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Chapter 482

Chapter 480: Providence

ARTHUR LEYWIN

Through the cacophony of indistinguishable sounds, I heard a muffled voice.

“Kill her.”

“No.”

A bright blur in the heart of darkness. The bitter backdrop for the echoes of ten thousand splintered aspects of a mind pushed beyond the edge of capability, of sanity.

Against the back of my closed eyelids, aether seeped like blood from the pores between worlds. Interposed over this image was another: golden threads stretching beyond the bounds of one world and into the next, through a rift, reaching far and wide as they spread from the nexus point that was a single man, a man whose hands were red with the blood of civilization after civilization. In the image, I cut the cords of Fate and watched an empire fall. In the image, I looked down at my own hands, and they were red like his.

Not like that. I cast the vision aside. A small dot of light was growing behind it.

I tried to speak. The words came out as a cry.

Another image. One I considered harder, longer: me, a crown of light above my brow, the threads of Fate wrapped around me like armor, Agrona powerless against me. In the vision, I struck him down ten different ways, and yet each Fateful blow reverberated across time and space to ensure failure and destruction, and ten different visions within the vision collapsed around me. Me, standing at the epicenter of failure.

I cast the image aside with some difficulty.

The light grew closer, brighter.

I pondered the last vision, the only way. It was a door I could open but not see beyond. But it was the only way.

The visions melted into a bright blur. I tried to close my eyes, but they were already shut.

Indiscernible sounds battered my ears.

“Kill her.”

“No.”

“Arthur-Grey.”

Lightning behind my eyes. Breath trapped in my lungs. A world written in fire, seen through closed lids.

My eyes snapped open, and a weak cry escaped my lips.

I saw myself from above, a mind out of body. I was sitting cross-legged in the pool of aether-rich liquid, which rippled slightly and cast an uneven blue-purple light across the interior of the large underground cavern where Sylvia had hidden so long ago. Beside me, Sylvie sat in an identical position. Her face was scrunched into a tight frown, her eyes still closed, the lids moving as the eyeballs below raced back and forth, as if she were having a tortured dream.

There was no emotion in what I saw before me. The scene was still too detached from me, too distant and unreal.

Tessia—no, Cecilia—was on her hands and knees next to the pool. Her gunmetal hair hung down in front of her face. Almond-shaped teal eyes narrowed, glowering through the silvery strands at the man standing above her. Blood pooled around her fingers and spilled into the pool, staining the dimming blue light.

I didn’t have to search for the source to know it wasn’t her blood, but my eyes still flicked to Nico. Each faint beat of his dying heart sent more of what little blood he had left pouring from the unearthly, branching black spike that protruded from his back.

Neither did I need to guess at how this had come about. The mana that had conjured the fatal spell still floated around Agrona, barely controlled. He had already forgotten Nico, I knew. His entire will was bent on Cecilia as he matched her glowering stare with a look of cruel, expectant command.

Many golden threads ran between the three. Those around Nico were beginning to snap one by one. Most led from him to Cecilia, wrapping around her, and fewer to Agrona. A couple of threads bound Nico to me, but these were trembling with tension, ready to snap.

While few threads connected Nico and Agrona, Agrona himself radiated more than I could count.

And yet I was covered in even more golden threads than the others. Wrapped around every inch of my body so that I was nearly hidden beneath them, the golden threads connected me to all the others, and then spread out into the wider world, just like Agrona. So thickly were the threads wound, that I almost looked like—

“Arthur-Grey.”

Through the woven threads, dimly glowing around me like the wrappings of an ancient mummified king, I saw it. The aspect of Fate, in and around me, bound to me, sitting just behind and above me—not in three-dimensional space, but in time and the pressed layers of the fabric of the universe that separated the physical world and the aetheric realm in which it was trapped.

“I accept the vision of the future you have offered as also being within the natural order, the necessary advance of the arrow of time,” the aspect continued, its voice only for my ears. “But I offer also a warning.”

My vision retracted even further, pulling back through the roof of the cavern and the soil above it into open air. Instead of looking down on the Beast Glades, I was above Etistin, just like in the visions Fate had shown me of the past events there.

Now, it showed me the future.

Just like before, white blurs representing the dragons arrived, and Etistin as I knew it was wiped from the face of Sapin. The bay looked lonely and forlorn without the city looking down on it, but time sped by, and soon a new civilization was building there. The simple structures they constructed did not last long before they too were wiped out. The speed of the vision seemed to be increasing, so that I only saw flashes of each new city being built before it was destroyed.

I withdrew further, until the entire world was only a distant bit of color against an expansive dark sky, empty except for the distant stars. All the wide universe was laid out before me in exaggerated colors, the stars bright pin-pricks of light against a swirling, oil-on-water backdrop of purples, blues, and grays.

And humming just beneath the surface, pressing against the walls of reality, was the building pressure of the aetheric realm. A consistent rhythm began to pulse outward from the aetheric realm like a heartbeat, and with each pulse, the stars brightened and bulged. The beats grew stronger, faster, and I suddenly understood what was about to happen.

As if my understanding had conjured it into existence, the world ruptured. It was like the vision I had seen before—the future Fate was attempting to conjure into being through me—but the resulting cataclysm didn’t occur on a global scale.

It was with a deep, vague horror that I watched as the aetheric explosion spilled across the sky, wiping away the stars and leaving behind only an endless void.

The scene faded away, and I was once again looking down on myself and the aspect of Fate sitting within and around me.

With the fading of the vision, my horror faded as well. What it left behind was like a distant dream only half-remembered in the deep dark of the night. One that none-the-less stops the dreamer from returning to sleep for fear that the nightmare will resurface.

“Kill her.” The cold words issued from Agrona, and he pressed down on Cecilia with his killing intent, pinning her to the ground on all fours.

She closed her eyes, her pain written in the golden threads that connected them. Two by two, the threads connecting her to Agrona were snapping and fizzling away to nothing.

Through gritted teeth, she uttered a single word. “No.”

My eyes snapped open, and a weak cry escaped my lips.

Agrona’s head began to turn toward me, his intent sharpening into a killing blade. Crouching at his feet, Cecilia’s eyes shifted to me, and through them I saw down deep into the heart of her, where a trembling Tessia uncurled and reached outward. Knots of golden thread strung back and forth between the two, a muddy, chaotic mess of past and future tying them together.

Another thread connecting Nico to Cecilia snapped, and I sensed that the breath leaving his lungs was the last he would breathe in this world.

“Nico!”

The pool erupted into commotion as, beside me, Sylvie burst upright. Her hands flung out, and a silvery, half-formed shield began to wrap around me.

The scythe of Agrona’s intent struck it, and it burst with a sound like a bell. Sylvie was lifted up, her body spinning through the air like a ragdoll.

Warmth spilled into my empty core as Regis desperately expelled all his own aether, forcing it through the gates around my core. Strength ran through my channels like lava, burning and inexorable.

Agrona rebounded back from Sylvie’s shield, stumbling a step.

Beside him, Cecilia rose.

Just as Fate hovered above and behind me like a golden shadow, a silver shadow rose with Cecilia. Emerald vines writhed through the silver light as Cecilia and Tessia stood together. The knotted golden threads binding them were unwinding. Not breaking, but unspooling, each frayed knot coming undone and straightening rapidly.

The silver shadow that was Tessia raised her arm. Half a heartbeat later, Cecilia did the same.

Emerald vines erupted from Tessia, snapping like green lightning through the air between her and Agrona. They slammed into him, knocking him back another half a step and clutching at his wrists and horns.

Cecilia’s hand tightened into a fist, and the threads around her flexed and vibrated, pulsing with golden light. Her jaw worked, her eyes closed, and tears leaked from them. Her hand fell an inch.

Agrona scoffed, and Cecilia was lifted off the ground. She hurtled into the air until her back slammed against the cavern roof, losing a hail of small stones, and then she fell back to the ground, landing heavily in front of me. A dozen threads or more snapped and burned away between Cecilia and Agrona.

The silver shadow that was Tessia was gone, dragged back into the prison of her body.

Agrona’s scarlet eyes lingered on Cecilia, his lips curling into a disappointed grimace.

I raised my hand. Agrona’s eyes shifted to me, widening.

Many threads still bound Cecilia and Agrona. Aether hardened between my thumb and forefinger, and I pinched down on the golden bundle, shearing through the threads of Fate as if they were no more than spun wool.

A shockwave rolled back in both directions from the cut, slamming into Agrona and spilling over Cecilia’s prone form, tossing her into the pool at my feet.

Agrona stumbled and fell, going to one knee. His eyes lost focus, and in the rippling of space and time I saw the burning away of all potential futures in which Agrona was able to use the Legacy, as a weapon in the form of Cecilia or as his own power. The shockwave continued to jolt through him, striking him again and again as each potential future collapsed in his mind.

Leaning forward, I pulled Cecilia toward me, holding her face-up on the surface of the dense liquid, now depleted of aether and casting a weak purple light. Many threads still connected her to the wider world. I reached for them next, but even the faint cutting edge of aether around my hand was difficult to maintain.

Reaching into the emptiness around me, I grabbed hold of the relic armor.

Black scales began to fold into existence over my skin as the armor formed, spreading out from my chest to cover my entire body. 

But as the armor spread, brilliant white plates and ridges started forming over it, growing into pauldrons and greaves over top the black scales. Heavy plated boots melded seamlessly into the greaves, and delicate gauntlets grew around my hands between my skin and Cecilia’s in my arms.

I had no time to consider the implication of this change, and, as the armor began drawing in aether from the surrounding atmosphere, I turned my attention to absorbing what I could. The aetheric edges around my gauntleted fingers grew firm again, and I again reached for the golden threads extending from Cecilia.

Time seemed to stutter. Beneath me, the blood-stained pool exploded upward, forming into swords, axes, and spears. Black-lined wind struck me like a battering ram, and I pulled Cecilia closer to me, shielding her as best I could. The wind began to pick up the weapons and spin them, leaving me at the center of a deadly vortex.

As the liquid swords and axes struck me, the armor pulled at my meager aetheric reservoir, fighting to reform as each blow ripped it apart piece by piece.

Through the storm of swords, I met Agrona’s eyes, now the color of clotted blood.

With a shaking hand, I reached for the golden threads. My fingers closed around a handful of the threads of Fate, and the aether bit into them.

Again, shockwaves rolled along the strings, spreading out across the entirety of the world. I felt every one, saw behind my eyes a hundred different cascading effects as the lives of Alacryans and Dicathians everywhere were changed forever. My legs trembled and my arms shook under the weight of it.

The vortex subsided, the conjured weapons splashing back down into the pool, now stained with my own blood as well. Agrona was on his hands and knees, his body heaving with every breath, his face a grimace of pain and desperate perseverance.

Only a few threads remained around Cecilia, while the golden lines radiating from Agrona were uncountable. I had seen so many possibilities in the keystone when searching for the way forward so that Fate would free me of its bonds. I didn’t know what I’d have done if I’d faced this moment before. Even now, it was a difficult decision to make, to accept. It felt wrong. It felt unfair.

There was no thread spreading out from Agrona that I could cut that would result in a victory here. No blow I could strike against him directly would bring about a world in which the future I had shown to Fate could come to pass.

I looked back at Cecilia. Her eyes fluttered open. There was no hint of Tessia in them; she had exhausted her strength and was buried deep underneath the stronger spirit of the Legacy, bound by Agrona’s magic and the spellforms drawn into her flesh.

Another thread between Tessia and Nico fizzled out. Only a single thin golden line remained.

Mana was starting to leak from Nico’s core and rising from his skin like steam.

Some wills were stronger than others. Certain visions of the future were so potent that they rewrote probability and potential, forcing reality to shift in order to manifest that future into being. That, I now knew, was the truth about how one altered Fate: through action and will and unassailable belief. It was not another power to be manipulated or controlled. The keystones had never been about controlling Fate, only about understanding it. But through understanding, it could still be influenced.

But it hadn’t only been my will that had influenced Fate.

“I’m sorry,” I said, and all my many regrets about how I’d handled everything between us came spilling out with those two words.

Cecilia said nothing, only stared back at me. There was no desperation in her gaze, no hope, no fear. It wasn’t trust, either. As I looked into those teal eyes, I saw only acceptance. She knew this was her end, and she no longer had the strength to fight it.

