, but I felt it like a brand on my skin.

"Look at you," she said, a weak smile tugging at the corner of her lips. "Crying like a baby."

"Shut up," I choked out, a broken, raw laugh escaping my throat.

"I have never seen you cry before," she said. "Not like this. "

"There is a first ti for everything."

She laughed too, and then she coughed, and the cough brought blood to her lips. She wiped it away with the back of her hand, and I held her tighter.

"...I am sorry," she said. "I am sorry you had to do this. But do not bla yourself. This is what I wanted. I am the one who asked you to do this. I... am the one who begged you."

"..."

"Do not pity yourself, Leo. Do not let this break you." She looked up at , and her eyes were wet with tears. "You did what I asked. You gave

what I wanted. You... freed ."

"I did not want to," I said. "I... never wanted this."

"I know," she said. "That is why I love you and I am sorry."

I did not know what to say. My throat was too tight, and my chest was too full, and the words would not co. I held her tighter and pressed my forehead against hers. Her skin was cold against mine, but I did not pull away. I could not.

This is the price of the path, I thought. This is the price of the choices I made.

Did I not say that I would never regret my choices?

Did I not tell Seraphina that I was willing to do whatever it took?

Did I not stand in that prison cell with blood on my hands and tell myself that this was who I had beco?

...Yes.

I had said those things.

I had made those promises.

I had chosen this path with my eyes open, knowing that it would lead to monts like this, knowing that there would be consequences for every decision I made.

However...

knowing and feeling were two different things.

I had known that I would lose people. I had known that there would be pain. I had known that the path I had chosen would not be easy or kind or gentle.

But... I had not known that it would feel like this.

It hurt. It hurt so much.

It felt like soone had reached inside my chest and squeezed my heart until it cracked, and no matter how many tis I told myself that this was the price of not running, the pain did not go away. It did not fade. It did not lessen.

It just sat there, heavy and cold, pressing against my ribs from the inside.

Why...? I thought. Why does it have to hurt this much?

Why do I have to lose everyone who matters?

Roran. The village. And now... Mia.

I had promised myself that I would never run again.

I had promised myself that I would stand my ground and fight for the people I loved, that I would not turn my back on anyone who needed , that I would face whatever ca without fear.

But I had not realized that standing your ground ant watching the people you loved die in your arms.

I had not realized that fighting for the people you loved ant losing them anyway.

I looked down at Mia. Her breathing was shallow, each breath a struggle, and her eyes were half-closed. Her chest rose and fell against mine, slow and fragile, and I could feel her heartbeat fading beneath my palm.

But she was still here. She was still with .

"Leo... the children," she whispered, her voice growing smaller. "Tell them... tell them I love them. Promise

you will help them. Make sure they live a good life. A life where they aren’t afraid."

"I promise, Mia. I promise," I said, my voice thick with grief.

"...And don’t regret... this path," she said, her eyes fluttering. "Live, Leo. For all of us."

I held her tighter, feeling her heartbeat grow faint and erratic against my ribs. I thought of every choice I had made, every drop of blood on my hands, every promise to stand my ground.

"Mia?"

She didn’t answer.

The hand on my cheek slipped away, falling limp to the cold stone floor. Her amber eyes, finally peaceful, stared at nothing as the light within them flickered and went out. Her chest gave one final, shuddering rise, and then she went still.

The warmth left her body with terrifying speed. In my arms, the girl I had fought for, the girl who had waited for

through every cut and burn, grew cold.

I sat there in the silence of the laboratory, clutching her lifeless form and I do not know what to do.

The world outside the mines didn’t stop; the war didn’t end; the gods didn’t speak. There was only the weight of her in my arms and the absolute, hollow silence of a promise kept at the cost of a soul.

Then I felt it.

A warmth in my chest. A glow in my bones, in my core, in the place where my black fla lived. The fla stirred, hungry and curious.

I rembered, when Mia pressed the blade into her heart, the black fla leaped from Tempest into her body, sothing ca back to . A warmth that did not fight. It surrendered. It flowed into the fla, and the fla changed.

...She gave

a part of her power.

The black fla in my chest was not just black anymore. It was hollow, empty and hungry for the kind of fire that did not burn flesh.

I looked down at Mia’s face. Her eyes were closed. Her chest was still.

"...Thank you," I whispered again.

_

anwhile, deep in the jungle outside the Crimson Mines...

Voss moved through the trees with a speed that should not have been possible for a man of his age.

His thin legs carried him over roots and rocks and through the thick undergrowth, and his breath ca in short, ragged gasps that fogged the air in front of his face. The sounds of battle grew fainter behind him, the clash of steel, the roar of demons, the screams of dying n, but he did not look back.

