[Skill used, Dream Weaving]
Darkness opened around Seraphel like a great, soundless mouth.
He woke with a gasp, choking on air that tasted of incense and damp stone. His wrists jerked—chained. His breath stilled in his throat. The tal cuffs clung cold to his skin, the weight of them sinking into bone. A faint ringing hum radiated from the walls, like distant chis underwater.
Light bled into the room.
Candles flickered awake one by one, forming a perfect circle around him—twelve points of fla, each a different color. Red, blue, gold, violet, black. They bent strangely, their flas leaning inward as though drawn toward him, slling faintly of resin and reverence.
He was kneeling.
Not by choice.
The stone beneath him was carved into gentle grooves—shaped exactly for knees. As if thousands had knelt there before him. As if the floor itself rembered submission.
His breath trembled.
"Where... where am I?"
The chamber answered only with the soft drone of unseen voices. Not words—tones, vibrations. His skin prickled with cold.
Then he saw the altar.
It stood ahead of him—white marble streaked with veins of silver. Pure. Beautiful. Holy.
Except the symbols carved into it were wrong.
Not the Fla.
Not the Suncrest.
Not any mark sanctioned by scripture.
They were older. Rounder. Whispering. A script he almost recognized, though the mory felt buried under years of obedience.
Sothing in him recoiled.
This was not a place of the Light.
This was sothing deeper. Older. A chapel, yes—but not for any god the Church bowed to.
A shudder gripped his lungs.
What has he done to ?
Footsteps whispered in the dark corridor behind him. Calm. asured. Almost courteous.
Seraphel stiffened.
From the shadows ca a man—young, slender, his steps lit with candle glow. Hair dark, eyes blue and bright as polished frost.
Aiden.
No disguises now.
No borrowed faces.
No pretense of nobility.
Just him.
He entered the circle with the slow grace of soone walking into a mory. His presence shifted the air; the candles leaned toward him subtly, like flowers to sunlight.
"Seraphel," he said softly.
The Inquisitor spat at the ground. "...Heretic."
Aiden’s smile was faint, nearly pitying. "If nas comfort you, keep them."
He kneeled—not in mockery, but as if speaking to a wounded man.
"You were not ant to wake so abruptly. The drug should have worn off gently."
Seraphel’s jaw clenched. "Release ."
"I will," Aiden replied, "when you understand why you are here."
Seraphel struggled against the chains. The tal tightened with a shrill ringing hum.
"These restraints are not punishnt," Aiden said. "They’re protection. For you."
"Protection?" Seraphel snarled. "From what?"
Aiden lifted a candle between two fingers. The blue fla danced, then stretched—unnaturally long, almost liquid.
"From yourself."
Seraphel froze.
Aiden placed the candle on the altar, and its fla bent downward, touching the stone, as though recognizing the carvings.
"I want to show you sothing, Seraphel." His voice gentled. "Sothing you have refused to see."
"I will not be tempted."
"Temptation," Aiden murmured, "is rely truth delivered too soon."
He glanced at the wall. A panel slid open—smooth, silent. Behind it glowed a mirror made of silvered obsidian. Seraphel saw his own reflection—pale, wild-eyed, hair disheveled, chest still marked faintly by the whorehouse sheets.
In his reflection, sothing clung to his back.
A shadow.
Thin, spined, clinging like a starving newborn. Its face pressed against the back of his skull.
Seraphel scread.
The shadow moved when he moved. Breathed when he breathed.
"No—no—"
Aiden stepped beside him. "This is not my illusion. This is yours."
The shadow hissed, jaw distending. It whispered soundlessly into Seraphel’s ear.
"What is that?" he choked. "What have you done to ?!"
Aiden placed a hand gently on his shoulder. "This is the faith you were given."
The shadow’s claws dug into Seraphel’s reflection.
Seraphel felt nothing—yet he heard the scrape in his nerves.
"You burn heretics," Aiden said quietly, "and call it righteousness. But the fire you command has never been divine."
"No—" Seraphel gasped, wrenching his gaze away. "Lies—"
"Faith without question is just obedience," Aiden said.