I didn’t acknowledge my own feelings. I felt guilt for my own actions, but I did not feel as though Cecilia or Nico had earned my mercy. Neither of my once-friends had been granted a fair life, neither on Earth or on this world, and I didn’t blame them for that. But both had chosen to treat this place—this life, this entire world—as if it didn’t matter. While Earth was little more than a bad dream to me, it had become their fixation, both past and future, and they had treated my world—my family—as a meaningless stepping stone to move from one life on Earth to the next.

I didn’t acknowledge my own feelings. But if I did, I knew I would find bitterness, and anger. And hatred. I didn’t acknowledge my own feelings because I didn’t want to react emotionally. I didn’t want to repeat their mistakes by letting the past destroy an opportunity for a better future. They didn’t deserve my mercy, and they certainly hadn’t earned redemption.

But punishing them wasn’t important either. Not in the grand scheme of things. Fate had shown me that.

A roar shook the cavern, and more stones and dust fell from above. Out of the shadows, purple light dancing across black scales, Sylvie swooped over us. The earth shook as her claw came down around Agrona, pinning him.

A scythe of transparent black mana carved through the pool beside me, nearly taking off my arm and Cecilia’s head.

I reached for a golden thread that led from Cecilia up through the ceiling of the cave. I took hold of it, but I didn’t cut it. Instead, I channeled Aroa’s Requiem into it, empowering the potential and conjuring a resonant hum through the thread that spread out in both directions. All of the other threads around Cecilia began to release, snapping like spider silk and turning to golden light and then to nothing but distant, inaccessible possibility.

The last of the knots binding Cecilia to Tessia unwound. When the knots were gone, these threads too faded.

Only two remained: the empowered thread, vibrating out into the universe, and the fraying thread connecting her to Nico, who had already breathed his last breath on this world. The last of his mana drifted free of his core and then out through his mana veins. A knot of bright amethyst motes of energy floated out of him.

 A small knot of golden thread, tentative and flickering, extended back to Cecilia.

“Go,” I said, my voice hoarse and weak.

Tears leaked from Cecilia’s eyes, and her lip began to tremble. For a moment, I saw neither Cecilia in Tessia’s body or Tessia herself. Instead, I saw the orphan girl who struggled to make friends for fear of hurting them. With only a slight nod, she turned her gaze along the path of the thread. Although I knew she couldn’t see it, she could feel it pulling her on.

Her eyes rolled back, and the essence of her being burned bright within the golden light of the thread of Fate—this one tying her back to Earth. The aetheric motes that had risen from Nico dissolved into the thread as well, and together, two small purple lights ascended up through the gold. Behind them, the string melted away.

The final shockwave erupted from Agrona, tossing Sylvie away as if she was a dry fall leaf. The force of the wave crashed out along the threads of Fate connecting Agrona to the world, and my mind was ripped out of the cave along with it.

I saw the Beast Glades beneath a rippling portal in the sky. Devices of obvious Alacryan design surrounded the rift, cutting it off from the world and hammering it with waves of disruptive force. Dozens of Wraiths floated in the air within the shield that protected them from the small army of dragons outside.

The shockwave rolled along the golden threads until it struck the Wraiths and Instillers like a physical blow. Like insects in a hurricane, they were swatted from the air.

When the first Wraith crashed into one of the shield generating artifacts, sparks flew from the device and the shield began to flicker. Then a second, third, and fourth Wraith landed among the fragile equipment, and an explosion rocked the Alacryan fortification. Starting first at a single point, the shield surrounding them began to collapse inward. The hole grew wider and wider until it was larger than the shield itself, and then the shield was gone.

The dragons hovered on the edges, staring in shock. Charon, floating at the front in his scarred dragon form, gave a bellowing shout, and the dragons descended on the prone Alacryans.

At the same time, across the continent, another shockwave struck hundreds of imprisoned Alacryans. Screams erupted in their cells, echoing out through the underground city. Backs arched as people threw themselves on the ground, clawing at spellforms and cores. I saw among them Corbett Denoir and the warrior Arian, Caera’s protector, but also the young Highblood from Xyrus, Augustine Ramseyer, and many others I was familiar with. 

I saw as Seth Milview and Mayla from Maerin town clung to each other, their faces twisted with pain and fear as they shook against the impact. Seris, Lyra Dreide, and Caera moved among them, seeming to be the only three of all the Alacryans not crippled with the colliding force of changing Fate.

Elsewhere, I rode the shockwave as it sped over Etistin. It found Scythe Melzri as she searched through the carnage of a horrible frozen battlefield. The Scythe bent down to check for signs of life from a pale-skinned woman with short white hair—the retainer, Mawar. Lance Varay lay nearby, stirring slightly. Melzri regarded her warily, then drew a blade just as the shockwave reached her, lifting her off the ground before dashing her through a field of ice spikes.

More threads connected across the wide ocean to Alacrya. There, my understanding of what was happening began to break down as the effects of the blast were too widespread for my tired mind to track it all at once.

Instead, whether by some thought of my own or some trick of the reverberating Fate, I focused on Taegrin Caelum, Agrona’s distant mountain fortress. Many Fate threads connected to points throughout the fortress, and such was the strength of the shockwave as it slammed against the stone walls that the mountain shook and the stone began to crack. A high tower burst apart at the base, sending down an avalanche of shattered stone to crash among the lower levels, the roof of the tower sinking into the imploding base in a cloud of dust.

In the distance, far behind Taegrin Caelum, a geyser of bright orange lava erupted from the caldera of Mount Nishan. Black smoke boiled out to cover the Basilisk Fang Mountains in an impenetrable black cloud, and the ground trembled.

As if in one voice, the entire magical population of the continent screamed out together, and then I was back in Sylvia’s cave, lying in the shallow, mostly empty pool beside Tessia.

The aspect of Fate no longer lingered just behind and above me. It was gone, and my vision of the threads of Fate connecting us all was gone with it.

I rolled onto my back and looked up at Agrona. He lay on his stomach, his back rising and falling steadily but his eyes staring emptily ahead, blank and lifeless.

A staccato beat against the wet ground drew my attention back to Tessia; she was seizing, her entire body shaking so violently that her heels clattered wildly against the stone. I dragged her into my lap, cushioning her head from the convulsions of her body.

Golden eyes shone in the dark, and Sylvie stumbled toward us, one arm cradling the other, which hung limply at her side. “What’s going on?”

The answer was self-evident.

The high density of mana that was compacted in Tessia’s body was beginning to spill out of her, creating a kind of rainbow aura that flickered and danced in the air like the Aurora Constellate. “She can’t control it.”

Regis, little more than a dark wisp with bright eyes now, flew out of my chest. He hovered in front of my face for a moment, then dipped down and vanished into Tessia’s body. ‘She’s trying, fighting. Cecilia taught her, or tried to, but…it wasn’t enough. She’s…dying.’

I ran my hands over her arms and up her neck where the spellform tattoos had helped to bind Cecilia to the body and maintain control over Tessia’s spirit, along with whatever other dark designs Agrona had woven into them for his own purposes. But they were gone. The spellforms had been destroyed by the process of removing Cecilia from her body.

“She has no core, and she isn’t the Legacy,” I said, holding her tightly to still the worst of the trembling. “It was Cecilia who went through the process of Integration.”

‘Art…’ Regis’s thought trailed off for a moment. ‘She says…that it’s okay. She wants you to know…that you did the right thing.’

I swallowed and ran a hand over Tessia’s hair. It was strange, thinking of it specifically as Tessia’s hair again. Her body. Her.

I winced as my core clenched. The wounds caused by Agrona’s attack were struggling to heal. Despite Regis’s sacrifice and the relic armor, my body was starved for aether. My lids were heavy, and every movement felt sluggish and painful. I felt weak, weaker than I had in a very long time.

My fractured focus returned to Tessia with a jolt. Mana was still pouring out of her, creating the dancing lights around her.

Without the aspect of Fate tying me directly back to the keystone and everything I had seen inside of it, the many potential futures I had looked at, using a combination of King’s Gambit, Fate, and the keystone itself, seemed blurry and distant. It had all been so clear, before, right up until the moment I had severed Cecilia and the Legacy from our world…

Only the aetheric realm’s future retained clarity. That, I understood. That, I knew what to do with. Hopefully I can do what needs to be done…

“Arthur,” Sylvie said from right beside me, making me wince. I hadn’t noticed her kneeling down next to me. “We have to do something.”

“I know, I…” I closed my eyes, squeezing them tight and then relaxing again. “I’m sorry, I’m just having some trouble…focusing.” With a little shake, I forced myself upright and adjusted Tessia in my lap.

‘She’s saying…ah, shit, Art. I wish I didn’t have to be the go-between here.’ Regis winced, a mental expression that sent a twitch through my own slack face. ‘She’s saying that she understands. It’s okay. You’ve done everything you can. She wants you to know that, after everything…well, she’s glad you’re here in the end. You and Sylvie. And me, but she added that as a kind of afterthought, and I—okay, okay. She, uh…she loves you, Art. And she wants me to tell you…goodb—’

“Stop,” I said, suddenly fully awake again. “Don’t. This isn’t goodbye.” I looked around the cave as if I might find the solution lying out in the open somewhere.

Agrona still lay comatose. The murky purplish light of the pool had faded, its aether spent. A single tear had traced down Sylvie’s cheek, and she leaned against my arm, her breath shallow.

The light of the mana interacting with the atmosphere around Tessia began to fade.

I tried to lift Tessia and stand, but I couldn’t. Sylvie did stand, but she wobbled on her feet, unsteady. “I lack the strength to transform right now. I…can’t get us out of here, Arthur.”

Without even the strength to lift Tessia, I struggled to make a mental inventory of all the tools at my disposal that might help her. I could communicate with her through Regis, I—

“I’m sorry,” I said suddenly, realizing that I hadn’t really responded to her properly. “This isn’t goodbye, Tessia. This is welcome back.”

Even as I said the words, I didn’t know if they were true. I only had one option, but I didn’t know enough about it to be certain it would work. Her body wasn’t badly wounded. Could an elixir give her the strength to control a coreless body?

With the little aether I had left, I imbued the spellform on my arm and plucked the two small, bright blue pearls out of my dimension rune. “Help me hold her.”

I eased out from beneath Tessia, who was no longer spasming but still twitched occasionally. Sylvie and I adjusted her so that she was flat on her back, and Sylvie did her best to stabilize Tessia through the twitching. With the pearls held in one hand, I conjured a small aether blade in the other. Pain shot through my temples and core as I forced the manifestation into place. The blade flickered slightly, then solidified. 

Taking great care, I sliced through her top, then the smooth skin above her sternum. The blade parted cartilage and bone as easy as skin, opening into where her core should have been.

Although her eyes were closed, Tessia’s body trembled as I pushed one of the mourning pearls down into the cavity. It settled there, sitting like a tiny, bright blue core in her chest. The core of a leviathan infant who never had a chance to live their life…a life now given to Tessia. I felt my jaw working as I clenched my teeth, the tension palpable, and forced myself to relax.

Regis pulled back from her body at my command; there was no longer any reaching her mind within, anyway. She was fully unconscious, her pulse barely beating.

Both Regis and Sylvie had shared in my memories of using the other mourning pearl on Chul, but I could feel their anticipation and distress as the seconds continued to tick past and nothing happened. “It takes time,” I assured them.

I felt Sylvie’s attention shift, and I followed her gaze back to her father. “The Legacy was as intrinsic to his plans as the mana veins are to a conjurer. Removing it—even the possibility of it—sent a shockwave through Fate that rippled across the entirety of our world. It was like reaching into his chest and pulling out half the channels running through his body.”

Sylvie glared at her father’s comatose form. “I saw parts of it. I…couldn’t keep up with everything. What are we going to do with him?”

“I never was able to see past this,” I said, sagging. The effort of talking was draining the very last of my strength. “The shockwave—I’m not sure. It acted like a flash of lightning, blinding me of everything after. I saw a lot of other possibilities, but it wasn’t like seeing the future, really. More like…coming up with a plan and convincing yourself nothing would happen except what you planned for. But I never found a way to strike Agrona directly—or Kezess for that matter—that worked.” I shook my head. “I’m sorry. Without the aspect of Fate here to tie me back to it all, I can’t explain it.”