He did not care what happened to Kael or Morana or any of the others. They had been useful once, shields against the Empire’s hunters, tools to acquire the subjects he needed for his research. But their usefulness had ended.

He had what he ca for.

He reached into his coat and pulled out a small glass tube, the liquid inside swirling with a dark, iridescent light that seed to move on its own. The Catalyst. The perfected formula. The key to immortality.

"Stupid bastards," he muttered, a wide grin splitting his pale face. "They think I joined them because I believed in their cause. They think I cared about their war, their Abyss King, their petty revenge." He laughed, a dry and rasping sound that echoed through the trees.

"I used them. Just like I used everyone else. The orphans, the prisoners, the children of Wayford. All of them were tools. All of them were steps on the path to my ascension."

He held the tube up to the faint light filtering through the canopy, watching the liquid swirl and pulse. His dark eyes glead with manic triumph.

"An army of immortal soldiers. Soldiers who cannot die, who cannot be stopped, who will heal from any wound and keep fighting until their enemies are nothing but ash. With them, I will beco the most powerful person in the world. No Empire, church or Demon army will stand in my way. No one will be able to stand against ."

He slipped the tube back into his coat and pushed forward, his thin legs carrying him deeper into the jungle.

The trees were thinning ahead. He could see the edge of the forest, the open plain beyond where the grass grew tall and the sky stretched wide and blue. Freedom. A place to hide and continue his work without interference.

"Just a little further," he whispered, his voice trembling with excitent. "Just a little further, and I will be untouchable."

But as he reached the final veil of ferns. A chill ran down his spine.

It was sudden and sharp, a cold that had nothing to do with the temperature. It started at the base of his skull and spread down through his shoulders, his chest, his legs, until his whole body felt like it had been dipped in ice water.

His breath caught in his throat. His feet stopped moving.

Every instinct he possessed scread at him to run, to hide, to turn around and flee in the opposite direction as fast as his legs could carry him. But he could not move. His body would not obey.

He was prey.

...And the predator was watching from the shadows.

The dread was unlike anything he had ever felt. It was not the fear of pain or the fear of death or the fear of the unknown. It was deeper than that. The kind of terror that animals felt when they sensed a natural disaster coming, when the ground was about to split open and swallow them whole.

The trees ahead of him rustled, and a figure erged from the darkness between the trunks.

He was walking slowly, deliberately, each step asured and unhurried, as if he had all the ti in the world and knew that his prey was not going anywhere.

His right hand hung at his side, gripping a katana whose blade was dark with fresh blood that still dripped from the edge and stained the fallen leaves beneath his feet.

His clothes were torn and stained, covered in blood and dirt and the evidence of a journey through hell.

His black hair was matted with dried gore, the white streaks standing out like lightning bolts against the dark. His face was pale, gaunt, the face of a man who had been pushed past every limit and had found sothing on the other side.

But... his eyes were the worst. His eyes were hollow, reflecting nothing but the void he had beco.

There was only the certainty of death.

Voss’s stomach clenched. His nerves tightened. His throat closed up, and for a mont, he could not breathe.

The figure stopped in front of him.

His hollow eyes stared down at Voss, and Voss felt those eyes like knives pressing against his skin, cutting through his confidence and his certainty and his desperate belief that he was the smartest person in the room.

"How...?" The word ca out of Voss’s mouth before he could stop it, high and trembling. "How are you alive? How did you defeat my perfect vessel?" There is no way you could have defeated my immortal soldier!"

Leo tilted his head. He did not speak. He did not need to. His silence was louder than any scream, more terrifying than any threat. He just stood there, staring at Voss with those hollow, empty eyes, and the silence stretched between them like a blade waiting to fall.

Voss swallowed hard. His throat clicked.

"Fine!" he scread, forcing a smile onto his pale face. "You survived. Congratulations, it must have taken a lot of luck or a lot of help. But it does not matter."

He straightened his back, trying to summon the confidence that had carried him through decades of running and hiding and experinting on innocent people.

"You think you can defeat ? You think you can kill ? I have spent years preparing for this mont. Years of research and experintation and sacrifice. I am not just so foolish doctor who stumbled into power. I am the architect of the future. I am the creator of immortality."

He reached into his coat and pulled out the glass tube. The dark liquid swirled inside, pulsing with that iridescent light.

"With this, I have perfected the formula. I have unlocked the secret of eternal life. My body will heal from any wound. My flesh will regenerate faster than you can cut it. You cannot kill , boy. You cannot even hurt ."

The boy said nothing. He just stood there, watching.

Voss’s smile widened.