The mirror pulsed. A new image appeared—Seraphel standing before the Council as a boy, trembling, surrounded by priests. One pressed a hand on his back. The sa shadow ford.
He rembered that day.
His induction.
His "blessing."
His obedience.
Seraphel’s throat closed.
"Stop this," he whispered.
Aiden turned the mirror away. "I will."
The shadow vanished.
Relief hit Seraphel like cold rain—only to be crushed by a deeper dread.
Aiden’s voice softened further. "You have lived your entire life serving n who wield shadows as halos."
Seraphel’s eyes burned. "...God saved ."
"No," Aiden said gently. "You saved nothing. You were made."
The words struck like a fist.
Seraphel wrenched at the chains until his wrists bled. "I am faithful!"
"I know," Aiden said. "And that is why I chose you."
"Chose... ?"
Aiden walked slowly around him, speaking like a teacher to a frightened child.
"You are not corrupt, Seraphel. Not yet. You believe in justice, even when the Church has forgotten the word. You believe in purity, even when the priests violate it."
He paused behind him.
"You believe, even when belief is a wound."
Seraphel felt breath on the back of his neck. Aiden’s voice whispered:
"And wounds can be healed."
The chains loosened. Just slightly.
Seraphel’s breath hitched. "What do you want from ?"
"To see," Aiden whispered, "if you are capable of faith... without chains, Capable of my Faith..."
The candles flared.
The room shimred like a heat-haze.
And suddenly—Seraphel was free.
The chains unlatched themselves with a soft tallic sigh.
Seraphel stared at his wrists. Then at Aiden.
He felt the surge—fear, adrenaline, pride. The old instincts roared: escape.
Aiden didn’t move.
Seraphel lunged.
He ran through the carved chamber, feet slamming stone. Ran down the dim corridor, heart pounding in his throat. Ran up a twisting stairwell slling of rain and incense.
The door at the top burst open—
—and he stumbled into warm, lamp-lit air.
Velvet curtains. Wooden floors. Perfu. Whispered laughter.
The whorehouse.
The sa private room.
The sa bed.
The sa rumpled crimson sheets.
Seraphel froze mid-step. His stomach dropped through the floor.
Impossible.
He turned slowly.
Aiden leaned in the doorway.
"Escape," he said softly, "always leads to where you refuse to look."
The room warped subtly—the walls breathing, the lamp flas bending inward, the sa scent as before but sharper, tallic now, like blood beneath perfu.
Seraphel backed away. "No... this is sorcery."
"Truth," Aiden said, "is the oldest sorcery...truths built upon lies.."
Seraphel’s breath trembled. Tears stung his eyes.
"Please..." His voice cracked. "End this. Kill . Purge . Whatever you want—just stop."
Aiden walked forward slowly.
Not triumphant.
Not mocking.
Gentle.
He knelt before Seraphel, lowering himself to eye level.
"Listen to ," Aiden murmured. "I do not want your death. I want your awakening."
Seraphel’s vision blurred. "I have nothing left...you already took everythimg from .."
"You have everything left," Aiden said. "You have doubt. And doubt..."
His fingers brushed Seraphel’s cheek, wiping a tear.
"...is the beginning of sight...the sight of which I will show you, guide you...."
Seraphel’s shoulders shook. "Why ?"
"Because the Saintess and will burn heaven," Aiden whispered. "And soone must survive to guide the ashes."
Seraphel blinked in shock. "The Saintess...?"
"Already walks my path."
Seraphel felt the world tilt, collapse inward.
"No," he breathed. "No. She would never—"
"She ca from your Church," Aiden said softly. "And she saw what you refused to: corruption so deep it breathes."
Seraphel collapsed to his knees.
He felt small.
Lost.
Human.
Aiden’s hand hovered above his shoulder—almost a blessing.
"You have a choice," he said.
Seraphel lifted his face, eyes raw.
"Serve n who clothed shadows in scripture...
or serve truth, even if it tears heaven open."
