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Now reading: Chapter 552 - Care from 100% DROP RATE : Why is My Inventory Always so Full?, a Fantasy novel by Meagerton.

The four spirits t at a waterfall.

Earth arrived first, rolling awkwardly over stone and grass.

Fire ca next, leaving little sparks behind every ti it bounced.

Wind descended in circles, spinning too quickly and bumping gently into Earth.

Water rose from the pool below the falls, dripping light as it floated upward.

For a mont, the four orbs stared at one another.

Then Fire bounced.

Wind bounced back.

Earth bounced once more heavily.

Water pulsed with quiet delight.

Then all four collided gently in midair and spun apart.

They did not need words.

They had always been separate.

Yet the mont they t, it felt as though separation had only been waiting for reunion.

...

The won watching the vision felt the golden radiance intensify.

mory entered them.

Not fully.

But enough.

Marie gasped and clutched the carpet beneath her.

Kaia bent forward, one hand at her chest.

Sylra’s eyes widened in silent shock.

Marina covered her mouth as tears finally spilled.

They understood now.

They were the spirits...

Everything they had believed about themselves tilted.

Their human mories remained.

Their lives remained.

Their friendships, choices, pain, laughter, and growth remained.

But beneath those lives was sothing older.

Four elental spirits born before they had ever worn human shape.

Marie whispered, "What are we?"

Kaia’s voice trembled.

"I don’t know."

Sylra said softly, "But the mory is ours."

Marina shook her head.

"Why did we forget?"

No answer ca.

Only the next vision.

•••

The first eting of the four spirits ended in joy.

Then all four turned toward the cavern behind the waterfall.

The thread led there.

They moved together.

Inside, the cavern was dark.

But darkness did not bother them. Earth felt the shape of stone. Fire saw warmth. Wind felt space. Water sensed moisture in every surface.

They went deeper.

Then they saw him.

A man.

...

The four won watching from the present froze.

Because the man looked like Lucien.

But...

This man was not the Lucien they knew.

His hair was longer and unkempt. His face was thinner. His clothes were worn and neglected. His skin held the pallor of soone who had stopped caring whether he lived cleanly or died slowly.

His eyes were the worst part.

It was hollow.

Empty.

The kind of emptiness left behind when grief had burned everything else and even anger had gone quiet.

Marie stopped breathing.

Kaia’s heart pounded.

Sylra’s fingers tightened against the table.

Marina whispered, "My prince..."

But the man in the vision did not hear.

He sat near the wall of the cavern, knees drawn slightly, staring at nothing.

The cavern around him was the sa place where the won now sat.

The sa carpet.

The sa fire pit.

The sa table.

The sa bed.

But in the vision, the place was bleak.

Uncared for.

Barely alive.

...

The spirits entered.

Their light illuminated the cavern.

For the first ti, the man looked up.

But then...

The man lowered his gaze again.

As if light itself had failed to matter.

The spirits hovered.

Fire bounced first.

No reaction.

Wind circled his head.

No reaction.

Earth nudged his foot.

No reaction.

Water floated closer and pulsed softly.

Still nothing.

The man’s stare remained blank.

But the spirits did not give up.

•••

The visions shifted.

Days passed.

The four spirits tried everything.

At first, they bounced around him, glowing brighter whenever they thought he might look. They rolled stones into little shapes. Fire made tiny sparks dance in the air. Wind made leaves spin in circles. Water ford small reflective bubbles.

The man did not respond.

So they changed.

They began taking care of him.

Earth beca the first to understand that the man’s body had grown weak.

The brown-gold spirit moved beneath him, lifted stone gently, softened the ground, and helped support his limbs when he needed to shift. Sotis Earth pressed warm mineral force against his body like a massage to ease his muscles that had forgotten movent.

Fire learned the cold hurt him at night.

So the red-gold spirit sparked small flas in the fire pit, never too hot, always enough. It burned away dampness. It purified rot. It made the cavern feel less like a grave.

