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Chapter 883: To Let You Taste Eternity

With profound sorrow, Naida explained softly, her voice trembling with the weight of necessary cruelty, “While you were distracted, I injected you with sothing that drains your mana first, preventing your Hellbringer form. It’ll let you move on without pain.”

“No! No!” Asher’s voice tore through the unseen barrier, grief raw and unbearable, understanding Naida’s intention but devastated beyond reason. “You shouldn’t have done that!!”

Ravina’s eyes flooded with terrified tears, disbelief mingling with hurt, “You’re… you’re trying to kill ? Why…?”

Naida shook her head sorrowfully, gently cradling Ravina’s weakening body, voice starting to thicken with remorse, “Because we have lived through a very similar tiline like this before or as your brother would call it the ‘Fractured Tiline’…the vital tiline where Aira coming to her senses or not decides everything. Did you really think this was our first ti coming here and helping Aira like this? No…we have done this so many tis and I unfortunately rember the various branches that had happened in a tiline like this including the possibility of you staying only to end up with a fate worse than death. Your father and mother wouldn’t want that.”

“But…” Ravina gasped weakly, tears streaming freely, “That shouldn’t be possible… You shouldn’t rember…”

Naida’s voice softened even further, heavy with profound sorrow, “I never should. But Aira—the Aira we just helped—she whispers to each ti a new tiline erges. It’s how I carry the burden, knowing everything we’ve done and everything we will suffer. Your brother and father wished to spare you this pain. Even strong and physically grown up as you are, you’re barely ten years old, Ravina. They didn’t want you chained to such suffering.”

“You’re lying… I could beco immortal like her! I could save him! Please…” Ravina pleaded desperately, weakening, her vision blurring at the edges of darkness.

“You’ve said that before and I know what cos of it,” Naida whispered, tears falling openly. “You never listened. You’re stubbornly courageous, just like your father. It’s what makes you precious, but also what makes this impossible.”

“Aunty Naida…” Ravina’s voice faded slowly, her eyelids fluttering, consciousness slipping away, “…I…”

“Forgive , Ravina… I’m so sorry but I can’t bear to see you suffer more,” Naida’s voice broke, fragile with heartbreak as she clung desperately to Ravina, clutching her fading body close, tears falling freely into Ravina’s hair.

From afar, Asher watched helplessly, his own heart fracturing with devastating grief. Ravina’s final breaths ca softly, slipping gently into eternal rest. His soul wept, understanding Naida’s heartbreaking choice yet unable to bear it.

She gently knelt and laid Ravina’s lifeless form carefully beside Cedric’s unconscious body. Her movents were slow, almost reverent, as though every motion carried the weight of countless lifetis. The air was thick with sorrow, the atmosphere heavy enough to choke even the faintest glimrs of hope.

She sat quietly beside an unconscious Cedric, eyes shimring with sorrowful affection. Her trembling fingers brushed softly over his peaceful yet tragic face, the touch as tender as a lover’s farewell. Each tear falling from her ruby eyes caught the faint starlight, shimring briefly like jewels before fading into darkness.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered, voice cracking, raw with grief and guilt, “I failed to save you… again. How many more lifetis must I endure this pain?” Her gaze drifted upwards, through clouds and stars, towards the invisible, uncaring heavens. “Aira,” she called softly, her voice trembling yet clear, a plea woven into every syllable. “I know you can hear out there. I’ve always wondered… why did you choose ? Did you really believe I was the only one strong enough to do the hard things nobody else would?”

She laughed bitterly, shaking her head as fresh tears blurred her vision. “No, I’m not as strong as you think. Every loop, every betrayal, every sacrifice—I’m this close to breaking apart forever.” Her gaze dropped lovingly back to Cedric and Ravina, the pain softening briefly as she whispered, “But sohow, for their sake, I pull myself together. And yet…I can’t…” Her eyes lifted again, pleading with the empty night, “I can’t keep hurting them like this. There’s only so much pain one soul can bear. I’m not as strong as you, Aira. So please,” her voice cracked, begging through the veil of stars, “make the next tiline the last. Let this tornt end.”

A sudden, oppressive silence engulfed her words. The gentle whisper of the wind ceased abruptly, the air heavy with foreboding. A shiver of dread raced down Naida’s spine, her heart stopping briefly in raw terror.

“It ends when you stop ssing with ti.”

A haggard, eerie voice sliced through the silence from behind her, cold and cruel, dripping with ancient bitterness.

Naida’s eyes widened sharply in absolute terror, sothing rarely shown in her composed deanor. She spun around imdiately, heart hamring in wild panic, gaze eting the nightmarish figure standing behind her.

The air around the chilling figure warped violently, distorting like mories unraveling mid-scream. Her hair glowed a sickly, radiant white, cascading lifelessly over her shoulders, shimring faintly like dying starlight tangled in threads of despair. Jagged, bone-like spikes protruded cruelly from her skull and shoulders, grisly reminders of ti’s relentless punishnt.