“He is going to wake eventually, though, right?” Regis asked, bobbing up and down and flaring his bright eyes angrily. “I know that using your ‘Fate Scissors’ technique to beat him won’t give us the future we want, but why not just…y’know—cut his head off now while he’s unconscious? Use the other pearl to get your strength back if you have to.”

I looked between the three of us, then down at the last pearl, still clutched in my hand. With a painful pulse of aether, I send it back into the dimension rune. “I don’t know if the pearl would even do anything to me. I admit, I lack the strength to even summon an aether blade now, but I won’t risk wasting the last mourning pearl.”

Sylvie struggled to stand again. She accomplished the task, but looked as if she might fall over at any moment. “I might have the strength…to strangle him while he’s unconscious. Maybe Fate appreciates…irony.”

Regis let out an appreciative laugh, and I smiled tiredly in spite of myself. Sylvie looked very serious—and as if she seriously might struggle to choke the life from a wounded raptor squirrel. Her expression cracked, and then she too was laughing at herself. I joined in, each shake of my shoulders sending pain quaking through every part of me, but mostly in my temples and the base of my neck.

There was one part of me that didn’t hurt, however.

Looking inward, I realized the scar Cecilia had left on my core had healed, and the itching sensation had subsided.

Suddenly, blue-white light, so bright I had to look away, glowed from the cut in Tessia’s sternum. At first there was only a trickle, but it quickly became a flood. Mana spilled out of the cut and scrubbed away her scrapes and bruises. Within her, that mana hardened into a dark black pit around the little blue pearl. As more and more mana poured out through the hard black shell, it lightened to red, then orange, yellow, and silver. Finally, the newly formed core turned a bright, snowy white.

Her breathing settled, and the tension in her brows and lips eased. She did not immediately wake, but a comfortable smile played across her sleeping face, as if she were having a pleasant dream.

I smoothed back her hair, wanting nothing more than to hold her in my arms and keep her there. But a part of me was hesitant as well, perhaps even afraid. She’d lived inside the head of someone who wanted nothing more than to kill me. She’d have learned all kinds of things about me…and maybe been subjected to any number of lies as well. Our story had been anything but simple up to now, and it would be callow and irrational to think we could pick right back up where we’d left off at the beginning of the war.

The sudden appearance of an oppressive mana signature ripped my thoughts away from anything so mundane as romance.

It approached with absurd speed, somewhere between flying and teleportation, and it was flanked by a cadre of lesser—but still inhumanly powerful—signatures.

The weight of it was too much to bear, and I couldn’t help but sink to the ground, lying flat on my back. Regis took shelter in my core, little tremors running through his wisp form. Sylvie sank to her knees and stared at the base of the long shaft that connected to the surface.

Dust billowed out as the approaching signature arrived, and I had to turn away and close my eyes against the stinging cloud. When I finally turned back, I was unsurprised to find Kezess standing there. Windsom and Charon, and…a person I had not seen in a very long time arrived a moment later. 

Charon hurried past Kezess, ignoring us and going to Agrona, who had still not moved. “Alive,” he said, lifting Agrona’s head by one horn slightly, then letting it fall back to the floor with a thunk.

Lady Myre, wife of Kezess and, long ago, my mentor, stood beside her husband with all the grace I remembered. Her gaze seemed to pass through Agrona to something deeper. “He is…wrong inside. Broken.”

With a light touch on Myre’s arm, Kezess took a few steps forward, moving in a casual, unhurried manner that I was too weak to be irritated by. His lavender gaze swept over me and Tessia, then settled on Sylvie. “Bring him. Bring them all. Call for all asuras to return to Epheotus immediately. There, we will close the rift and be finished with this war for good.”

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    #panic# here's the chapters, I can send docx files too if needed. BUT these are translations of french chapters so it has grammar mistakes tho
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    Volume 11
    Epilogue


    CECILIA SEVER

    The smell of smoke alerted me and I dropped the wool bundle that I was tingling before rushing to the kitchen. My hip hit the side of the side table and I turned around too late to catch the lamp, which tilted to the side and broke against the uneven planks on the ground.

    Suffering a sigh, I decided to do what I could for the lamp after saving the ruins of dinner, and I continued into the little open-air kitchen, where a pot boiled violently and released black smoke. I had already learned what it was to grasp the burning iron handle with my bare hands – I lifted the heavy pot of the solar heating element and put it on the table. The iron feet left small black marks on the surface of the wood.

    Mying my lip so as not to sigh again, I took a wooden ladle and I stirred the soup, hoping that it had not burned too much, but knowing that we would eat it in one way or another.

    I stirred the soup for a minute or two to prevent the still hot iron from burning it further, then I took off my hand and picked up the cracked lamp. Looking at her with regret, I walked towards the door, but stopped in the frame to turn around and look at the little house.

    "House," I said, the word being strange on my lips. Nowhere else had this word agreed to me before, but the little hut, well outside the city, with its capricious electricity and its endless maintenance problems, seemed to me quite simply to be a house.

    I smiled as I walked down the three brick steps and bypassing the outer wall of the hut by a worn gravel road that held more from the earth than from the rock.

    The hut overhanged a meander of one of the many simulated rivers that surrounded the city, whose constant flow of fresh water was the fruit of pumps and valves rather than gravity. A thin row of evergreen trees bordered the bank of the river. A disused dock advanced from the edge of our property in the moving water, but we had never managed to obtain the permit to use a boat to enjoy it.

    Between me and the river, on four legs on the rocky ground which we had got rid of grass and weeds, was Nico. For a moment I saw him not as he was, but as he had been at the same time the boy I remembered and the dark face he had worn in this other life.

    This thought made me shake my head, as if I had got up too quickly and saw stars. It was hard to remember all of this. It was easier not to try to remember. But sometimes thoughts came back to me, and I couldn't help but think about it. I had a life on Earth, as the Inheritance. This version of me had lived a short and tortured existence before being annihilated by my own actions.

    My eyes closed and I had to be careful not to breathe too fast. At the risk of sinking under the waves of the following memories, I bite the side of the cheek and forced my eyes to open again, and then began to strolling on the gentle slope towards Nico. The sight of this Nico had faded. He had become himself again. Although her hair was still black, her face was soft and kind, his eyes tender. Just watching him eased my anxiety.

    He looked up. There was a stain of black earth, or perhaps fertilizer, on the edge of his nose and on his cheek. I could not help smiling at this sight.

    "That's exactly what I feared," he said, smiling at my smile. But when he glanced at the ground, the expression disappeared to give way to a frown of thoughtful eyebrows. "This ground is horrible. The river has not been there long enough to irrigate the surrounding land, and it's really rocky." He passed his fingers into the earth, biting his lip. “Despite everything, we should be able to do it.”

    "The dinner is ready," I said stiffly. I knew he wouldn't say anything about the fact that he was burned, but I kept thinking about it. "Unless we can go to town? Buying something good? The soup will last for a few days.”

    Nico got up and brushed his hands on his dirty pants. "You burned it, didn't you?"

    I uttered a dismayed moan. "I don't know what happened. The saucepan was lit and I got lost..."

    "I know," he said to console me. Suddenly, he found himself right in front of me and his powerful arms drew effortlessly to him.

    I pressed my face on the curve of his shoulder and started shaking.

    "I know," he repeated, with his hand running through the back of my long brown ash hair. The detail remained in my mind. Ash brown, not silvery grey. "It happens to me too," Nico whispered, shaking me against him. "I'm thinking about something, and the next moment, an hour has passed and I haven't moved. I think he swallowed loudly and his hands go down my arms until his fingers mingle with mine. "I think that's what Grey did."

    What Grey did.

    Forgeing a radiant smile, I clasped his hands and moved him away from the struggling garden. "Come on, let's go to the city."

    He looked at me suspiciously. "This is your only weekend off a month, Cecilia. You know that if we go to town..."

    "I promise you I won't train you, okay?" I looked at him beggingly.

    Laughing, he pulled me until his arm was draped on my shoulders, our fingers always intertwined. “I should be washed and put on my city costume.”

    I leaned against him, smiling on his lips.

    Once we were both ready, it took us 20 minutes to walk to the station, where we could take a train to the activities district. We talked about where to eat and whether we could buy tickets for an old retro movie, or maybe even check the license office for a car or boat license, but it was just words in the air. We both knew that we could not afford anything other than travel by train and an economical dinner for two.

    Once we got into the maglev and took our seats, we're silent. I guessed that Nico was sinking into a disturbing memory of the way his smile faded and how his unfocused eyes filled with sadness. I wanted to know what he was thinking, but I didn't want to interrupt him. No, it wasn't quite that. The truth is, I didn't want to share this dark memory. I had my own share of these moments and memories, and sometimes the smells of blood and burnt flesh swallowed everything else. I felt cowardly, but I didn't have the strength to shoulder part of Nico's burden.

    Nevertheless, I shook his hand and put my head on his shoulder, so that he would be there when he came back.

    "How long have we been here?" he suddenly asked, his cheek leaning against the top of my head.

    "What do you mean?"

    "Here." He made a vague gesture around us. "This life. This world."

    "Nico, we were..." I walked away and put a leg on the seat so I could turn and face him. “We are both born in this world. We have known each other since we were children at the orphanage. We have a lifetime of memories together..."

    He nodded his head with a distracted air, the attention always elsewhere. "I know. I remember everything, but I don't feel like it happened to me. I hardly remember other things, like my childhood in Alacrya, I broke through the evocation of the other world, but they still seem to me to be real. Here, I remember everything that happened before we bought the property and we were finally immersing ourselves together, the marriage, everything ... everything is so clear, but I have the impression ...”

    "Like a life that someone else lived," I ended up for him, passing my fingers through his black hair.

    He glanced at my expression, then lowered his eyes to his hands stirring on his knees. "I'd like to understand what happened. I remember the cave, Agana, ma..." He swallowed heavily and closed his eyes. His breath escaped in a tense shudder. "I'm dead, Cecil."

    "No," I said firmly, seizing his hands and drawing them on my lap, forcing him to turn to me and look me in the eye. "And even if that were the case, it doesn't matter. I'm dead too, remember? All that matters is that we are here, together. There is no Heritage, no fight to become king, no crushing weight of fate on our shoulders. We can just live. Together. Whatever Grey did, whatever he did it, he got rid of that fate and brought us here."

    A little sad smile blossomess on Nico's serious face. "I don't think it's Grey. Well, maybe his power, but I don't think he chose this life for us." In front of my empty gaze, he rolled his eyes. "It's you. This life, this picture in which we have been placed with all these perfect memories, is exactly what you always wanted it to be. It can't be a coincidence. It had to be you."

    "I don't know..."

    Part of me knew that I had not lived through all the memories I had of this life. It was a new reincarnation, but instead of being placed in a ship – a brand new body that would force us to take the place of someone else. Grey had somehow placed us in our own lives, our own bodies. I had checked the previous events and confirmed that my duel with Grey had indeed taken place and that this version of me had died at that time. This had not been written. His reign, the wars he had waged, his sudden and unexpected disappearance in this world, everything was as before.

    I did not understand him, but the power he had given us in existence as if we had always been there. We ended up where I had imagined: in a little hut on the banks of the river, normal people who were doing the best they could. No inheritance, no mana, no ki. We were just... ordinary.

    Perfect and ordinary.

    There was a ding, and the maglev began to slow down appreciably. I jumped, realizing that we had been sitting in silence for a long time. "I'm sorry, I..."

    "I know," said Nico, claving my leg as a sign of understanding.

    We went down the activity district and walked along several streets of the city, where we sat quietly in one of our favorite restaurants and enjoyed a simple but delicious meal – and not burned. As we finished, my communicator rang, informing me that someone was trying to reach me. I had done a madness by equipping myself with a mobile communication device, but my work required me to do so.

    Looking at Nico with guilt, I pressed the button of the bracelet to answer the call.

    "Director, I'm really sorry to bother you," said my assistant immediately, Evie. She looked exhausted. “There was apparently a problem with one of the bills, and two officials from the city office are here.”

    “Dinner time, on a Saturday?” I asked in disbelief, without waiting for an answer. "Luckily, I'm already in town. I can be there in twenty minutes."

    Nico watched me carefully, the expression was carefully empty. He would not be upset by my inability to keep my promise, but I knew that he would mercilessly teasing me about it.