"All I have to do is kill you and leave. That is all. One more corpse in a jungle full of corpses. No one will ever find you. No one will ever know what happened to you. You will be forgotten, just like your village and everyone you ever loved."

He raised the tube to his lips and drank.

The liquid burned as it went down, hot and cold at the sa ti, and Voss gasped as it spread through his veins like fire through dry grass. His body convulsed. His muscles spasd. His skin rippled and shifted, the flesh writhing beneath the surface as if sothing was trying to escape.

But he did not stop.

He pulled out another tube from his coat and drank that one too. Then another. And another. Each one sent fresh waves of pain through his body, and each one pushed him further from humanity and closer to the thing he had always wanted to beco.

His skin darkened, turning grey and thick like cured leather. His bones cracked and reford, lengthening and sharpening, pushing against his flesh from the inside. His fingers curled into claws, and his teeth elongated into jagged fangs.

The mass of his body grew larger, taller, wider, swelling with corrupted muscle and twisted bone until he towered over the boy who stood before him.

"I am perfect! I can regenerate faster than you can cut!"

"Let’s see how much your body can handle," Leo whispered, his voice low. "Let’s see how much you can regenerate."

The flas ca to life in his hand.

These were different. Still black, but now streaked with a hollow purple glow at their core. Darker and deeper. They clung to his palm and his fingers, pulsing with that faint purple light, and they made no sound.

They gave no heat. They just existed, hungry and patient, waiting to be fed.

Voss felt sothing cold settle in his chest.

"What... what is that?" he asked, his voice no longer confident.

Leo did not answer. He raised his sword.

The flas spread from his hand to the blade, crawling along the steel like vines climbing a wall, and they did not burn the tal. They beca part of it. The edge of the katana glowed with that sa hollow purple light at its core, surrounded by black flas, and the air around it rippled with heat that was not heat.

Leo moved. The flas were everywhere.

They leaped from the blade and wrapped around Voss’s body, clinging to his skin, clothes and his hair.

And the worst part? They did not burn.

They just... consud.

Voss felt them sinking into his flesh, reaching past the muscle and the bone and the corrupted tissue that was supposed to make him immortal. They found his core, the source of his power, and they began to eat.

"NO!"

He tried to swat them away, but his hands passed through the flas as if they were made of smoke. He tried to run, but his legs would not obey. He tried to heal, but the flas were burning faster than his body could regenerate.

Leo watched everything. He just stood there with his hollow eyes and his burning sword, watching Voss die by inches.

The flas spread across Voss’s chest, his arms, his legs, consuming the corrupted flesh and leaving behind nothing but ash. He scread and thrashed and begged, but the flas did not care.

They were hungry.

They had been hungry for a long ti.

"Please!" Voss begged, falling to his knees. "Please, stop! I will give you anything! I will tell you everything! I will—"

"Tell ," the boy said, "what did Mia beg for?"

Voss’s mouth opened, but no words ca out.

"What did the children beg for? The ones you cut open and strapped to your tables and left to rot in the dark? What did they say when they begged?"

Voss scrambled backward, his clawed hands digging into the dirt. "It... it was research. It was necessary. You cannot make a breakthrough without sacrifices—"

"Shut up."

The flas surged.

Voss scread as they ate through his legs, turning them to ash from the knees down. He fell forward, catching himself on his hands, and the flas crawled up his arms, consuming his fingers one by one.

"LET

GO! PLEASE! I AM SORRY! I AM SO SORRY!"

The boy knelt in front of him.

His hollow eyes stared into Voss’s, and for a mont, Voss saw sothing in them. Sothing that looked like grief? Exhaustion? No, maybe the weight of everything that had been lost.

"Sorry is not enough," the boy said. "Sorry does not bring them back."

He placed his hand on Voss’s head.

The flas spread from his palm, covering Voss’s face, sinking into his skull, reaching for his brain. And Voss scread, not because of the pain, but because of what he saw in the flas.

The faces of everyone he had ever hurt.

The children who had cried for their parents.

The parents who had died trying to protect their children.

The villagers who had been slaughtered to cover his tracks.

The orphans who had been taken from the only ho they had ever known.

All of them.

Every single one.

They were there in the flas, staring at him with hollow eyes and open mouths and screams that would never end.

"This is what you took from them," Leo said. "This is what you stole. Their lives and futures. Their chance to grow up and fall in love and grow old and die peacefully in their beds."

"I DIDN’T AN—"

"You ant every second of it."

The flas burned brighter, and Voss’s body began to crumble.

His arms turned to ash, and he fell forward, his chest hitting the dirt. His legs were already gone, and his torso was cracking, the corrupted flesh flaking away like dried mud.