Her pale skin was etched with luminous, white veins—scars pulsing ominously, remnants of mana abuse and countless desperate manipulations of ti itself. Eyes, blazing radiant voids, stared back at Naida—empty of compassion, rcy burned away eons ago, replaced by an eternity of bitter rage.

Her tattered dress clung grotesquely to her emaciated form, stiffened by countless layers of dried blood. Crimson stains marked her long fingers, still fresh, dripping ceaselessly, marking the ground like a macabre trail of violence. Orbs of pure radiant mana hovered silently around her, serene in their terrifying purity—ready to annihilate reality itself without hesitation or remorse.

Asher was paralyzed in shock, horror gripping him completely. He recognized the cruelly distorted face—this was Aira—but twisted beyond all humanity, beyond madness, into sothing utterly monstrous and unrecognizable.

This Aira didn’t even have any traces of humanity left in her unlike the Aira that Naida and Ravina had fought. And it seed she was far more powerful than any Aira he had seen, except for the one that ascended.

Naida stumbled back, voice weak with terror and disbelief, “You…again…”

Aira smiled darkly, a chilling grin devoid of warmth. Her voice dripped venomous mockery, “Yes. Did you miss ?” She tilted her head mockingly, eyes glittering cruelly, “It was terribly foolish of you to kill that young demon out of fear of . Did you forget I can rewind ti?” Her lips curled viciously, voice lowering to a malicious whisper, “And I’ll gladly exact the sa punishnt again. I never tire of it.”

“No, don’t—please!” Naida’s voice broke desperately, hands raised in futile surrender. “I don’t know what you want…or what I could possibly do to make you leave us alone!”

The dark amusent drained from Aira’s twisted face, replaced by malevolent contempt. Her eyes burned brighter, chilling and inhuman. “Leave you alone?” she whispered bitterly, voice trembling with ancient pain and rage. “I begged the sa—to the stars, to ti, to the Damned One itself. No one ever listened. Now it’s your turn to scream into the void, to beg, plead, suffer—and be forgotten. Again…and again…”

Naida’s fists clenched in helpless fury, her voice desperate yet determined, “I’m asking you again—don’t you care about Cedric or Asher anymore? Did you forget why you beca like this?”

Aira stepped closer, radiant veins crackling beneath her sickly skin, her eyes glistening dangerously. “You still think this is going to help save him?” She slowly stepped closer, voice trembling with spite and bitterness. “This loop thrives on hope. On futile rewinds. On pathetic, dood acts of love like yours. I’ll burn every thread, destroy every soul who dares tamper with ti. I’ll silence every heartbeat, every hour—until there’s nothing left to rewind. Only then will he truly rest.”

Naida’s voice trembled bitterly, full of heartbreak and resignation, “You’re beyond saving, you monster.”

Naida brandished her spear, stance determined yet hopeless. Aira’s smile returned crueler, colder. She lifted a pale, crimson-stained hand, the orbs of radiant mana spiraling violently, gleaming ominously.

“You’re right,” Aira whispered mockingly, power surging hungrily around her fingertips. “I’m beyond it all. Unfortunately, I don’t have ti to punish you properly—another foolish version of myself is out there playing with ti again. The one who you helped beco an immortal,” She gnashed her teeth in anger. But…” Her voice deepened ominously as her lips twisted into a malevolent smile, “I can spare a mont to let you taste eternity.”

“No! Aira, please—” Naida’s voice shattered desperately as pure terror consud her.

Aira’s outstretched hand twisted sharply. Ti itself scread in agony, wrapping around Naida, tearing through her flesh with rciless precision.

The beautiful, regal Naida withered horrifically before Asher’s frozen gaze. Her ruby eyes widened in anguished disbelief as youth faded in seconds, skin wrinkling, hair turning brittle and white, her strength devoured rcilessly.

Asher’s soul fractured, horror choking him as he helplessly watched Naida’s body decay into a skeletal form. Bones cracked, crumbled, then fell heavily into dust, scattering silently across the cold, indifferent earth.

For so reason, he felt that this was not a simple or quick death but sothing far far worse to make even Naida that terrified.

Through it all, Aira laughed coldly, mocking Naida’s desperate echos, “If only I had more ti to savor your agony. But duty calls.”

She turned briefly towards the sky, an eerie calm in her cruel eyes. “Enjoy your peace while you can. Eventually, you’ll beg for oblivion too.”

And without another word, the horrifying figure flickered—vanishing like a twisted nightmare, leaving only silence and echoes of endless despair behind.

Asher’s heart sank, trembling violently, heart shattered by what he’d witnessed. If he could feel, his nerves would be trembling, grief and rage mingling in agonizing waves. He’d seen cruelty, suffering, tragedy—yet never had he imagined such a rciless fate as this.

To see soone he once loved turning into sothing like that and exacting such “punishnt” on another one he loved.

His shaking hands clenched tightly, an anguished promise whispered into darkness:

“No more…I won’t let you do this alone anymore, Aira. I’ll find a way… no matter how many lifetis it takes.”

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