"You already know how this ends. You've seen it. You've felt it."
Above us, the ltdown twisted, arcs of swirling color forming a silhouette in the vortex. My lips pressed into a tight line. Belisarius. I knew that shape, that resonance. I recognized the half-manifest presence that threatened to cross the threshold from illusions into raw existence. The dryness in my mouth flared; I refused to let a flicker of dread show on my face.
Before I could move, the Harbinger raised a staff I hadn't noticed before. Or perhaps illusions had disguised it until now. The ltdown roared like a storm, illusions layering themselves into the air with each pulse. My arms ached, my lungs begged for relief, but I forced them into compliance. We clashed, swords against illusions, staff against steel. The ltdown's shrieks turned the entire chamber into a haze of fractal chaos.
Sowhere in the havoc, I caught sight of a blurred silhouette overhead, eyes flickering with a presence I wished I'd never seen. Belisarius opened them, half-ford, bridging illusions and reality. nnAnd the Harbinger's voice, calm and darkly amused, whispered across the storm of fractals:nn"Do you even know what you are?" The Harbinger tilted his head, expression unreadable beneath the flickering illusions. "You think you're here to stop this. That if you carve through , through my cult, through this city, you'll unmake what's already begun. But you're wrong." His voice softened, the kind of softness ant to dig under the skin. "You're not here to stop this, Draven. You're here to fulfill it."
The air rippled. The chamber cracked. The mont had run out, and so had any semblance of calm we might have clung to. Illusions twitched at the edges of my vision, glimring strands of fractal light that darted away whenever I turned my head. In my lungs, the dryness scoured each breath, leaving behind a taste of heated dust and sothing acrid, like scorched tal. I forced myself not to cough. Weakness—any weakness—would be read by the ltdown as an invitation.
A pressure wave exploded across the chamber, powerful yet eerily silent, and I heard only the faint rush of displaced air. But the force slamd into us like a battering ram. Asterion, fast on his feet, skidded back with arms braced, boots scraping to keep him upright. I felt the shock in my legs, a jolt that nearly drove
to one knee. Overhead, the illusions around the ceiling flared brighter, as though the ltdown itself had exhaled. The floor split beneath , stone stretching and folding as if the temple had co alive, battered into shape by leyline energy. It was as if we'd stepped onto the back of a huge, thrashing serpent whose scales kept shifting just to knock us off.
A single glance upward confird what I dreaded: the ltdown's raw magic was funneling directly here, shaping the air, the ground, the illusions. Runes flared in the corner of my gaze, etched into broken pillars that now floated at impossible angles, beams of epheral light bridging them midair. It felt like the ltdown was weaving a tapestry of chaos, each thread twisted in fractal patterns. The dryness in my throat chafed worse with every passing heartbeat, as if the ltdown's presence was siphoning away the last traces of moisture in the air. My pulse hamred to the sa frantic rhythm that the illusions danced to—a punishing tempo I had no choice but to match.
Asterion leapt onto a shifting platform as a chunk of floor behind him collapsed into a gaping nothingness. He snagged an outcropping with one hand, just barely anchoring himself, then vaulted to more solid ground. I followed before illusions sealed the gap, boots planting on a slab of stone that hadn't existed a second before. The dryness in my mouth itched, and I forced a slow exhale to keep from choking on dust. There was no ti to question the platform's stability. If we paused, we'd give illusions the advantage.
Above, the ceiling twisted in fits and starts. Pillars that had once soared upright now tilted at impossible angles. Epheral walkways flickered in and out, half-bridging the gaps, tempting any fool to step onto them. I had no intention of playing by the ltdown's rules. This entire battlefield was alive with chaos, but I refused to be a pawn. My sword, heavy in my hand, was the only certainty I had.
Figures erged from the arches—robed cultists whose bodies flickered like candle flas on the brink of guttering out. Yet there was strength in them, a savage shimr in their eyes that matched the ltdown's swirl. The leyline's energy bled into their limbs, making them half-spectral, half-real, intangible one second and solid the next. Their weapons shifted with their movents. A staff elongated into a scythe of shimring light. A short blade morphed into a whip crackling with epheral sparks. Each was an extension of the ltdown's will, and we were intruders to be purged.
One lunged straight for , illusions trailing from his arms like strears of fluid color. I parried before his blade could fully manifest, steel clashing with fractal energy that sizzled against the tal. The dryness in my throat beca a raw burn—I could practically feel the ltdown's power trying to seep into my lungs through the swirling illusions. The cultist's form fractured as we locked weapons, his face splitting into two partial images, each glimring with a half-ford grin. I exhaled, a short, forceful breath, ignoring how it scraped my throat, and twisted my sword angle. My blade found the leyline thread anchoring him to reality, snapping it with a tallic ring that echoed in the hush. He shattered in a swirl of light, dissolving into formless arcs before vanishing altogether.
Asterion advanced to my left. I saw him deflect an elongated staff that sought to coil around his waist. His dagger cut the epheral tal like cloth, illusions splintering as the cultist staggered, half-lost in the ltdown's swirl. With a final slash, Asterion dispatched his attacker, who crumpled into a ghostly imprint on the floor that flickered out an instant later. The ltdown claid its own, leaving behind only fractures of color that drifted away.
The air changed. A deep, resonant growl rumbled through the chamber, a sound both bestial and electric, vibrating along the stones. It set my teeth on edge, dryness intensifying until each breath stung. Then it appeared—a chira of fractured light and darkness, stepping into being like a nightmare forced into the physical world. Limbs twisted, half scaly, half epheral, flickering in and out of existence as the ltdown tried to decide how real it was. Its mouth yawned open in a snarl, static-laced, crackling with violet energy that arced across fang-like illusions. If the ltdown were a living thing, this was its chosen champion—a behemoth conjured to devour us.
Its first lunge defied logic. Sothing that large shouldn't move so quickly, but illusions and ltdown arcs let it warp space around its limbs, propelling it forward in a blur of fractal color. I threw myself aside, twisting to avoid claws raking the stone. The impact left scorched lines that glowed searing white, sizzling the air. Asterion ducked under a thrashing tail that elongated mid-swing, then snapped back to half its length. The dryness in my throat felt like swallowing knives—I fought the urge to cough.
It reared up, illusions swirling around its chest, forging thick plates that glimred with violet sparks. I realized, in a cold, analytical flash, that the ltdown had partially stabilized this creature. It wasn't just epheral claws or illusions woven in a haphazard shape. The ltdown had poured raw power into it, sothing dangerously close to reality. My heart pounded in my ears as I circled, testing angles for an opening. A slash at its flank might do nothing if illusions re-ford a second later.
It roared, stepping onto a platform that rippled at its touch. The floor beneath Asterion's feet buckled, forcing him to spring back or risk tumbling into swirling fractals of empty space. I seized that mont to move, charging in from the creature's exposed side. My sword swung with lethal purpose. The dryness raked my throat raw, but I ignored it, funneling every ounce of will into precision. My blade connected with the illusions forming the beast's ribcage, tearing a line of fractal haze that spat arcs of violet energy. The chira jolted, screeching in a static-laden pitch that raked my nerves, illusions swirling violently in protest.
It struck back, epheral jaws snapping at . I pivoted on raw reflex, dropping low. The dryness made
want to choke, but I forced a steady exhale, letting the fraction of a second's calm guide my response. I hamred my elbow into the beast's neck—a worthless tactic against illusions, but it served to disrupt the ltdown's flow for an instant. The chira reared, illusions fracturing around its body, flickering enough for
to glimpse the real arcs of energy knitting it together. It wasn't invincible. But it was close.
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