    “Oh, thank you, Director,” said Evie, sighing relief. I heard her pass the information on to those responsible.

    “At right.” I cut the call and I made Nico my most beautiful pout. "I'm sorry, it's an official thing, I have to..."

    He raised a hand to warn the rest of my unnecessary apologies. "You know what I think of what you're doing. These children--all the children of the orphanage--you're-a-great-great-great-great-great-girl--you's--you's-a-great-get-get-get-get You're the best manager they can hope for."

    “Expecs Director Wilbeck,” we said at the same time. We laugh lightly again asking for the addition.
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      Extra 1 – Early Truth


      ARTHUR LEYWIN

      From the cover of the trees, I watched Tessia walk a hundred paces in the sun-bathed clearing. Except she wasn't Tessia anymore. More really. No more now. Tess was there, buried beneath a freshly reincarnated and still confused Cecilia, but it was Cecilia who was piloting Tessia's body as she walked, with her head down, her lips constantly shaking as if she were repeating something.

      The isolated corner of the village of Eidelholm seemed empty with the exception of Cecilia, but it had not been left alone in that precarious moment. When I arrived, I had found several Arcyan mages wearing emblems who stood guarding the edge of the trees. One of them was cooling the body within three meters of my observation point, and the others had all been eliminated in the same way. More problematic was the signature of vitriolic mana that I could feel nearby. Despite my rushing through the Relictombs to reach this point before the impending attack on Aldir, I was confident that I could defeat Nico if necessary, but it would waste precious time and could make me lose my chance to talk to Cecilia.

      It had taken me several attempts to cross the Relictombs in a way that would allow me to return to Dicathen with sufficient time to pierce the mystical fog of the Elshire forest and the Alacryan influence that was spreading. Because of the vortex effect that captured the momentum of my passage through the time line of the keystone, every life had to be lived at least a little bit inside each moment; I was not looking forward to being forced to start all over again if that conversation went wrong.

      If only there was a better way to meet this challenge, I thought for a moment before I focused on Cecilia again. Given everything I had already changed to get to that point, I couldn't afford to be decompressed, otherwise I might forget my overall goal again and sink into this new life without having achieved my most important goal.

      Inspiring to stabilize myself, I came out of the forest's shadow and walked outwards. Cecilia turned my back and walked back from a vast Elvish domain. Arriving at the end of her way, she turned her heels, took two steps, then stopped abruptly at seeing me, her distant gaze again focusing on me.

      It was not the Cecilia that she had been when we fought in the empty ruins of the Exeges Palace. In the present of this time line manifested by the keystone, it was freshly reincarnated, confused and barely able to manage the new power that had been given to it. And yet, in a few hours, she will be neck-to-shell with an asura next to Nico. It was not hatred or even acceptance that I saw reflected in his eyes this time. On the contrary, I have seen confusion and fear. And perhaps even a little spark of hope.

      “Cecilia.” I pronounced his name calmly, as they speak to a frightened animal. "My name is Arthur. I'd like to talk to you."

      His eyes narrowed slightly and his hands rose to his waist. The mana is shaking around them. “Arthur Leywin. I... know who you are. But...” She closed her eyes and turned her head, a painful expression drawing on her features.

      I approached timidly a few steps. "You saw the memories of the woman whose body you dwell. Tessia Eralith.”

      Cecilia made a sour grimace by showing her teeth, her eyes still closed. "You were... promised to each other. Stop it. Stop it." These last words were sharp, almost painful, and seemed to be directed inwards.

      "She's fighting you."

      "She thought... you were dead..." Cecilia's eyes opened and she stared at me. "You're our enemy. You fought Nico."

      "There's more than that," I replied, keeping my voice soft and not threatening. “You have been reincarnated from another world, a place called the Earth. Nico too. And I too."

      She froze, looking into a vacuum. “What?”

      I was relieved by his obvious surprise. I knew that Agrona had used--or rather, was currently using the freshly reincarnated Cecilia to convey a message to the elves as Tessia, and I had guessed that they would not have had time to start manipulating her memories or poisoning him with Nico's hatred towards me.

      "I don't know if your memories of this previous life are clear, but I hope you'll remember me." I stretched out my hands to the side, with the palms turned towards her to show that they were empty. "In this world, I'm Arthur Leywin. But in the last one, I was called Grey."

      Cecilia jumped, her own hands falling as the magic around them dissipated. "G-Grey? But... how?"

      "Agrona," I said simply. "Nico and I were the anchors of your own reincarnation. Our relationship with Tessia turned it into your ship."

      Cecilia's mouth opened, and her eyebrows suddenly kissed, but she did not find the words she was looking for. After a while, his mouth closed. She turned half and glanced over her shoulder in the direction of Nico's mana signature.

      "I don't blame you for what happened on Earth," I said firmly, trying to bring his attention back to me. "You took the only path you saw. I regret everything that has happened, but we have both been used by greater forces than us. And Cecilia, that's why I'm here now. Because it starts again."

      His gaze slowly turned to me, with suspicion infiltrating his features. “Tessia. His mind is cloudy and distant, his thoughts incoherent. She remained silent until you arrived. She's... confused. She's suffering. You lied to him."

      I trembled inwardly, while trying not to let the ticble appear on my face. My goal here was not to try to sort things out with Tessia. It had to wait until I had solved the keystone and found a way to remove Cecilia from Tessia's body without killing Tess. But I didn't expect Tessia to interrupt this conversation or deflect her from her class.

      "I'm sorry, Tessia, both for the lie and for the fact that you discovered it this way," I said, speaking through Cecilia in his half-was awakened mind that is underneath. "But if you always have love for me, you must let me talk to Cecilia without intervening."

      Cecilia's gaze turned downwards, almost as if she were looking at herself. "She has become silent. She... trusts you." She focused on me again. "What do you want, Grey? How do you do that again?"

      Taking a deep breath, I sat on a large rock at the edge of the clearing. "What do you know about Agana and why you were reincarnated?"

      She hesitated. "Nico only told me that Agana is our benefactor. It gives us a new chance to live in exchange for our help. Nico has already lived in this world for almost twenty years.”

      "Why does he want you, precisely?" I asked, even though I already knew the answer.

      Cecilia's features shrunken themselves in distress. "Because I am the Leier."

      I acquiesced, letting a slight sigh escape. “Agrona is a master of mental manipulation. He can even erase and replace your memories. He's already done it for Nico, and he's going to do it for you too. What you have experienced on Earth will seem very soft to you in comparison."

      Cecilia stepped back by half a step, looking at me as if I had attacked her. "Nico wouldn't do that to me. He knows what I've been through, better than anyone."

      I sadly shook my head. "It's not the same as before. This is partly because of the manipulation of Agana. But he kept living after you killed yourself with my blade, Cecilia. And all the while, he thought I had murdered you just to be king. This hatred has escalated in him for the rest of his life. Then, after his reincarnation, Agrona fed this rage, turning Nico into a weapon.”

      "No, it is..." Cecilia stopped, looking again towards Nico's distant mana signature. "Why are you here, Grey? Why are you telling me all this?"

      I knew I was doing too much. But if I wanted to get something useful from Cecilia in this conversation, I needed her to be ready to tell me anything. "If he hasn't already, Agrona will promise to send you and Nico back to Earth. Not in your old lives, but in any life you want." When I finally escaped the keystone, I had to face Cecilia. The truth was that I didn't know how to defeat her without destroying Tessia. “This promise is a lie. Agrona uses you, and he has no intention of rewarding you, neither of you."

      His eyebrows frown, and his gaze sharpens. "How can you know all this, Grey? You seem very well informed to an enemy of Agana."

      "I know a lot," I admitted, crossed his gaze. "But I need to know more. That is why I am here. I need your help. If you can tell me what I need to know, I'll help you too."

      “How?”

      "What do you want, Cecilia?" I stood up and took a few shy steps towards her. "You've been given a second chance in life. I was a king on Earth, but here I was given what I always wanted: a family. It may sound like a strange exchange, but it is an exchange that I would be happy to do, no matter how many times I would live this life. But what about you?"

      Cecilia passed one hand over her face, sinking slightly. She recoiled a clumsy by a few steps and swintered on a bench leaning against the rear wall of the Elven Estate. "I don't know."

      Taking the risk, I carefully reduced the distance that separated us and knelt down a few meters in front of her. "I know you already have a lot to deal with, and I show you all the colors. But I need to know this, Cecilia. If you could do something about this new life, what would it be?"

      She thought for a long time, and then finally said, "Normal, Grey. I want to be... normal."

      I remained silent, leaving him free to keep talking.

      "I'm not the Legacy. It may be a trait I have, but it is not me. I just want... well, I'd like someone, somewhere, to see me like someone else." His eyebrow frown turned into an ironic half-smile. "I guess it's Nico." The brief smile disappeared, and she raised her eyes through Tessia's hair, which had fallen on her face, to pierce me with a viscous gaze. "I'll protect him, Grey. If you intend to fight it, you will have to fight me too."

      Desiring to make myself as threatening as possible, I knelt down, then I sat on my heels and crossed my hands on my lap. "I understand that. And Agrona too. You may not believe it now, but I want to help you, Cecilia. You, Nico and Tessia. But I don't understand enough what he did to you. Do you know anything that might help me free yourself from this prison?"

      Cecilia seemed to be folding up on herself and pressed her face in her hands. "I'm so confused, Grey. I don't know... what's going on? I was dead. I remember the darkness, the relief after so much suffering. But I had barely closed my eyes and then... a white light and a broken heart. My God, she's suffering so much."

      My jaw clenched until my teeth grinded while I imagined Tessia trapped in her own body, tied up and gagged by the runic tattoos running along Cecilia's arms to her neck. As a member by member, I bend my muscles until they hurt me, and then relaxed the tension. At last, my creaky teeth separated and I let out a calm breath. “How do you free yourself from each other?”

      Cecilia shook her head, her hair wavy around her face. 'I don't know. Nicoi.” She suffocated herself by pronouncing her name and swallowed before continuing. "Nico said she wasn't really there. She's dead, and I feel an echo of her memories. Agrona can calm them down, and even make them disappear if necessary.”

      “That’s not true,” I said, making sure to keep a soft voice. “Nico may not know it, but he only conveys Agana’s lies.”

      “Really?”

      Cecilia rose by a leap, searching around her for the source of the voice, but I rose more slowly. Nico had removed his mana signature by approaching, and with Realmheart still limited in that lifeline, I was not sensitive enough to have noticed his approach. It stood in the shade of the trees, a black silhouette in the greyness.

      "Nico, Cecilia." I have put a warning in their names. “Today, your speech will be interrupted by an attack by Epheotus. Two asuras. They will destroy all of Elenoir and everything you've built here. You will fight them, lose and flee. Then I'll find you. In a month from today in the city of Victorious.”

      "What bullshit," Nico wrath, advancing in the light of the clearing. "You're a murderer, Grey. I wouldn't believe you if you told me that the sky is blue and the water damp. You were stupid to come, and even more stupid if you think I'm going to leave you."

      “Nico, he didn’t murder me,” Cecilia interrupted, quickly passing by me to join him.

      Her eyes turned to her, but something trembled on her edges. "You don't know what you're saying. You're confused, Cecilia. I was there. I saw it..."

      “I remember,” she insisted, cutting it back into its momentum. “I pushed him to act, I pushed him harder and harder, and then lowered my defenses at the last moment. It was perhaps his sword that struck the blow, but I did it.”

      Nico stepped back as if he had been struck, his already pale face becoming ghostly white. "It's not possible, it's..." He looked away from her to put it on me. "No, you killed him. I saw it with my own eyes."

      "The city of Victorious," I repeated. “One month.”

      Then I turned my heels and ran into the forest. I felt that Nico was beginning to follow me, but Cecilia intercepted him. When I felt that I was at a safe distance, I used the short-range warp tempus with which I had run away to teleport again to the nearest Relictomb gate, buried and broken in the heart of the Great Mountains, but now repaired by the Aroa Requiem. I had already thought of Ellie, but I knew she had escaped alive, and in addition, it was not real anyway.

      Taking a final look at the rocky roof in the direction of Elenoir, which would cease to exist within the hour, I returned to the Relictombs to begin the next phase of my plan.