He crawled.

With nothing but his chest and his chin, he dragged himself across the jungle floor, leaving a trail of ash and blackened blood behind him. His mouth opened and closed, gasping for air that would not co, and his eyes were wide with a terror that had no end.

Leo followed him.

He walked behind Voss as the doctor crawled through the mud, his boots crunching on the fallen leaves, his sword hanging loose at his side. He did not hurry. He did not gloat. He just walked.

"Please... please..." Voss’s voice was barely a whisper, wet and bubbling, as blood and ash mixed in his throat. "I do not want to die... I do not want to die... I DO NOT WANT TO DIE!"

"You should have thought of that before you made everyone else die."

Voss reached the edge of the clearing. The trees were thinning. The open plain was just ahead, the grass swaying in the breeze, the sky blue and indifferent.

"Almost there... just a little further... just a little—"

The flas consud his chest.

His arms crumbled. His shoulders collapsed. His head rolled forward, his chin digging into the dirt, and his eyes stared at the open field that he would never reach.

One more inch. One more breath. One more second.

The flas reached his neck.

Voss opened his mouth to scream one last ti, but no sound ca out. The flas poured into his throat, and his eyes went dark, and his body crumbled into a pile of ash that the wind picked up and scattered across the jungle floor.

The boy stood over the ash.

His sword hung at his side, the soul flas flickering along the edge, hungry even now, even after being fed. They had tasted sothing new today.

A soul that was old and twisted and full of darkness.

They wanted more.

He looked at the pile of ash, the bits of bone that still smoldered, dark stain where Voss’s blood had soaked into the dirt.

"...Pathetic," he said.

The word hung in the air, heavy and final, and the jungle seed to hold its breath.

He raised his sword and swung it through the ash, scattering the remains across the ground. The wind carried them away, and the sun broke through the clouds, and the birds began to sing again as if nothing had happened.

But... sothing had happened.

The boy who had walked into the jungle was not the sa boy who walked out.

He looked up at the sky. The sun was setting, painting the clouds in shades of orange and red and gold. The light washed over his face, warm and soft, and he closed his eyes.

The sword fell from his hand.

It landed in the dirt with a soft thud, and the soul flas flickered and died, leaving the blade dark and cold. He did not pick it up. He did not have the strength.

His knees buckled.

He fell to the ground, his hands pressed against the dirt, his shoulders shaking. The tears ca then, hot and fast, streaming down his cheeks and dripping onto the ash below.

No one was there to see him cry.

No one was there to hold him.

No one was there to tell him that it would be okay.

The sun sank below the horizon, and the shadows grew long, and the boy sat alone in the ground, surrounded by ash and death and the mory of everyone he had failed to save.

He scread.

It was not a battle cry. It was not a roar of triumph.

It was raw and broken and full of everything he had been holding back since the night Wayford burned. The grief of losing Roran. The guilt of watching the children die. The weight of every life he had taken and every life he could not save.

The jungle echoed with the sound, and the birds flew away, and the sun finished its descent, leaving the world in darkness.

The boy sat alone on the dark, and he did not move for a long ti.

The night was falling.

The sky was deep purple and black, scattered with stars that seed too far away to matter. The ash still smoldered in the ground, tiny embers glowing in the darkness, bits of fire still clinging to the remnants of what had been a man.

The boy lay on his back, staring up at the stars, his chest rising and falling with shallow, ragged breaths.

Tempest lay in the dirt beside him, the blade dark and cold, the leather grip stained with blood that would never wash out. The sword had done its work. The sword had tasted vengeance.

But... the sword could not fill the empty space in his chest.

He thought about Roran, the way he had smiled at the end, the way he had said that Leo would be stronger than him.

He thought about the children, the ones who had been taken and the ones who had been saved, and the ones who would never grow up.

He thought about Mia, the warmth of her hand on his cheek, the sound of her voice, the way she had looked at him with those amber eyes that had seen too much pain and still held onto hope.

He thought about the oath he had made.

I will not run...

He had kept that oath. He had stood his ground. He had fought and bled and killed and lost, and he was still standing.

However...

Standing did not an surviving.

The tears ca again, silent this ti, sliding down his cheeks and disappearing into his hair. He did not wipe them away. He did not have the strength.

The stars watched him from above, indifferent and eternal, and the jungle was silent, as if it was mourning alongside him.

The boy who had decided not to run lay in the darkness, surrounded by the ashes of his enemy, and wept for everything he had lost.

The sun would rise again tomorrow. The world would keep turning. The war would continue.

But tonight, there was only... grief.

...And the boy who carried it alone.

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