Monts later, Atticus found himself trailing behind Anorah as they made their way toward his training room on the hill. Her pace was brisk, and not once did she turn to look at him from the mont they left the hall.
'She's definitely mad.'
She didn't slow until they reached the training room, and the mont they stepped inside, Anorah crossed the space and moved straight to the terminal embedded in the wall. Then she started silently altering the room's configuration.
Atticus remained where he was, watching in silence.
'Should I apologize?'
He hadn't exactly done anything wrong. At least, he didn't think so. Was not doing what your woman wanted sohow wrong by default? He really hoped not. Otherwise, he'd just fucked up spectacularly, and the last thing he wanted was to return to a world without sex.
He swallowed.
'I should say sothing.'
"Hello…"
Atticus cringed imdiately and cursed himself inwardly, then cleared his throat.
"I… I can see that you're sohow mad. Why don't you calm down first?"
Anorah turned slowly, giving him a strange look.
"What do you an? I'm calm."
"So you're not angry?"
"I'm not."
Atticus let out a quiet sigh of relief and allowed himself a small smile.
"Good. For a second there, I thought you were angry."
"…."
She stared at him for several seconds without speaking, then turned back to the terminal. The terrain shifted rapidly, an endless desert, then frozen plains of ice, sprawling grasslands, crashing oceans. When the scenery flickered from forest to city, Atticus finally frowned and stepped closer.
"What are you doing?"
"Nothing."
"That's right… does Asterra have training rooms like this? I don't think I've seen one."
"…"
"Are you looking for a specific terrain? I can help."
"No."
Atticus exhaled.
'She's definitely angry.'
Were won always this complicated? Why insist she was calm when she so clearly wasn't? Was there so unspoken language he hadn't learned yet? He shook his head.
"Listen," he said, "I know you're angry. Can you stop pressing that terminal so we can talk about it?"
"There's nothing to talk about," Anorah replied flatly. "You already made your choice."
"And you're angry because it's not what you wanted?"
She paused and her hands tightened into fists. A mont later, she loosened them and resud tapping at the terminal.
"No."
"Then why are you angry?" Atticus pressed. "Just tell . Ignoring it won't make it go away."
Her fingers slamd the terminal harder now.
"Anorah…"
Tap. Tap. Tap.
Atticus frowned, then reached out and closed his hand around her fingers, only to stiffen when he felt them trembling. He looked up at her face and froze as tears stread silently down her cheeks.
"Anorah… why…?"
She turned away and wiped at her eyes.
"…I hate it."
"Hate what?"
"War, Atti." Her voice wavered. "During the battle, I heard millions screaming, begging not to die. I watched my people fall… the blood…" She shook her head. "I hate it. I don't ever want it to happen again. I don't—"
Her words dissolved into sobs as Atticus pulled her into his arms and held her tightly, one hand brushing through her hair. Only now did he truly understand where all of this was coming from. The constant battles… watching her people die, had carved scars far deeper than he'd realized.
At the very least, it finally made sense.
'That's why she's against it.'
Going after their enemies would plunge their world into unending conflict. No matter how powerful he beca, there was no denying the reality… many would die. That was the future Anorah was trying to reject, one where she would be forced to watch her people fall again and again.
'But there's no helping it.'
Atticus offered her no words of comfort. He felt for her. sympathized with her, even, but he wasn't in the habit of lying to ease pain. The world was cruel, and their enemies even more so. Choosing restraint in the na of protection was nothing more than being naive, and the last thing he would do was encourage it.
Because in the grand sche of things, aside from those he truly cared about, the trillions that made up Eldoralth could perish for all he cared.
…
Anorah eventually cried herself to sleep in his arms. Atticus ford a bed and blanket in the center of the training room and carefully laid her down, altering the scenery into sothing composed and quiet. 'She'll be better when she wakes up.'
He saw her breakdown not as weakness, but as necessity. People only truly changed after hitting rock bottom.
'Still… I didn't get the chance to ask how she's here with .'
'I like her.'
The sudden thought made him pause.
'You can like anything?'
'Of course I can! The better the warrior, the larger one's heart. She's proven that much, and it deserves respect.'
'I don't know about that… you seem heartless.'
A woman who hadn't even batted an eye at his agonized screams underground was hardly in a position to lecture him about hearts.
'Bla your incompetence for my behavior. My heart is as vast as the elents encompassing the universe.'
Atticus narrowed his eyes slightly.
'I've been aning to ask you… since you're the ego in the exo suit. You've been in my head for most of my life and only awakened recently. Why are you… you? And how do you wield such control over the elents?'
Silence followed, stretching for several seconds.
'Clarity would no—'
'You don't know either, do you?'
'…'
'Back in my mindscape, you said you didn't know why you were helping . It's because you have no mories from before we bonded… isn't it?'
Her silence answered him more clearly than her words ever could. Atticus didn't press further. He was already confident in his conclusion, though the implications of it remained uncertain.
'My earlier assumption may be right. That person… or soone else from the higher planes… sent her to Eldoralth.'
What her purpose was, however, remained a mystery.
With no way to uncover the truth now, Atticus pushed the thought aside.
'I should answer this…'
His gaze drifted to the blade resting at his waist, and he frowned faintly.
'It's calling to .'
This summons felt different from the others. There was no pressure, no insistence, none of the familiar pull of urgency. It felt more like an invitation, one he was free to accept or decline.
For a mont, Atticus considered ignoring it. The fifth trial hadn't been deadly, but there was no guarantee the sixth would be any different.
'Should I risk it?'
He recalled the mont he'd stood surrounded by Marquis at the climax of the Ascension Ga and let out a quiet sigh.
'It better not be a death trap.'
Atticus directed his awareness into the katana, and the world shifted as his consciousness was wrenched away.
A second later, wind roared past him as he found himself falling through open sky.
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