      - -

      The city of Victorious was sweeping under my feet like a huge anthill who had just been kicked. Not only was it used as a military center for the west coast of Alacrya, with a steady flow of soldiers entering and leaving the city, but its inhabitants were also preparing for the Victoriad River. That's exactly why I chose this place: I didn't think it would be difficult for Nico and Cecilia to invent an excuse to be here on this particular day.

      Technically, I could not know for sure whether they were going to arrive, but after my warning about the asuras turned out to be true, it was hard to imagine that they would not come.

      Not releasing any mana signature, it had been easy for me to move around in Alacrya without being noticed. From the top of a central bell tower – an old alarm system that has long been replaced by more effective magical artifacts – I would be able to feel their powerful mana signatures as soon as they arrive.

      The morning passed without hindrance and I had a breakfast consisting of fresh fruit. As I stowed off the seed of the last fruit, Regis crossed the floor of the tower in its spectra form. “Alaric’s men confirm that there was no agitation among local soldiers. They seem to have kept silent on this meeting, whether they intend to be here or not.”

      I contented myself with acquiescer and throwing a lamella of dried wogart, which he tore toat with a dry blow. In silence, we have resumed our monitoring.

      It did not take more than twenty minutes before the air changed and two powerful new signatures appeared in the city. They left the warp tempus platforms and moved away with determination. I waited. They changed direction, then again, and I relaxed. "Go get them."

      Regis melted again into the mass, descending through the tower and rushing into an interception trajectory of the two powerful signatures.

      I did not have to wait long before they came back.

      Instead of taking the streets and stairs, Nico and Cecilia flew over the roofs. I was standing by the belfry, waiting. They stopped at about 15 metres, hovering in the open air. Their expressions were hard to read, but they immediately seemed distant and suspicious to me.

      Regis came back right behind them, solidifying by my side. His hair was bristled.

      “I’m glad you survived the Aldir and Windsom attack,” I said, folding my arms on my chest and looking at them with a stoic air.

      It was Nico who responded. "What you said turned out to be true. Both on the asuras and on the Earth. So the real question is what you want, Grey."

      I had been thinking for a month and an end at that time. I didn't see the point of making the conversation last or turning around the pot. “How can I convince you to leave Agrona?”

      They exchanged a subtle glance. "Is that really why you got so hard to meet us, not once, but twice?"

      "It's not my only question, no." The naked hairs were bristling, but I didn't know why. "How did Cecilia's reincarnation work? Does Agrona know how to cancel it without killing any of the minds in the body? What is Agrona’s true goal for the Inheritance?”

      I still didn't know what kind of power Fate would give me when I escaped from the keystone, but I had to find a way to take care of Cecilia and Nico without killing Tessia in the process.

      As they didn't answer, I focused on Cecilia. She hadn't been in this world for as long as Nico, and Agrona had had less time to corrupt her. “I cannot promise you to fulfil all your wishes, but I can promise you both that Agrona will never respect its share of the market. As long as you value him, he will keep you, and as soon as you have none, he will reject you."

      I felt frustrated that the two people kept looking at me without answering. It was almost impossible to see them as Elijah and Tessia now. Even though they had the same faces, they were Cecilia and Nico firmly.

      That was when the click occurred.

      I closed my eyes and let my head hang. "A trap."

      Suddenly, the tower sunk into the ground, like a sword in tender flesh. My feet left the floor and I hit the ceiling. Next to me, Regis glapi and became intangible before flying in my chest. I extended my hand to God Step, but a wall of horrible noises fell on me, throwing me against the still-moving ground, loud enough to make it shatter. The miserable and strident screelation has taken all meaning away from me.

      In the distance, I realized that I was falling to the center of the bell tower, then that I suddenly stopped, and that several tons of stone and earth were collapsing around me, crushing me. The screeching remained, as if glass splinters were rubbing against each other inside my brain. My body tried to heal, but it was largely crushed and many steel bars pierced me. I should have suffocated, but I could not escape the agony of breathing only from the earth.

      Fortunately, I remained insensitive, and the worst of the pain was stifled by the fate that at the same time drowmed my ability to think clearly. It took time, but my conscious mind began to make its way through the noise. I knew this because the pain intensified as I became aware of the situation.

      The weight on me moved and I returned to me just in time to see half of the roof of the berry detach and float in the air.

      Agrona was floating in the space left behind, made visible by a glowing star that gravitated around Cecilia. He looked strangely displaced in his urns amid the rubble of the tower, in the depths of the city of Victorious.

      He was shaking his head. "Bold, Arthur. Too bold. A sad end to our game." He glanced at Nico and Cecilia. "They're mine. Did you really expect to conquer them so easily?" He made a gesture of his hand and the debris of my body came out of the crater. Pain hugged me at every tendon, at each joint, with every limb and with each organ. "Well, your story is not yet written. We can still learn a lot from your body."

      I closed my eyes and let slip a truly amused laughter. The sound was interrupted when I started spitting blood. “Indeed. I'm... interested to see what we can still learn. Together.”
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        Extra 2 – A Brief Repit


        ARTHUR LEYWIN

        Repressed memories of another uncertain and drifting life have invaded me, homogenizing with many previous lives in a confused cloud of half-experience.

        As I floated in the aftermath of this life, my mind haunting my own child's body as the ghost of an old and restless spirit, I recognized him for the first time: I was tired.

        The keystone punished me in a way that I could not have anticipated. Like a candle that falters in the face of a strong opposite wind, I was in danger of turning off. I knew it, but I couldn't do anything about it. I had no opportunity to back down, or give up. But with every life, the possibility of failure was becoming more and more real.

        The life of the infant rushed as I languished in this post-mortem cloud. I allowed the memories of my decisions to float, without taking the time to dissect my last attempt to resolve the key as I had done for the previous time. There was a new collection of puzzle pieces that had to fit in one way or another together, but my very human consciousness was tired, and my little infant brain wanted to do nothing but eat, sleep and be clean.

        Suddenly, I was a young child again. How many times now? I asked myself, briefly, without succeeding, to align all the lives of the keystone in order, each version of me resembling a little toy man placed on a shelf.

        The young voracious version of me was already devouring the library books in my parents' office and was beginning to accumulate mana towards my sternum. It was enough for me to blink for the house to be destroyed when I woke up and so that everything started again.

        By sinking completely into my body, I took possession of myself and stopped. I couldn't deal with all this again, not yet. I needed to rest. There was time... it took time.

        Standing on my chubby and slightly arcuate legs, I gave up meditation to... play with cubes in my room. They weren't painted in color like the ones we had for the youngest children in the orphanage, but they were expertly carved to form small brick patterns, and I quickly arranged them to form a coarse wall. I indulged in the grey matter of my physical form as a child, and the instinct of a toddler took over. I started playing, effortlessly and without worry.

        The day when I should have formed my nucleus and awakened, and Arthur Leywin's worries, Lance and Regent of all Dicathen, were overwhelmed by the desires of a toddler who quickly became a boy. Sometimes I had annoying echoes of memories, like my fourth birthday, when I suddenly thought we should have moved to Xyrus, but they fainted as fast as they had come. After a while, I no longer knew whether they were real or whether they were just half-forgotten little dreams.

        I was approaching my thirteenth birthday when I first spoke about these strange memories of my father.

        He stopped to ramble the rushes and looked at me with a pensive air. “Few people believe it today, but some ancients still speak of ancient customs. People thought their minds were reborn in a new body when they died. Reincarnation, I think they called it that way. One of the things they were based on was that kind of memories. You know, memories that don't seem to be yours." With a shrug of his shoulders, he returned to raking, pulling the old rods towards the door.

        I pushed my own little pile of dirty rushes on the floor without really cleaning anything, my mind being absolutely not occupied with this task. "But sometimes, I remember... the magic."

        Dad froze. I stared at him from the corner of my eye, and his face passed by several expressions one after the other. The surprise was quickly overshadowed by the pain, which melted into disappointment before finally being covered with a painful smile. "I don't think that's so strange, Art. All children dream of doing magic."

        He sighed and pressed his rake against the wall. I did the same and dropped myself against him. He hugged me and clamp me against him.

        "I'm sorry," I muttered into the rough cloth of his shirt.

        "What?" he asked, caught off guard. “Why?”

        "I know you're disappointed that I didn't wake up." I tried to keep a stable voice talking, copying the tone he used when he and Mom were arguing, but he didn't want to feel like it was.

        He clenched and the embrace became troublesome. Slowly, he released me, then placed one hand on each side of my head and forced me to look it in the eye. "Listen to me, Art. You don't disappoint me. No," he added quickly when I tried to look away, unable to believe it. “Listen. I'm sorry if I gave you that impression. He interrupted and let go of me, struggling to keep his calm.

        His jaw contracted as he picked up his rake and began cleaning the ground again. After a few seconds of hesitation, I followed his example.

        "You have done nothing wrong, Art," he continued, the grater of his voice fading. "If I seemed disappointed, it's not because of you. I... I wanted so much that you were a wise, and maybe I'm disappointed with the situation, but never by you. I know you may not see the nuance now, but it's important that you try. I don't want you to grow up thinking you've disappointed me. On the contrary..." He interrupted himself to raking a large pile of rushes and went aside so that I could do the same.

        "I'm afraid it was I who disappointed you," he ended by looking at me with watery eyes.

        I wanted to tell him that he had not disappointed me, that I loved him, nor was it his fault. But I couldn't find the words.

        He scraped his throat. "Hey, what do we do to melt? Your mother and sister will only come back from the market in a few hours. Why not put down these rakes and fetch the training swords?" His face became lighter, unknowingly, if it was a real excitement or a mere false aspy. “We can finish the chores later.”

        I didn't really want to, but I still gotten acquiesced, knowing that he was just trying to help. Dad put an arm around my shoulders to hug me, and then gave me an elbow so that I could get past the front door. By the time I came back with the two training blades in my hand, I was already relaxing, leaving behind the dark thoughts of strange memories and magic to focus on the feeling of the leather-wrapped handle in my hands. When I put his sword back on dad and settled in the center of the courtyard to make us more flexible, I had almost forgotten the whole exchange.

        I wasn't afraid to admit that I was good at a lot of things. Almost everything I was trying, actually. I might not have been able to form a nucleus, but I was doing pretty much everything very naturally. Sword fighting was no exception.

        Dad had started training very early, and it was so natural for me that I was constantly surprised with my technique. It's at least what he liked to tell me. I didn't remember everything that had happened when I was four or five years old, but I knew I had always felt very comfortable when we were training, especially with swords. It was as if everything else was going in the background and I could focus on what I was doing.

        As I leaned over, I caught my father, looking at me pensively, with eyebrows frowning by concentration. He looked away as soon as I looked at him, and I understood that he was still thinking about the conversation. "I shouldn't have talked about it," I thought, reprimanding. I knew that dad tended to think too much and become emotional. I had to support him. I was no longer a little child running after his parents whenever things seemed difficult. I was almost a man.

        I stood upright and made the sword spin in light wood. "Are you ready, old man?"

        Dad laughed, surprised, and turned his foot, bringing back the tip of his sword so that it was directed towards my face. "I'm always ready to give you a beat, little one."

        As I smiled, I pretended a forward slit that turned into a push under his care. He moved his hands slightly, placing his blade in a better defensive position. Leaving my right foot, I moved abruptly to the left and took a quick shot to his thigh instead. He changed his attitude, retreated his right foot to avoid the blow, and shot his gun on my shoulder.

        I fell into a front roll, quickly inverting my grip on the training sword in order to tighten it tightly against my body. Despite the speed of this maneuver, dad had already turned and was rushing when I was back on my feet. I was younger and faster than he was, but he had much more training and the benefit of mana improving his speed and strength.

        “Experience always prevails over young people,” he said with a smile before launching a series of quick moves.

        I blocked them all to the last. Feeling the end of his burst, I dived under the last blow and pushed my blade into the ground between his feet. Deceiving in the direction of the attack, he tried to retreat and stumbled over the blade. His eyes widened and he struggled hilariously as he lost his balance and began to fall back.

        I rushed forward to carry the “dead” blow, but the ground moved, sneaking under my feet. I collapsed, my blade escaping from my hands as I tried to catch up on the ground. "Tricher," I shouted as I fell.

