The coffin stood much taller than Alex, an ornate black structure that asserted its presence even within the pitch darkness surrounding it.
Its material appeared to have been carved from stone or bone, yet carried a quality that neither possessed, sothing living in it, sothing that rembered being alive and had not entirely finished.
A malevolent aura radiated outward from its surface. Not wild or angry, rather it was calm and absolute.
The darkness around it visibly responded, stretching and twisting at its edges, warping in the way that existence warps when sothing fundantally wrong with it is introduced into its presence.
The void seed to almost groan, straining against the proximity of the coffin the way a living thing strains against a grip it cannot break, held in place not by force but by inevitability.
"That thing." Leviathan’s voice had changed.
The playfulness was gone. The careless authority, the tone of a being who had spent so long controlling and commanding everything within his reach that the habit of ease had beco indistinguishable from his nature, all of it had simply left his voice, stripped away in the space between one breath and the next.
"What did you bring from that strange realm?" It was not truly a question. It was the statent of soone who already knew the answer wouldn’t change anything and was asking anyway because asking was the only thing left to do.
Leviathan knew with complete certainty that nothing within the Domain, nothing within the world as he understood it, could produce in him what the presence of that coffin was producing.
He had encountered fear before. Fear was not a stranger to him. It was an old companion he had walked beside for long enough to understand its every shape and texture, to know how it moved through him and how to move alongside it without being governed by it.
What he felt now was not that kind of fear.
He beca aware, almost against his will, that his lips had gone dry. He licked them, a nervous gesture, involuntary, the kind his body produced without asking permission, and he almost did not catch himself doing it.
He did not wish to acknowledge what the gesture ant. But he knew, even as he resisted knowing it, what was sitting at the root of what he felt in the presence of the thing caged within that coffin.
It was primal.
It was the fear etched not into the mind but into the being itself, the fear that prey carried before its predator, written into the bone and the blood before thought had any say in the matter.
’The fear I feel,’ Leviathan thought, his dozen eyes fixed on the coffin with an attention that had shed every other concern, ’is only sothing I have ever felt in the presence of my King.’
Then his face twisted.
The fear was still there, every bit of it, unchanged and undiminished. But sothing rose through it and alongside it that was entirely different, sothing that curled his features into a heinous grin of pure, shivering bliss, his eyes brightening with the particular light of a being that has just been handed sothing it has wanted for longer than most things have existed.
’But the thing within that coffin is not my King. And that ans I get to break it.’
"You are making quite an ugly face," Alex said, and there was a hint of genuine surprise in his voice, the faint quality of soone who had prepared for several possible reactions and had not fully accounted for this one.
"You are fulfilling my truest wish," Leviathan breathed, and the words ca out on sothing close to a salivating exhale, unguarded and trembling with a thrill he was not bothering to contain. "I cannot begin to explain in words what this feels like."
He took a step forward, not aggressive, not tactical, simply drawn, the way a starving thing is drawn toward sustenance that it can sll but has not yet reached.
"I am the manifestation of this world’s envy," he said, his voice carrying the weight of sothing stating its own nature rather than describing it.
"So ask yourself what I feel standing before my King and watching the imnsity of power he wields. The envy that produces in , if you rendered it as fire, could burn this world’s oceans dry and return for more." His grin deepened. "But my King made . He is my origin. I cannot break him. I would never wish to. That desire has no purchase in ."
His eyes moved from Alex to the coffin and back again, the grin settling into sothing that was almost reverent.
"But that thing," he said softly, "stirs the sa kind of envy in that only my King has ever stirred."
He exhaled slowly, the sound of it wrong in ways that were difficult to na precisely.
"I do not know what horror you have sealed within that prison," he said, and the admission carried no sha in it, only hunger. "But I find myself hoping, genuinely hoping, that whatever it is will not disappoint ."
His dozen eyes burned with the particular brightness of sothing that had waited a very long ti for a particular kind of mont and had just recognized its arrival.
"It is good that you are enjoying this," Alex said, and there was sothing in his voice that was almost sorrow, quiet and genuine, entirely at odds with the battlefield logic of everything surrounding it. "Because at least one of us should be able to rember what is about to happen with so asure of pleasure."
He did not stand on ceremony.
He stepped forward, placed his hand flat against the surface of the coffin, and before Leviathan could form a remark, his body began to dissolve.
It happened the way ink disperses in water, deliberately and without resistance, his form coming apart into streams of darkness that flowed into the coffin’s surface and were absorbed by it, drawn inward as though the coffin had been waiting for exactly this and recognized the offering imdiately.
The chains responded.
Each one snapped at its center, not broken by force but released, the tension going out of them all at once, and they fell to hang loose at the coffin’s sides, their tal rings striking nothing, their sound swallowed entirely by the darkness around them before it could travel anywhere.
The seals that had pulsed steadily across the coffin’s surface, each one etched with ancient script that had breathed with its own quiet rhythm, faded.
Seconds passed.
The coffin stood bare, its polished surface reflecting nothing back to the darkness around it. Then even that stillness shifted, and slowly, without sound, the lid slid aside and fell.
The thud it produced when it hit the void floor reverberated outward and was then consud, leaving a silence that felt fuller than the one before it.
Inside the coffin, cradled in the soft velvet embrace of its interior, lay a man.
He stood at least two and a half ters, even in repose. His features were sharp, sculpted, and cold, carrying the particular quality of a face that had been refined past the point of ordinary handsoness into sothing unseen.
His skin was the color of pale ash, flawless as polished marble, unmarked by anything ti or violence had tried to leave upon it. Long strands of pitch-black hair fell across his shoulders and cascaded down his back like a river of night that had found a shape it preferred and decided to stay in it.
Leviathan looked at him.
The confusion that moved across his face was genuine, which was itself unusual, because Leviathan was not a being who wore genuine confusion easily or often.
There was recognition in his expression, the sense of sothing familiar being perceived, but alongside it sothing equally strong and entirely opposite, a complete and baffling blankness where recognition should have extended further and simply did not.
He could see the resemblance to Alex. That much resolved itself quickly. But he could also see sothing else layered beneath and through it, traces of an individual who was not Alex, another presence that did not belong to the sa origin, woven into the sa being with a thoroughness that should not have been possible.
He leaned forward slightly, his cold blue eyes pressing deeper, pushing past the surface of what was visible into the structure beneath, reading what lay below the appearance with the practiced perception.
What he found there stopped him, and for just a mont, Leviathan was genuinely, completely shaken.
"What is this Frankenstein thing?" The words ca out with sothing close to revulsion, which, from Leviathan, was almost a form of respect.
"This is a ssed-up sight even by my standards." He straightened, his eyes still moving across the figure in the coffin with the focused attention of soone trying to solve a problem that kept refusing to resolve. "So what happened to you? So old monster tried to worm his way into your being, take over your existence from the inside?"
He shook his head slightly. "No, that does not work either; a takeover does not produce this, it does not amalgamate half a foreign soul with two-thirds of the original."
He began to murmur, half to himself, cycling through possibilities and dropping them one after another as each failed to account for what he was seeing, the process carrying the particular quality of a mind that was genuinely engaged rather than performing engagent.
"So ancient entity tried to devour your soul? No." He dismissed it before the thought had finished forming.
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