The whorehouse walls flickered—turning to stone, then wood, then nothing. Darkness beneath them. Stars above.
Seraphel looked up.
One star pulsed brighter than the rest—pale blue, almost sorrowful.
Aiden’s voice drifted like a breath:
"Faith does not bind you. You ....bind you."
Seraphel closed his eyes, trembling.
The candlelight dimd.
The last thing he heard was Aiden’s whisper, warm as fire, cold as judgent:
"Choose."
Seraphel didn’t know how long he stayed kneeling in that shifting space where stone, velvet, and starlight overlapped. His mind drifted in and out, drowning in the echoes of Aiden’s words. Doubt pulsed like an unfamiliar heartbeat inside him, a small, painful thing trying to grow through old scars.
For the first ti in his life, he didn’t know what he believed.
A soft chi sounded, like a drop of water landing in a still pond. The illusion of the whorehouse peeled away like wet paint. Candlelight replaced starlight. Stone walls replaced curtains. The scent of incense returned, richer, deeper.
Seraphel found himself sitting on the edge of a stone dais now, no longer chained, no longer restrained. His breath shook in his chest.
Aiden stood across from him, hands clasped behind his back. Calm. Patient. He watched Seraphel as though watching a child learn to speak for the first ti.
"You didn’t answer," Aiden said quietly.
Seraphel swallowed. "I cannot choose."
Aiden stepped closer. "You can. You are just afraid to... choose the right side of history serapheal...be one of my students, my apostle."
Seraphel pressed a shaking palm against his forehead. "Afraid of damnation. Afraid of deception. Afraid of—"
He choked on the last word.
"Her."
Aiden’s eyes softened. "The Saintess?"
Seraphel nodded slowly.
"She is everything I could not be," he whispered. "Everything I wanted to be. The fla I chased until my soul bled."
’hmmmm....he has feelings for the saintess.... interesting, I can use that..’ Aiden thought.
"And now?" Aiden asked.
"Now she follows you....I ca all the way here, just tp have her recognize in so way but..."
Aiden approached him, not with triumph but with sothing gentler—sympathy, or an imitation of it.
"She doesn’t follow ," he said. "She walks beside . That is the difference."
Seraphel’s breath stilled.
"But you..." Seraphel stared at him. "What are you doing to her? Twisting her mind? Filling her with—"
Aiden lifted a finger.
And the world changed.
Not violently. Not theatrically. Just... shifted, as if reality bowed and reshaped itself. The darkness to their right opened into an archway, revealing a room Seraphel recognized instantly:
A chapel.
One of Aiden’s illusions — no, replicas — of chapels from the upper churches. He had seen this exact one during a pilgrimage in his youth... except this one was wrong in subtle, bruising ways.
The pews were too polished. The candles too steady. The statue of the goddess’s vessel too flawless. A recreation made by soone who understood architecture but not faith.
And kneeling at the altar was the Saintess.
Hands folded. Shoulders trembling. Hair spilling like molten gold around her. Her voice faint—whispering prayers.
But not in the holy language Seraphel had taught her.
The words were older, softer, syllables that rose through the air like smoke. They curled around him in tendrils of sound he didn’t understand but felt. Each one pressed against his ribs like a gentle hand.
Seraphel’s breath caught.
"What... what is she saying?"
Aiden stood beside him quietly. "She is asking for guidance."
"From who?"
Aiden turned his head, looking at the Saintess the way a scholar might look at a rare, blooming flower.
"From the only place she has ever found it."
Seraphel stared at her silhouette. At the way she trembled as she prayed. At the way tears glimred on her cheeks.
He had never seen her cry like that.
"Is she unhard?" Seraphel whispered.
"She is safe," Aiden said. "For the first ti in her life...with , she’s safe..."
Seraphel felt sothing twist inside him—jealousy or grief or both.
"I need to speak to her," he said.
Aiden shook his head. "Not yet."
Seraphel turned to him sharply. "Why?"
Aiden stepped into the chapel, the divine quiet bending around him.
"She is not praying for faith," he said. "She is praying for permission."
