The silence after the vision was suffocating.
Raen stared at his hands. They trembled—not from fear, but recognition. Sowhere, in that fracture of mory, he had seen himself. Not as he was now, but as sothing older. Sothing bound in chains of mory and prophecy.
Lyra sat quietly beside him, knees pulled to her chest, her spellbook open but forgotten in her lap.
"You said... the Hollow King," she whispered. "What does that an?"
Raen didn't answer at first.
Because the answer wasn't in words. It was feeling—a void where a soul should be. A thrum in his veins not of blood, but Nas, echoing fragnts of those he had consud.
"It ans I was never just Raen Valor," he said, voice distant. "Or maybe... I stopped being him the first ti I devoured a god."
He stood, walking to the edge of the cavern. The crystal shard was gone. In its place, scorched markings had ford in a circle around where it had floated—glyphs not of language, but binding. They thrumd softly under his feet, alive.
Lyra joined him. "These markings... I've seen sothing like them before. In the forbidden codex under the Ashen Library. They're part of a power system—an ancient one."
Raen looked at her, gaze sharp. "Explain."
She nodded, her voice calm but urgent. "There were once three Laws that ruled this world: The Law of Nas, The Law of Thrones, and The Law of Unmaking."
---
The Law of Nas governed identity. Everything—every soul, place, weapon, god—possessed a True Na. To speak it was to bind it. To devour it... was to beco it. This law was broken when Raen consud the first god, and the world has been bleeding ever since.
The Law of Thrones defined power's hierarchy. Thrones were not physical chairs, but conceptual dominions. Whoever ascended a throne ruled over a domain—Ti, Death, Fla, mory. But each throne ca at a cost. It fed on the one who sat upon it, demanding they beco its idea.
The Law of Unmaking was older than the gods. It described entropy not as destruction, but reversion. To break the world back into Na, and Na into Void. Only one power wielded this law.
The Hollow King.
---
"That's the system," Lyra finished, pale. "Everything in this world flows from it. The power to devour Nas. To ascend Thrones. And to Unmake."
Raen closed his eyes.
And laughed—quietly. Bitterly.
"So I'm not just a curse. I'm the curse."
Lyra stepped forward, placing a hand on his back. "No. You're the only one who can survive the system without being broken by it."
He looked at her.
Her presence—so small, yet unshaken—was the only warmth in that cavern of forgotten truths.
---
As they turned to leave the temple, the world above had changed.
The sky was bleeding.
Ash fell like snow, and the sun was hidden behind a veil of sickly red clouds. Across the horizon, a tower of obsidian had erupted—black and jagged, pulsing with the sa energy Raen now carried inside him.
Lyra's breath caught. "That wasn't there before."
Raen nodded. "The shard awakened it. Or... I did."
Suddenly, a pulse of pressure washed over them—thick, godlike. The trees swayed without wind. Birds died mid-flight. And from the direction of the tower, a sound rang out.
A na.
Spoken by no tongue, yet felt in every vein.
> "Raen."
---
From the ashes, a figure erged.
Tall. Cloaked in armor made of twisted bone. Its face was a mirror—Raen's face, but twisted, cruel, empty.
It knelt.
"You have returned, my King."
Raen didn't move. His voice was flat. "Who are you?"
The figure looked up, hollow eyes gleaming. "I am the first Na you ever devoured. The first throne you broke. I am your shadow, your sword, and your consequence. I serve the one who devours Nas."
Raen drew his blade.
Lyra stepped forward, magic pulsing through her fingers. "Is it hostile?"
The mirror-King only bowed lower. "Only if commanded."
Raen stared at the creature—and in that mont, understood.
He hadn't just consud gods. He had created echoes—fragnts of power left behind that could act.
This was the true nature of his ability.
Echo-Sovereignty.
He didn't just gain their strength.
He ruled their ghosts.
---
They traveled toward the obsidian tower, now visible like a spike through the heavens. Each step brought whispers, voices long gone—gods who had once ruled.
And Raen, the usurper.
He would face the throne that awaited.
But as the tower lood nearer, Lyra turned to him.
"There's sothing I didn't say earlier," she said. "About the forbidden book. I translated a passage after you fell unconscious."
She reached into her satchel, pulling out a torn page.
Raen scanned it.
The script was older than anything he had read. But one line stood clear:
> "The Hollow King is not the end of the world."
> "He is what remains... after it ends."
Raen looked up.
And for the first ti, he felt it.
The world was dying.
And he might be its final witness.
---
To be continued...
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