Wind learned the air grew stale.

So the pale green spirit moved constantly through the cavern, clearing smoke, carrying fresh air inward, sweeping dust from corners, and sotis trying to push bits of food toward the man’s mouth with comical determination.

Water learned his body needed care most often.

The blue-white spirit cleaned him.

It wiped away dirt. It brought droplets to his lips. It cooled fevers and washed wounds. When he did not resist, Water treated that as permission to keep trying.

...

The four won watched in silence.

The visions were not grand.

There was no battlefield.

Only four tiny spirits caring for a broken man who did not seem to care whether he continued breathing.

That made it hurt more.

...

The spirits left the cavern each day to gather food.

Fruits. Roots. Herbs. Anything soft enough for him to eat.

They brought everything back with enormous pride.

The man ignored it.

Still, they continued.

One day, Wind managed to push a small fruit against his lips.

He turned away.

Fire flared indignantly.

Earth rolled closer and pressed against his knee.

Water pulsed gently.

The man closed his eyes.

The spirits gathered around him.

They waited.

And waited.

At last, perhaps because his body had reached its limit, perhaps because so buried part of him was tired of refusing kindness, or perhaps because four tiny beings had beco too stubborn for despair to defeat, the man opened his mouth.

He bit the fruit.

He chewed once.

Then again.

The spirits froze.

Then...

They exploded into celebration.

Fire spun so fast sparks scattered everywhere.

Wind circled the cavern wildly.

Water bounced up and down in little splashes of blue light.

Earth rose beneath the man and gently lifted him to his feet.

The man almost fell.

The spirits caught him.

Then, with absurd solemnity, they began dancing.

Four tiny orbs held up a broken man and spun him in an uneven circle around the fire pit.

The scene should have been ridiculous.

It was ridiculous.

It was also heartbreaking.

Because the man’s eyes changed.

Only a little.

But enough.

Sothing moved behind the hollowness.

A mory, perhaps.

A feeling older than grief.

The faintest confusion of a person who had forgotten he could be cared for and suddenly found himself unable to deny it completely.

...

The won cried openly now.

Marie laughed once through her tears.

"They were so stupid."

Kaia smiled painfully.

"So stubborn."

Sylra whispered, "So kind."

Marina wiped her face and said, "Of course we were."

The vision shifted again.

•••

This ti, it was no longer the spirits’ perspective.

It was the man’s.

The world looked dimr through his eyes.

Every motion cost effort. Every sound reached him as if through distance. The little spirits moved around him constantly, bright and irritating and warm.

They had beco part of his days.

He did not speak.

But he noticed them now.

Earth liked sitting on the carpet.

Fire stayed near the pit.

Wind rested by the table when it grew tired from circling too much.

Water liked the bed, perhaps because it had spent so much ti fixing the blankets around him.

They had places.

Their own small places.

The man noticed that too.

Then one day, they left to gather food.

They did not return.

At first, the man did not move.

Evening ca.

The fire pit remained unlit.

Night settled.

The air grew stale.

No small body nudged his hand.

No water touched his lips.

No wind tried to force-feed him.

No earth supported his weak legs when he shifted.

Morning ca.

Still, they did not return.

The man’s gaze slowly changed.

For the first ti, worry appeared.

It was stiff and awkward. Almost unfamiliar.

He sat up from the bed with effort. His body trembled. His muscles had recovered only a little, but that little had been given by them, day after day, through care he had not asked for and did not deserve in his own mind.

He lowered his feet to the ground.

His breathing grew rough.

Then sothing glinted in his eyes.

Decision.

He knelt.

Slowly, painfully, he reached beneath the bed and pulled out a simple box.

The four won watching the vision felt the air around them tighten.

The man opened the box.

Inside lay sothing impossible.

The Origin Core.

Not a fragnt.

A whole, radiant, terrifyingly complete core pulsing with the authority of beginning itself.

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