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As Raen stepped through the fractured arch of black stone, sothing intangible gripped his chest—like a hand made of ice squeezing his lungs. The air inside the temple was wrong. It tasted like burnt blood and ash, and the flickering torches mounted on the desecrated pillars seed to breathe, shadows pulsing with each beat of his heart.

Lyra followed close behind, her hands faintly aglow with sigils of forbidden magic. The stolen book from the ancient library hung in a satchel at her side, trembling ever so slightly—as if it could feel what awaited within.

The chamber ahead yawned open, circular and enormous, and at its center stood a cracked monolith inscribed with shifting glyphs that clawed at their eyes if looked at too long. Raen halted, staring at it.

"Do you hear that?" Lyra asked, voice barely above a whisper.

Raen didn't answer. The glyphs weren't the only things shifting. Sothing was unraveling in his mind. A hum—low, ancient, impossibly distant—threaded into his skull. It wasn't the first ti he heard it. The more gods he consud, the louder it grew. Like the whisper of a thousand dying gods crying out through his veins.

He stepped toward the monolith, but his legs weakened. The mories began to rise again—mories that weren't his, but were now stitched into his soul.

The execution of a lover. The betrayal of a brother. The fall of a kingdom, watched from a throne soaked in blood.

"Raen!"

Lyra caught him as he collapsed to one knee. His hand clutched the left side of his chest where the Demon God's mark pulsed erratically. He could feel it—his identity fraying under the weight of what he had taken.

"I can't... I can't tell who I am anymore," he whispered, eyes wide, wild. "Their lives... they scream inside ."

Lyra knelt in front of him, her hands on his face. "You're Raen Valor. You're you. Don't let their echoes beco your voice."

A mont passed.

Then another.

He closed his eyes.

And breathed.

Silence.

For a heartbeat, it was just silence. Real, still, his.

He stood.

They stepped closer to the monolith together.

Suddenly, a scream ripped through the stone—inhuman, layered with hundreds of overlapping voices. The glyphs burst into writhing tendrils of fla and shadow, curling outward into a spectral form: a guardian spirit twisted by divine corruption. Its eyes were hollow, its face masked with silver tears.

"You are not welco," it hissed. "You carry the stench of gods and demons alike."

Raen didn't flinch.

He drew his blade.

Lyra whispered the first spell she had mastered—the one that turned her blood into chains of fire.

Together, they faced the guardian.

And the war in the shadows began.

As Raen stepped through the fractured arch of black stone, sothing intangible gripped his chest—like a hand made of ice squeezing his lungs. The air inside the temple was wrong. It tasted like burnt blood and ash, and the flickering torches mounted on the desecrated pillars seed to breathe, shadows pulsing with each beat of his heart.

Lyra followed close behind, her hands faintly aglow with sigils of forbidden magic. The stolen book from the ancient library hung in a satchel at her side, trembling ever so slightly—as if it could feel what awaited within.

The chamber ahead yawned open, circular and enormous, and at its center stood a cracked monolith inscribed with shifting glyphs that clawed at their eyes if looked at too long. Raen halted, staring at it.

"Do you hear that?" Lyra asked, voice barely above a whisper.

Raen didn't answer. The glyphs weren't the only things shifting. Sothing was unraveling in his mind. A hum—low, ancient, impossibly distant—threaded into his skull. It wasn't the first ti he heard it. The more gods he consud, the louder it grew. Like the whisper of a thousand dying gods crying out through his veins.

He stepped toward the monolith, but his legs weakened. The mories began to rise again—mories that weren't his, but were now stitched into his soul.

The execution of a lover. The betrayal of a brother. The fall of a kingdom, watched from a throne soaked in blood.

"Raen!"

Lyra caught him as he collapsed to one knee. His hand clutched the left side of his chest where the Demon God's mark pulsed erratically. He could feel it—his identity fraying under the weight of what he had taken.

"I can't... I can't tell who I am anymore," he whispered, eyes wide, wild. "Their lives... they scream inside ."

Lyra knelt in front of him, her hands on his face. "You're Raen Valor. You're you. Don't let their echoes beco your voice."

A mont passed.

Then another.

He closed his eyes.

And breathed.

Silence.

For a heartbeat, it was just silence. Real, still, his.

He stood.

They stepped closer to the monolith together.

Suddenly, a scream ripped through the stone—inhuman, layered with hundreds of overlapping voices. The glyphs burst into writhing tendrils of fla and shadow, curling outward into a spectral form: a guardian spirit twisted by divine corruption. Its eyes were hollow, its face masked with silver tears.

"You are not welco," it hissed. "You carry the stench of gods and demons alike."

Raen didn't flinch.

He drew his blade.

Lyra whispered the first spell she had mastered—the one that turned her blood into chains of fire.

Together, they faced the guardian.

And the war in the shadows began.

---

To be continued....

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