        The sweet grass cushioned my painless fall, but the blow that followed against my shoulder blades hurt me as a dog. "Gah." I drove away from dad trembling with laughter on the floor, his training blade held softly in his hand. "No mana manipulation in training," I complained, trying to get my hand behind me to rub my shoulders. I knew the blow was going to leave a painful mark.

        'I had to answer your invitation,' he said nonchalantly, putting himself on the side and supporting his head with one hand. "That was clever. I was completely destabilised."

        "You think I'm good enough to be an adventurer even without mana?" I asked casually. "Where could I ever become one day? I have heard from other boys that the younger members of the adventurer's guild are my age or less.”

        Dad got up and held out my hand. I took it and he trained me after him. “This is not unusual. Non-Mai mas adventurers, I mean. But it's pretty rare, and they never rise higher than the first rank or the first two. The thing is, mana beasts are much more dangerous than you think. Entering a dungeon without mana improving your senses or creating a barrier around you is practically a death sentence."

        In front of my mine, Dad hastened to add, "But the magi represent only a small percent of the Fir population. There is simply not enough wizards to fill all guard posts or form an entire army. There are even tournaments for non-mage fighters. You're good, Art." He brushed the dirt of his trousers. "Too good, maybe," he added with a smile. "But you're so smart. Many of the best scientists and inventors that exist are non-mages. I have no doubt that whatever you do, you will be the best in your field."

        I rubbed my neck and tried to hide my smile. "Thank you, Dad, I."

        "If you keep working," he said, winking. "Now, let's go. Enough warm-up. Let's see what you really know how to do, Art."

        With the same smiles, we put ourselves back in position before exploding again in a series of strikes, parades, skies, and quick counter-attacks. One hour or more has elapsed in intense blurring. The fight ended only when my father suddenly lowered his guard and stiffened in the middle of the exchange, which caused him a violent blow to his forearm.

        He grinned, dropped his training sword, and rubbed the spot, while addressing a painful smile to mom ascending the alley, frowning. "Uh, darling. Your visit to the market was quick today.”

        She passed him in his eyes to the front door, where one could clearly see a pile of dirty rushes and two rakes. "You say that every time, Reynolds."

        Next to Mom, Eleonore pretends to roll her eyes. "Yes, Dad. Every time."

        I hid a smile behind my hand as Dad rushed towards Mom, kiss her quickly and took the big basket full of basic necessities she wore. He tried to walk on the back of Ellie's shoe, pulling him halfway through his foot, and then cast an innocent glance at my wide-eyed eyes that made me cheer with embarrassment in the face of his stupidity.

        "Beautiful shot, Arthur," said Mom, continuing to pass in front of the house. "Your father will beg me to treat the blue later, I promise."

        Ellie laughed loudly, turning around and pointing her finger pointing.

        "I won't do it." Dad defended himself, the air was upset. “I am an adventurer and a mage, not a baby who needs to be kissed him bobos.”

        Ellie is shundering. "I don't know, Dad. Are you sure? Say 'goo-goo gah-gah' just to be sure."

        Mom smiled and winked at me, then she straddled the heap of dry, fibrous grass into the house. Ellie straddled her, grabbed a rake, and started removing the scrub from the doorway to let dad pass.

        Facing the door, Mom turned around and looked at me, a little fold between her eyebrows. "Are you coming back, Art?"

        I realized that I had looked at mom, Dad and Ellie, all three gathered around the door of our house. A distant memory resurfaced, and I saw my father's body lying on the ground, torn like a beast and covered with blood. Then it was Ellie, a red spear piercing her body. And finally, mom... my mother, looking at me with a shocked air that turned into furious unbelief.

        “My brother?”

        I shook my head and the vision became clearer. I saw my parents and sister, who were all looking at me with family anxiety. This vision left me a ball in my throat, and I suddenly wondered if I had not been hit harder than I thought when I had been in a clash with dad.

        "I'm here. It's just that..." I had to take a break to clear my throat. "I'm coming.”
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  3. Offline
    + 10 -
    Volume 12
    Chapter 481. What Was Lost


    ARTHUR LEYWIN

    "Hello, Arthur."

    The voice reached me through a distant, ethereal but familiar mist. I was drowsy, nestled in the hollow of a cozy blanket of thoughtless fatigue. The familiar voice had something exciting, but that was not enough to get me out of my metaphorical nest. As I pierced the fog of my sleep, this thought sparked a spark and a burning idea irradiated the fugue.

    This fatigue seemed abnormal to me. Not natural, even. As if sleep had pushed its claws into me and wouldn't let go of me.

    The ether gushes out of my nucleus in response to my discomfort, and the fog dissipated. I stood upright suddenly and looked around me, half panicked, without remembering how I had gotten to where I was. I was surrounded by bright white stones, moulded in curves and arches.

    "Calm, Arthur, calm."

    Turning my eyes off from the unusual architecture of the building that surrounded me, I focused on the elderly woman sitting near my bed. Her wrinkles dug as she addressed me a warm smile, and for a moment I had fifteen years old again. The panic dissipated almost as fast as it had come. I was in bed. Regis, in his puppy form, lying on the blanket at my feet and slept deeply. I was safe.

    ”Lady Myre. It's been a long time..."

    “For me, it seems to me that little time has passed,” she simply replied.

    I thought about the difference in our views and wondered whether my own estimate of time was valid. After all, how long had it been in the keystone? How many lives had I lived since my last meeting with Myre? According to one interpretation, it was an eternity. According to another, it was only a few short years. For the first time, I was really seeing the foreign perspective of asuras like Kezess and Agrona, and I thought I was a little bit of understanding how they saw the passage of time.

    "Where am I?"

    "Epheotus," she said. His eyes turned to one of the arched windows, and my gaze followed his. "More precisely, you're in the city of Everburn."

    Through the curved window, I could see the buildings on the other side of the street. The walls were clean and smooth, in white stone or cream, and rose to the roofs covered with turquoise and cyan tiles. Bent windows, mirrors of the one by which I looked, sprinkled the facades, but I could not distinguish much of what was behind it. As I examined the buildings, an asura with soft green hair passed, her eyebrows frown by concentration, mouth moving as he spoke under the effect of his breath, apparently for himself.

    Behind the buildings, the shadow of a massive and distant mountain, scarcely more than a blue silhouette against a blue sky background, dominated the city. The mountain had a characteristic split shape.

    “One of the many dragon towns in the shadow of Mount Geolus, yes,” continued Myre. "I thought it would be more... comfortable for your family. That the castle, I mean."

    "Where are Ellie and my mother?"

    Although grandmother's smile never left her face, Myra's gaze was intense and attentive. I couldn't help thinking that she was reading in me like a book. "I felt you were waking up and I sent them for a little race. Forgive me, Arthur, but I wanted to talk to you alone."

    Stretching my eyebrows, I stood up in a seated position and tilted my legs out of bed. I was dressed in a silk night shirt which I did not recognize, the bright white of which contrasted with the forest green of the sheets. "Are you talking to me? As a guest or as a prisoner?”

    "Don't forget that you yourself asked Windsom to bring your family to Epheotus," she replied, but her tone remained gentle. "You are, as before, my welcome guest, Arthur."

    I thought about all this as the fragments of my memory continued to be put back in place. “Agrona?”

    Myra acquiesced, her silver-grey hair floating around her face. “He is imprisoned in Indrath Castle. He and his relative, Oludari Vritra, both. But..."

    His hesitation and nervous expression twisted my stomach. "What's the case, Myre?"

    Looking out the window towards Mount Geolus, she leaned slightly forward. “Agrona is mute. Even Kezess failed to get Agrona talking. Even his thoughts are veiled, if any. But he feels... bad. Empty. Arthur, I must know what happened in this cave."

    I quickly thought about what Kezess could already know. Were they able to take anything in my mind without my knowledge? I asked myself darkly. Even though I wanted to trust Myre, I couldn't trust Kezess, and it was his wife. They had appeared together in the cave, just before I fell unconscious, and she could be operating on her behalf at that particular time.

    Activating the King's Gambit prudently, I divided my mind into several branches, each focusing on a different layer of truth, potential truth and pure and simple lies. Aloud, I said, "Using a power that the ancient jinn called Destiny, an aspect of the ether, I was able to destroy the potential of the Heref going by separating it from both the reincarnated version of Cecilia, my old friend of the Earth, and Agana himself, making him unable to use his power for himself. The act caused a kind of shockwave. Maybe it had an effect on his mind."

    Again, this piercing look. "You learned to control this... fate, then?"

    'No,' I said, letting my eyes fall and my voice fill with regret. The different branches of my thoughts were superimposed on each other, all thinking the same thing. "It wasn't something I could use, only... influence. And again, only in the moments that followed the resolution of the keystone. Power is not something that can be controlled.”

    I didn't know whether I was telling the truth or not, but I kept the thread of that thought buried under several others. Thanks to the presence and help of Destiny, I had been able to directly modify these sons in a way that I did not fully understand, but I had not had time to consider my agreement with fate or the consequences of the keystone. I didn't yet know what these events had revealed in me. My only concern was that Kezess would not learn everything I knew, neither about fate nor about repeated genocides of dragons.

    'Ah, well, it's perhaps better that,' said Myre, 'not giving any external indication that she doubted what I was saying or even that she could read the different branches intertwined with my thoughts. "It's better not to touch that kind of thing." With a little nod, she concentrated on me again, and her smile came back. "You probably want to know more about what happened, of course. All the dragons were reminded of Epheotus, and the breach was closed. What Agrona hoped to achieve by taking it back, he missed it."

    I frowned, focusing on a little detail. “I understood that Epheotus would die if the breach was closed.”

    “The connection remains,” Myre patiently explained, “but the gate is closed. It would take an etheric knowledge beyond everything that still exists--self--Arthur-- to cut the fastener that binds Epheotus to your world."

    This is what the rebellious jinn hoped to accomplish by using Destiny. I have seen this possibility in my own research, with Destiny by my side, through potential futures. But doing that would be an act of genocide as horrible as the dragons themselves did. I would perhaps do so if there were no other way to prevent Kezess from repeating the story, but even then, I do not know if I could condemn the whole species asura to wither slowly while Epheotus dissolves around them.

    "I see," I said after a while, relaxing the King's Gambit. "I shouldn't stay long, then. I don't want to be rude, Lady Myre, but I'd like to talk to my family."

    She swept away my words with a back hand. "There's no rudeness in there, Arthur." His tone quickly hardened, becoming more serious. "You had an incredibly trying experience. I can still feel the broken echoes of so many false memories jostling in your mind. Take time to rest and talk to your loved ones. You are welcome here as long as you need it. You have rendered our two worlds an indescribable service by ending the long rebellion of Agrona.”

    She got up just as I heard Ellie and Mom's voices outside. "I'll leave you to your family. I'm sure you have a lot to say to yourself."

    "Wait," I said, another memory finally being put in place. “What Tessia?”

    Myre addressed to me an accomplice smile. "Don't worry, she's here. She'll wake up soon, I guess. You had to both recover."

    When she turned away, I had the impression that a veil was getting behind my eyes. My mind touched both that of Regis and Sylvie, my thoughts intertwined with theirs.

    'Arthur, you're awake,' thought Sylvie, the surprise spreading through the threads of our mental connection. 'I didn't feel you were starting to move.'

    Regis's head broke away from the blanket and he turned to me to look at me with a dark air. 'It was time, Beautiful with Sleeping,' said he, thoughts laden with fatigue. He had exhausted all his ether by giving it to me, after I burned it in search of the future with fate, the King's Gambit and the power of the last keystone...

    Outside my room, Myre directed my sister and mother towards me. The curtain which had just strayed to allow Myra to pass opened up again when Ellie ran into the room, with her eyes wide and her mouth open. Seeing me already seated, she went forward as if to throw herself at me, then hesitated. His smile faltered, outstretched by anxiety. Eventually, she stepped forward and leaned over to gently hug me.

    I accepted the embrace with gratitude, glad to see her unscathed from the trials she had had to endure in my absence. Indemne, but not affected. Behind her, Mom lingered in the doorway, with a hand holding the curtain. “Windsom has respected its market share? And you were treated well?”

    Ellie recoiled, folding her arms and taking a severe air. "Actually, we..."

    “We were treated very well here,” Mother quickly said, cutting Ellie speech. My sister gave her a glance to which Mom responded. I could not read exactly what non-verbal sign passed between them, but it was clear that they were holding something. "It's amazing, Arthur. It's like a whole new world."

