The deeper they descended into the molten tunnels beneath the Flavault, the more the air seed to breathe on its own—like the lungs of so buried titan exhaling heat, madness, and mory. Raen felt it first. A tug behind his eyes. A thread pulled taut beneath the skin of his thoughts.
Keir noticed it too. His voice had grown quieter, his humor brittle. And Ashveil, despite his eternal calm, kept glancing at Raen like sothing was shifting inside him.
The walls pulsed.
The path was lined with twisted statues—warped remnants of gods long dead, their stone faces sared and lted, mouths wide as if still screaming. One statue had a single eye carved into its forehead, and as Raen passed, it wept molten gold. No one touched it.
"Do you hear it?" Raen murmured.
Keir hesitated. "The... humming?"
It wasn't humming. Not truly. It was a song that wasn't made of sound—a mory of a lody buried in bone. It tugged at Raen's soul like a noose.
They reached a chamber where the stone gave way to black crystal. A throne stood shattered in the center, split into dozens of jagged shards that floated above the floor like a crown of obsidian teeth. And at the heart of it—
"Serenya," Raen whispered.
She stood barefoot upon the shards, unhard. Her pale skin shimred like she was half-real, dressed in a torn, blood-stained wedding gown. Her hair, once a chestnut waterfall, was now tangled and clinging to her like vines. Her eyes—gods, her eyes—still glowed with that twisted affection that made Raen's blood burn.
"Hello again," she said softly, voice lined with thorns. "Did you miss ?"
Ashveil drew his blade.
"No," Raen said sharply. "Don't."
Serenya stepped down from the floating shards. They moved aside for her like worshippers parting for a queen. She reached him without sound, her fingers brushing his jaw.
"You look older," she whispered. "More broken. That suits you."
Raen didn't move. "You shouldn't be here."
She tilted her head. "But I never left you."
Keir stepped forward, "Who the hell is this?"
"My past," Raen said. "The part I buried."
Serenya smiled sweetly. "He carved out of his soul, piece by piece. Left in the dark. But love... it grows stronger when starved. Didn't you know?"
Ashveil's knuckles whitened. "What does she want?"
"To finish what we started," Serenya said.
She turned, arms spread wide as if inviting the gods themselves. The shards of the throne floated higher, reacting to her emotion. Her voice dropped, tender as a lover's whisper.
"I rember the night you left bleeding. Do you?"
Raen clenched his fists.
"I begged you to stay. But you said love was weakness. You said the gods needed to die more than I needed to live. And so I died. And the gods? They fed sothing worse than death."
She stepped closer. "They made beautiful."
Raen didn't flinch as she pressed her lips to his. It was warm. Familiar. And wrong.
"Serenya—"
"You were my salvation. Now you'll be my ruin."
She leaned into his ear. "You can't run from anymore. Either love again... or I'll make you watch as I tear apart your new friends."
And then she turned.
To Keir.
"I could flay the god inside him. Peeling it off like skin. Would you like that, Raen? Or maybe I'll slit Ashveil's throat while he sleeps. Then kiss the blood from your fingers."
Raen stepped between them. "Touch them and I'll kill you."
Serenya blinked, then giggled.
"You already did."
And with a flick of her wrist, the black crystal throne shattered further—unleashing a scream from the earth itself.
From the walls, golden veins burst open, and a wind filled with voices shrieked through the chamber.
Serenya vanished into the shadows.
The song returned—louder, furious, divine.
Raen fell to his knees.
And a voice—not Serenya's—spoke inside his head.
"The first throne has been found. He rembers. The Devourer wakes."
To be continued.....
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