Seraphel blinked. "Permission... permission for what?"
Aiden’s gaze lowered to the Saintess with an expression that was almost unbearably gentle.
"To let go."
The Saintess’s voice trembled, rising to a soft sob.
Seraphel felt sothing inside him break.
He moved forward on instinct, but Aiden raised a hand—and the air around Seraphel tightened, holding him still without force, without pain. Just a boundary, firm as a parent’s hand on a child’s shoulder.
"Seraphel," Aiden murmured, "if you interrupt her now, she will only shatter harder."
Seraphel looked desperately from Aiden to the Saintess, heart pounding. "She is suffering."
Aiden nodded. "Healing always begins with pain... she’s ."
Seraphel shut his eyes tight.
When he opened them again, the Saintess rose slowly, wiping her face with trembling hands. She turned toward Aiden, not Seraphel. Her eyes were red, her expression raw, naked.
"Aiden..." she whispered, voice broken. "I—please... tell I am not wrong."
Aiden cupped her face with both hands.
"You are not wrong."
She sagged against him in relief, like a believer collapsing before a god.
Seraphel’s heart cracked.
Aiden brushed a thumb over her cheek. "You saw the truth. You felt it. You survived it."
She nodded against his palm.
"But... Seraphel..." she whispered, hesitating.
Aiden’s eyes flicked toward the Inquisitor, unreadable.
"He is here," Aiden said, "because he needs to see what you already have."
The Saintess’s gaze t Seraphel’s across the chapel.
A wound opened in her expression.
"Seraphel," she whispered. "Why didn’t you stop them?"
The words struck him like a blade.
His breath left his lungs.
"What?" he whispered hoarsely. "Stop who?"
Her voice cracked. "The Council."
Seraphel felt the floor tilt beneath him.
The Council.
Aiden stepped back, watching quietly.
The Saintess clenched her fists. "They tried to silence . Told to retract everything. Told to lie. Told that what I saw in the upper sanctum—the corruption—was a dream. A delusion."
Her voice rose in anger.
"They said I was unwell. That I needed containnt."
Containnt.
Seraphel felt bile rise in his throat.
He knew that word. He had used that word.
She pointed at him. "You were there. You heard them. And you... you said nothing."
Seraphel’s mouth opened, but no words ca.
Aiden spoke instead, his voice gentle but rciless.
"Your silence wounded her more deeply than any blade could."
The Saintess swallowed hard. "I trusted you. More than anyone."
Seraphel felt his knees weakening. "I... I didn’t know. I didn’t—"
"Yes," Aiden said softly. "You didn’t know. Because you never questioned them. Not once."
Seraphel trembled, collapsing to his knees.
The Saintess looked at him—not with hatred, but with disappointnt so deep it felt holy.
"I needed you," she whispered. "And you weren’t there."
She turned away, stepping closer to Aiden, drawn to him like a tide to the moon.
Seraphel stared at the floor, breath ragged.
"Please..." he whispered. "What do you want to do?"
Aiden stepped beside him, speaking low enough for only Seraphel to hear.
"Choose."
Seraphel lifted his head, vision swimming.
"Choose what?"
Aiden extended a hand.
"To walk into the truth with us...
or remain blind and be left behind."
The Saintess turned, watching Seraphel with tear-streaked cheeks, eyes shining with sothing fragile and breaking.
Seraphel looked at Aiden’s outstretched hand.
He didn’t take it.
But he didn’t pull away.
His fingers trembled above Aiden’s palm.
Then—
A door slamd sowhere far above them.
Distant voices echoed—angry, armored, shouting.
Seraphel froze.
The Saintess gasped.
Aiden’s expression barely changed.
"The Church," he murmured, voice calm as midnight. "They’ve followed the trail."
He looked at Seraphel.
"At your knights’ pace... they will reach us in ten minutes."
The Saintess stepped closer to Aiden, fear rising.
Seraphel stared at the stairs, heart hamring.
Aiden’s hand remained extended between them.
"Choose," he said again.
"And choose quickly."
User Comments
0 comments from readers