    I stood up, suddenly feeling uncomfortable in my silk night clothes in this strange room. “I have seen some of the Alacry attacks from inside the keystone. I, a flood of tangled memories tore away from the lips and overwhelmed me in waves. I remembered Varay, lying inert in the centre of a devastated battlefield. I remembered the Alacryens collapsing in their cells. But there were also other memories, confused by time, distance and a kind of unreality. I saw the consequences of things that had not yet happened, or that might not happen at all.

    Sylvie's presence grabbed me like two strong hands on either side of my face, forcing my attention to move forward. Respire, Arthur. We're here to support you. You don't have to carry all that weight on your own."

    Based on her presence in my mind, I transferred some of the weight to her. Regis rose on trembling legs, frowning on his puppy's face. Together, my two companions leaned, but the sudden and suffocating presence of the waves only intensified. Like a man who drowned, I was driving them into my fall.

    “Arthur?” Mother had taken a step forward, but her face was blurred, her expression was nothing more than a shadow blown on her face.

    Without conscious intent, the ether escaped from my nucleus and filled my limbs, trying to support me against the mental weight of so many lives of memories taking place through my consciousness all at once. Regis stumbled forward, dematerialized, and slipped into my body, bulging in me. Later, I felt Sylvie pierce under the force of so many raw memories.

    Realizing that the King's Gambit had helped me contain the tide, I completely reactivated it. I saw myself reflected in my mother's shiny eyes, the shiny crown of light on my blond hair. My consciousness divised, then further divided, fracturing in such a way that every competing thought and memory was supported by their own branch of focused consciousness.

    In front of me, Mom and Ellie exchanged a glance. "Are you all right?" asked Ellie, with a heavy tone of anxiety and disappointment. His shattered eyes turned several times towards the luminous crown.

    I had used a lot of the King's Gambit before trying to reach the fourth keystone. Even though I had learned to partially activate the godrune, which had the effect of increasing my faculties without the golden crown shining on my forehead being fully manifested, I could not have noticed Ellie's change in behaviour while I was planning my actions with the help of the godrune.

    There were several possible reasons for Ellie's antipathy for the King's Gambit, but the most likely was that she did not like the change I had undergone by channelling the godrune. Although it allowed me to divide my mind and think of several things at the same time, thereby greatly increasing the speed of my cognition, it also required a more purely logical view of events, getting rid of emotional reactions. It was quite natural that my sister, with whom I had an essentially emotional relationship, found it unpleasant.

    As this thought descended along one branch, my mother focused on another. Instead of being worried or hesitant like Ellie, the shadows around her eyes, the digging of her wrinkles, the paleness of her skin, and her sagging posture suggested nothing but exhaustion close to weakening. The events that preceded my absence and took place during it completely exhausted it. She had softened for a moment, relaxing for the first time in weeks, but it had quickly turned into a new layer of fatigue when I had been struck by the sudden influx of memories of the keystone.

    My mother wanted nothing but my presence, my strength and the fact that I would take away some of the burden of concern from her.

    Parallel to these thoughts, branches of concentration treated and compartmentalized all the memories of the many different lives I had lived inside the keystone. But lives were only a small percentage of memories, and my last efforts were aimed at convincing the conscious aspect of fate that there was another way to move forward than to completely break out the etheric kingdom and allow the concentrated ether there to be part of the physical world in an explosion that would destroy Dicathen, Alacrya, and Epheotus.

    The time lines and futures I had seen were almost innumerable. The ability of the keystone to simulate alternative realities, combined with the King's Gambit and the presence of Destiny, had acted as an almost infinite kaleidoscope, with each fractal motif representing an entire reality and a sequence of events through which I had simultaneously sought the solution to my own problem and that of Destiny. It turned out that the latter was the simplest of the two to be solved, even though even my almost infinite resources--at that time-- had revealed that the beginning of the path I had to take, and not the resolution I had sought.

    Entropy. In the background, I kept dissecting the idea. An unnatural pressure accumulated behind the veil of our known dimension, like water behind a dam.

    It turned out that Destiny was neither the dam's builder, desirous of obstructing its flow, nor the water itself, which flowed only according to its limits. No, he was closer to a conscious incarnation of the natural sciences and their expectations. An arbiter of the laws of magic and science. Where water does not feel the desire to go beyond the dam and does not care about the banks of the river, the Destiny and by extension, all the ether feel the urge to sink. More accurately, the ether was the dissipating mist, with the moisture particles forming the mist spread out until they could no longer be seen. He.

    "Arthur?" repeated Mom.

    I smiled, aware of the mechanical aspect of expression. "I'm fine. I'm glad you're both doing well. When I see Windsom, I'll tell him what I think." Focusing on Ellie, I added, "And don't worry about this old jinn relic. I'm sure it can be repaired."

    They exchanged a look again. I released the King's Gambit until I felt the crown faded. The influx of memories having been dealt with, I no longer needed the complete effect of godrune. However, I did not completely interrupt the mana flow that fed it, recognizing that it was a mistake to have done it the first time. Instead, I left a constant net of ether to keep the rune activated and support my lazy mind with extra threads to process everything that was going on.

    Mom stepped forward and put a hand on my cheek. "I'm very proud of you, Arthur. You succeeded. You saved the world."

    In my mind, I saw dragons destroy civilization after civilization, resetting the world over and over again. "I'm not sure that's true. Not yet, anyway. But I'm not done fighting."

    Ellie suddenly smiled, bouncing on her feet. "And you saved Yourss. I always knew you'd come back, but I couldn't believe it when the dragons brought you here with Sylvie and Tessia."

    The branch of my thoughts about Tessia and what had happened to her went to the foreground of my consciousness. "Where is she?"

    Ellie weakened in the seriousness of my tone, but made a gesture backwards, through the curtain that closed this room.

    "I'd like to see her." Without waiting for an answer, I got up and passed Mom and Ellie, pulling the curtain aside and crossing the door with a single gesture.

    The large living room was airy and bright. The high curved ceilings, doors and curved windows were distinguished from all the architectural styles I had seen in Dicathen or Alacrya. The walls were made of a smooth, white stone that was not marked by tools. Blues, greens, and yellows were detached from white in the form of carpets, drapes, bright crystals that illuminated the darkest corners, and blunders that filled the space not only with colors, but also with a bouquet of sweet smells.

    Feeling Tessia's mana signature shining from its now white core, I bypassed a small table that had grown from a single piece of wood to direct me to another room, also separated from the rest of the house by a curtain. I stopped for a moment before I pushed the curtain aside, and I thought about what was waiting for Tessia when she finally woke up.

    She had been a prisoner of her own body since before the destruction of Elenoir. She had seen Cecilia become a weapon for Agrona, unable to intervene. She had learned the truth about me and my past life, but had also certainly been subjected to all sorts of lies. Even if I were still not convinced of the form that a relationship might take, what would Tessia think of it?

    The memory of our exchange in the Wall was repeated in the background of my thoughts.

    "I love you." Even now, I couldn't believe I had told him. It was so complicated, with my memories of previous life still secret, and the fear that she would react like my parents, or even worse, was powerful.

    "I love you too, idiot. But we're at war. We both have responsibilities and people who need us.” His voice had been a solemn murmur and his eyes full of tears, but his lips had sketched an uncertain smile as we teased ourselves to break the tension.

    "I know. And I have things to tell you, so if we made a promise?"

    “What kind of promise?”

    “The promise to stay alive so that we can have a future together, a relationship...a family.”

    "I promise."

    It seemed incredible to me to have been brave enough and full of hope to make such a promise. I'd had lived through so many things ever since, I'd been close to so many things, I'd seen the truth of power in this world...

    Now I felt like it was a crazy promise. Desperate, blind and mad with hope.

    My hand plunged into the bright cloth of the curtain, shunning it.

    In a small room almost identical to the one I had woken up, Tess was lying in a similar bed, with the same thick emerald green blankets, although hers were half removed. She was also dressed in the same way, with silky night clothes made of white
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    1. Offline
      + 20 -
      cloth embroidered with green vineyards, so perfect for her that I suddenly wondered if Myre had not ordered them specifically for Tessia.

      When I took a step into the room, it shook slightly. Her silver hair floated on the pillow around her, and for a moment the image of her I saw was superimposed on another image of her, of another life, when we had just married and had we been lying together in our marital bed for the first time .

      It's not real, I remembered when the blood stained the memory.

      I took a second step and opened her eyes. I dived into his vitreous teal eyes, moving like a dream to the edge of his bed. My fingers touched the surface of its cover but did not touch it. My tongue seemed to multiply inside my mouth. I realized distracted that I had forgotten to continue to channel the ether into the King's Gambit.

      Ellie was then by my side, leaning over Tessia and crushing her in a ferocious embrace. "Tess," she exclaimed.

      “E-Ellie?” Over Ellie's shoulder, I could see Tess looking around her with astonishment and confusion. "What happened? Where am I by the sky." She letped Ellie and raised her hands behind my sister, staring at her tight fingers. "My body. I control my body."

      Ellie stifled a sob as he recoiled, one hand on her mouth. Mom put one hand on her shoulder, exerting a slight pressure. “Eleanor, we should give them some time.”

      Ellie's mouth opened, but no words came out. After a few seconds, she nodded and turned away. Mom threw a half-pleasant, half-warning, smiled at Tessia, and then took me out of the room following my sister.

      "Arthur..." Tessia breathed, standing up, with her back leaning against the headboard. "Of course. Forgive me, I remember now. We... we were saying goodbye. I thought..." She swallowed heavily and lowered her eyes to her clasped hands.

      "I was never going to let that happen," I assured him. The words seemed hollow to me as I prognosted them, against the backdrop of my many battles against Cecilia and my hesitations about what to do with the Inheritance. It seemed certain that Tessia would have understood my fight... and my failures.

      The ghost of a smile appeared on his features. She was pale, especially at the lips, and a melancholy of which I did not remember had taken root in her expression at rest. Otherwise, she was exactly as I still imagined in my mind: strong, beautiful and royal. Unwillingly, I glanced at his neck, aware of the absence of the cord which should have borne half of the pendant in the shape of a leaf and heart. My hand was carried to my chest, where mine should have rested, but I had lost it at the City of Telmore after the battle against Nico and Cadell.

      She seemed to understand. "It was really beautiful. The pendant, I mean. Finally, the moment. The promise. Everything was beautiful. Not as I had imagined, of course. Not then at that time, and certainly not after, but... at least we had that. It was real."

      "That's true," I assured him. My gaze was fixed on the floor. Suddenly I felt his hand take hold of mine. His fingers intertwined in mine. Slowly, I turned around to look at her. "I thought everything I said."

      She stared at our intertwined fingers. His jaw was clenched, his eyes scrutinizing, his lips clenched. It was not someone looking for comfort or physical comfort in touch. No, I had rather the impression that she was holding me like an anchor.

      "At least I finally understand why you could never repay me when we were younger." The ghost of a smile has returned. "For me, you were this... mystical and beautiful fascination. I had taken care of you even before we could come to 'employer'. To see you live in our house, with us--with me--it was like coming out of a fairy tale." His eyes slowly rose up my arm, from my neck, from my lips, and finally stood on my own eyes. "But for you... I was just a child. A stupid little girl."

      "I'm sorry I couldn't tell you," I said quickly, maintaining eye contact. "I never wanted to lie to you, I couldn't…”

      'I know,' she said in the silence that settled down after I got away, the words I broke. "There's nothing you've done that I haven't already forgiven."

      I looked for his eyes, the fold of his eyebrows, the tension in each of his breaths, the stumbling beats of his heart. What does this mean for our promise? I wanted to ask him, but I restrained myself. It was too much to ask him at that moment. Requiring an answer on his part just to help me sort out my own emotions would be unfair.

      But one thing was clear. Things between us were different from what they were at the time of our promise, and I didn't know if we could find what we had lost.
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  4. Offline
    + 50 -
    Arthur: If you bite it and you die, it's poisonous. If it bites you and you die, it's venomous.
    Tessia: What if it bites me and it dies!?
    Caera: Then you're poisonous. Jesus Christ, learn to listen.
    Virion: What if it bites itself and I die?
    Regis: That's voodoo.
    Sylvie: What if it bites me and someone else dies ?
    Tessia: That's correlation, not causation.
    Virion: What if we bite each other, and neither of us die?
    Regis: That's kinky.
    Arthur: Oh my God
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  5. Offline
    + 20 -
    Volume 11: Epilogue
    ...

    CECILIA SEVER

    The smell of smoke sent alarm bells ringing through my mind, and I dropped the bundle of woolen yarn I was fiddling with before hurrying toward the kitchen. My hip caught the edge of the side table and I turned too late to catch the lamp, which pitched over sideways and cracked against the uneven floor boards.

    Heaving a sigh, I resolved to do what I could for the lamp after I rescued the ruins of dinner, and continued into the small, open-air kitchen, where a pot was bubbling violently and issuing black smoke. Careful to wrap my hand first—I’d already learned how it felt to grab the hot iron handle with my bare hands—I lifted the heavy pot off the solar heating element and set it on the table. The iron feet scored little black marks in the surface of the wood.

    Biting my lip to keep from sighing again, I grabbed a wooden ladle and stirred the soup, hoping that it hadn’t burned too badly but knowing we’d be eating it one way or the other.

    I stirred the soup for another minute or two to keep the still-hot iron from burning it further, then unwrapped my hand and picked up the cracked lamp. Regarding it with regret, I headed out the door but stopped in the frame to turn and look back at the small home.

    “Home,” I said, the word strange on my lips. Nowhere else had ever fit the word before, but the little cabin, well outside of the city, with its finicky power and endless maintenance issues, just felt like a home.

    I smiled as I took the three brick steps down to the ground and marched around the outer wall of the cabin along a worn gravel path that was more dirt than rock.

    The cabin overlooked a bend in one of the many simulated rivers that encircled the city, its constant flow of fresh water the product of pumps and gates instead of gravity. A thin row of evergreens lined the bank of the river. A disused dock poked out from the edge of our property into the moving water, but we’d never managed to acquire the license for a rowboat to take advantage of it.

    Between me and the river, on his hands and knees in the rocky soil we’d cleared grass and weeds from, was Nico. For a moment, I saw him not as he was, but as he had been—both the boy I remembered and the dark face he’d worn in that other life.

    The thought made me shake my head dizzily, as if I’d stood up too quickly and seen stars. It was difficult to keep it all straight. Much easier not to try and remember. But sometimes the thoughts came back to me, and I couldn’t help but think about it. I’d had a life here on Earth, as the Legacy. That version of me had lived a short and tortured existence before it was snuffed out by my own actions.

    My eyes drifted closed, and I had to take care not to breathe too rapidly. In danger of sinking below the waves of the memories that came after, I bit the side of my cheek hard and forced my eyes open again, then began jogging down the gentle slope toward Nico. The vision of those other Nico’s had faded. He was himself again. Although his hair was still dark, his face was soft and kind, his eyes gentle. Just looking at him made my anxiety ease.

    He looked up. There was a smudge of dark soil—or maybe fertilizer—across the bridge of his nose and his cheek. I couldn’t help but smile at the sight.

    “It’s just like I was afraid of,” he said, smiling at my smile. When he glanced back at the ground, though, the expression fell away to be replaced by a thoughtful frown. “This soil is horrible. The river here hasn’t been in place long enough to truly irrigate the surrounding earth, and it’s really rocky.” He ran his fingers through the dirt, biting his lip. “Still, we should be able to make it work.”

    “Dinner’s ready,” I said stiffly. I knew he wouldn’t say anything about it being burnt, but I wouldn’t be able to stop thinking about it. “Unless…well, we could go into the city? Get something nice? The soup will keep for a few days.”

    Nico stood and brushed his hands off on his filthy trousers. “You burned it, didn’t you?”

    I burst out with a dismayed groan. “I don’t know what happened. The pot was on and I just kind of got lost…”

    “I know,” he said consolingly. Suddenly he was right in front of me, and his strong arms pulled me effortlessly to him.

    I pressed my face into the curve of his shoulder and began to tremble.

    “I know,” he repeated, his hand running down the back of my long, ashen-brown hair. The detail stuck in my head. Ash brown, not silver-gray. “It’s been happening to me, too,” Nico murmured, holding me tight. “I’ll think about something, and the next thing I know an hour has passed and I haven’t moved. I think…” He swallowed heavily, and his hands ran down my arms until his fingers entwined with my own. “I think it’s whatever Grey did.”

    Whatever Grey did.

    Forcing on a bright smile, I squeezed his hands and pulled him away from the struggling garden. “Come on, let’s go into the city.”

    He regarded me suspiciously. “It’s your one weekend off a month, Cecilia. You know if we go into the city that—”

    “I promise that I won’t drag you there, okay?” I batted my eyes at him pleadingly.

    Chuckling, he pulled me around until his arm was draped over my shoulders, our fingers still entwined. “I better wash up and put my city suit on then.”

    I leaned against him, smiling brightly.

    Once we were both ready, it was a twenty-minute hike to the train station, where we could catch a ride into the activity district. We chatted about where to eat and whether we could afford tickets to an old movie at the retro cinema or maybe even check the licensing office for a car or boat permit, but it was only talk. We both knew the finances simply weren’t there for anything aside from the train ride and an economical dinner for two.

    Once we’d boarded the maglev and took our seats, we fell silent. I could tell Nico was slipping away into some troubling memory by the way his smile faltered and his unfocused eyes filled with sadness. I wanted to know what he was thinking about, but I didn’t want to interrupt. No, that was not quite it. The truth was, I didn’t want to share in whatever dark memory had surfaced. I had my own fair share of those moments and memories, and sometimes the smells of blood and burning flesh would swallow everything else. It felt cowardly, but I lacked the strength to shoulder any part of Nico’s burden.

    Still, I squeezed his hand and rested my head on his shoulder, there for him when he came back.

    “How long have we been here?” he asked suddenly, his cheek leaning against the top of my head.

    “What do you mean?”

    “Here.” He gestured vaguely around us. “This life. This world.”

    “Nico, we’ve been…” Trailing off, I leaned away and cocked one leg up on the seat so I could turn and face him. “We were both born on this world. We’ve known each other since we were children in the orphanage. We—we have a whole life of memories together…”

    He nodded distractedly, his focus still somewhere else. “I know. I remember everything, but I…don’t feel like it happened to me. Other stuff, I can barely remember, like my childhood in Alacrya”—I flinched at his mention of the other world—“but that still feels real. Here, my memory of everything that happened before we bought the property and finally moved in together, the wedding, everything…it’s all so clear, but feels…”

    “Like a life someone else lived,” I finished for him, feathering my fingers through his dark hair.

    He stole the briefest glance at my expression, then stared down at his hands fidgeting in his lap. “I just wish I understood what happened. I remember the cave, Agrona, my—” He swallowed heavily and closed his eyes. His breath came out in a tense shudder. “I died, Cecil.”

    “No,” I said firmly, gripping his hands and pulling them into my lap, forcing him to turn and meet my eye. “And even if you did, it doesn’t matter. I died too, remember? All that matters is that we’re here, together. There is no Legacy, no fight to be kings, no crushing weight of destiny on our shoulders. We can just live. Together. Whatever Grey did, however he did it, he cut that fate away and put us here.”

    A small, sad smile bloomed on Nico’s serious face. “I don’t think it was Grey. Well, maybe his power, but I don’t think he chose this life for us.” When I regarded him blankly, he rolled his eyes. “It was you. This life, this picture we’ve been placed into with all these perfect memories, it is just the way you’ve always wanted it to be. That can’t be a coincidence. It had to be you.”

    “I don’t know…”

    Some part of me knew that I hadn’t lived through all the memories I had of this life. It was a new reincarnation, but instead of being placed into a vessel—a whole new body that would require us to take over someone else—Grey had somehow placed us into our own lives, our own bodies. I had looked up previous events and confirmed that my duel with Grey had still taken place and that version of me had died there. That hadn’t been unwritten. His time as king, the wars that he had overseen, his sudden and unexpected demise in this world, everything was just as it had been.

    I didn’t understand it, but the power he had wielded had written us into existence as if we’d always been here. We picked up right where I had pictured us: in a little cabin by the river, just normal people getting by the best we could. No Legacy, no mana, no ki even. We were just…plain.

    Perfect and plain.

    There was a ding, and the maglev train began to slow noticeably. I startled, realizing we had been sitting in silence for quite some time. “I’m sorry, I…”

    “I know,” Nico said, squeezing my leg in understanding.

    We got off in the activity district and walked the length of several city streets, where we sat quietly at one of our favorite restaurants and enjoyed a simple but delicious—and unburnt—meal. As we were finishing, my communicator dinged, informing me that someone was trying to reach me. It had been a splurge to get fitted with a mobile communication device, but with my job, it had felt necessary.

    Looking guiltily at Nico, I pressed the button on the wrist-worn control band to answer the call.

    “Headmaster, I’m so sorry to bother you,” my assistant, Evie, said immediately. She sounded frazzled. “There was apparently a problem with one of the bills, and there are two officials here from the city office.”

    “At dinner time on a Saturday?” I asked incredulously, but I didn’t wait for a response. “As luck would have it, I’m already in the city. I can be there in twenty minutes.”

    Nico was watching me closely, his expression carefully blank. He wouldn’t be upset at my failure to uphold my promise, but I knew he would tease me mercilessly about it.

    “Oh, thank you, headmaster,” Evie said, letting out a breath of relief. I heard her relay the information to the officials.

    “See you soon.” I disconnected the call and gave Nico my best apologetic pout. “I’m sorry, it’s an official thing, I have to—”

    He raised one hand to forestall the rest of my unnecessary apology. “You know how I feel about what you do. Those kids—everyone at that orphanage—are lucky to have you, and, to be honest, you need them almost as much. You’re the best headmaster they could hope for.”

    “Except for Headmaster Wilbeck,” we said simultaneously. We were still laughing lightly as we asked for the check.
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    1. Offline
      + 00 -
      I dont think that’s the whole chapter? If not, can u please share the other part
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  6. Offline
    + 10 -
    It feels so forced, that it's hard to reign in the puking.

    1. Tessia Lived through integration too, and her body is one with mana. Made of it. She IS mana, with a will of it's own. There can't be "too much mana inside of her", nor can she give birth to the second core.

    2. All the while Arthur was commanding aether and that took effort and Aether inside of his core. But inside the Trial he have "learned all that he could" from the Djinn warriores. Which means, he doesn't need Aether to battle, as Djinns were master of Aether, but not mana, and, in fact, used non of it.
    (there was talk about them being born with strong mana and knowledge of Aether. But it was quickly tucked under the rug and none of the Djinn trainers used any mana at all. Then there was a Phoenix-friend and his father, but both of them had mana "weaker than the dragons' ".
    All in all, they utilised mana through aether and not the other [dragon] way around)

    3. Nico never had the chance to explain the Silvia's core, nor mend his relationship with Grey, even though the letter only wanted to disable him and not kill, as he understood his circumstances.
    The same was true for Cecilia. She is a menace at war, but a gullible child overall.

    There was no need to end their lines and send them off, especially, since they could help him. But. no matter.

    4. Living through the numerous lives with the King's Gambit he never earned the new Rune, even though he had gained the insight of Destruction by simply battling some enemies.
    Djinn runes became a strategic plot-resource, instead of a mild power-up along the main road.
    And by all right, he should have awakened to a body full of Djinn runes.

    5. Agrona and thread-cutting? Why not cut his Life thread from the very beginning?

    There is so much more jagged pieces to this puzzle of shit-chapter, that it belittles the greatness of the whole novel.
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  7. Offline
    + 00 -
    Не понял, где глава??????????????????????
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    1. Offline
      + 00 -
      Новая глава будет 5 июля
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      1. Offline
        + 00 -
        Почему? У автора перерыв?
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        1. Offline
          + 00 -
          Наверное, так часто бывает перед финалом тут нечему удивляться.
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  8. Offline
    + 00 -
    where...is...the...new...chapter...
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  9. Offline
    + 00 -
    this is ending, i dont like it! actually maybe I do , no more waiting til the next friday, I m gonna cry when this is over, pls no side stories, they just make finishing a great story feel sadder
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  10. Offline
    + 00 -
    Finally, something good. I just hope that greed wouldnt cloud the eyes of the bastard dragon Kezess.
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