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Now reading: Chapter 77: Under the Gaze of an Unmoving God from Serpent Emperor's Bride, a Yaoi novel by supriyashukla.

[Temple of Lord Urzan—The Hidden Sanctum—Continuation]

Silence followed the revelation.

Not the absence of sound—but the kind that pressed inward, as though the stone itself leaned closer to listen.

Levin stood unmoving.

The words "authority over ti" had not struck him like thunder. They settled instead—heavy, patient—like a crown placed upon the head before one realizes its weight.

"I—" He stopped himself.

The well at the center of the sanctum pulsed once, faint and deliberate, the surface of its darkness rippling as if stirred by an unseen breath.

Levin looked down at his hands; they were steady.

"No," he said at last, voice calm but threaded with sothing deeper. "I do not feel... power."

Arkhazunn watched him closely, every instinct screaming that this was the wrong response—the response of those most dangerous to the world.

"That does not disprove it, Malika," the High Mage said carefully. "Most forces that rule do not announce themselves. They are felt by others first."

Levin exhaled, slow and steady.

A faint, almost weary smile touched his lips as he shook his head. "High Mage," he said gently, "perhaps you are thinking too deeply." He lifted his hands, palms open—scarred, human, real. "I am only a warrior, Alpha. I bled on battlefields. I learned steel, not sorcery. I have no gift, no blessing, no hidden power."

The words were sincere. Grounded.

"I survived," Levin continued, voice low but firm, "because I fought, because I endured—not because ti bowed to ."

Zerat nodded at once, stepping closer, his presence solid and unquestioning.

"I agree," he said, his tone carrying imperial certainty. "My consort is human. A warrior. His strength is discipline, resolve, and will—not magic." His gaze flicked briefly to the Sirrash heart, then back to Arkhazunn. "There is no world in which he secretly carries power without my knowing."

For a mont, Arkhazunn only watched them, then—slowly—he nodded.

"A fair claim," the High Mage said. His voice softened, but his eyes sharpened. "And one I would very much like to believe."

He took a single step forward, the hem of his robe whispering against ancient stone.

"Then," Arkhazunn continued quietly, "let us not argue with belief."

Levin frowned slightly. "What do you an?"

Arkhazunn lifted his gaze fully now, eting Levin’s without challenge—but without retreat either.

"Let us test," he said.

The word settled into the sanctum like a dropped coin into deep water.

Zerat’s expression tightened. "Test?" His hand slid instinctively closer to Levin’s waist. "Explain."

"Nothing reckless," Arkhazunn replied imdiately. "No summoning. No invocation. Only observation." He gestured faintly toward the well, toward the lingering hush in the air. "If Malika truly possesses nothing beyond human limits, then nothing will answer him."

Levin studied the High Mage for a long mont.

"And if sothing does?" he asked.

Arkhazunn did not look away. "Then we stop. Imdiately. No conclusions—only confirmation that we were not mistaken."

Zerat’s jaw worked once. He glanced at Levin, searching his face—not for fear, but for consent.

"I will not allow harm," Zerat said quietly. "Not even curiosity’s harm."

Levin t his gaze and, after a heartbeat, nodded.

"I do not mind," he said calmly. "If this ends doubt—for you, for the empire—then do it."

Zerat inhaled slowly, then inclined his head once.

"Very well," he said. "We check."

The sanctum seed to stir at the word.

The ancient air thickened, the broken pillars seeming to lean inward, the small well at the center darkening as if its depth had suddenly grown imasurable.

Arkhazunn stepped forward, robes whispering against stone.

"I will cast the arrest again," the High Mage said, voice careful, ritual-clean. "Using the sa particles drawn from the Sirrash heart." He lifted his gaze to Levin. "Malika—you will remain outside the circle."

Levin nodded once, expression steady.

"If ti halts," Arkhazunn continued, "only the Malik and I will remain active within the ward. If you still move—" He paused. "—then there will be no room left for doubt."

Zerat’s hand brushed Levin’s briefly, grounding him, before he stepped into the etched circle with Arkhazunn. The runes beneath their feet glimred faintly, old gold and violet interlaced.

Arkhazunn raised both hands.

The Sirrash heart responded at once.

The cracked purple stone pulsed—once, twice—and the particles bled outward like starlight ground into dust. Arkhazunn spoke words older than crowns, syllables that did not ask permission but claid jurisdiction.

The sanctum inhaled.

And—

Ti stopped.

The whisper of water from the well vanished mid-breath. Candle flas froze, their blue tongues arrested in perfect stillness. Dust motes hung like constellations carved from glass. Even the air—dense, unseen—felt rigid, unmoving.

Zerat did not breathe. Arkhazunn did not blink, and both turned; their eyes found Levin, and he moved.

Levin’s breath caught as the world revealed itself to him—stilled, suspended, unreal. His heart pounded, loud in a silence that should not allow sound. He lifted his hand slowly, watching his fingers cut through unmoving air.

They t no resistance.

His eyes widened.

"...So it wasn’t a delusion," he whispered.

Arkhazunn’s lips parted—not in triumph, but in awe edged with pain. Blood slid from his nose, rising slightly before gravity rembered itself. He wiped it away with the back of his hand, unfazed.

"As we assud," Arkhazunn said hoarsely. "The arrest recognizes authority—and yields to yours."

He bowed deeply, despite the strain tearing through him.

"It appears, Malika," he continued, voice reverent and shaken, "that ti itself does not bind you."

The Sirrash heart pulsed violently. Arkhazunn snapped his hands downward; ti crashed back.

Sound slamd into the sanctum—the rush of water, the hiss of flas, and the breath tearing from lungs. Arkhazunn staggered, catching himself on one knee, blood now dripping properly onto the stone.

Zerat was moving before the echo faded. He crossed the circle in a single stride and caught Levin by the arms, silver eyes searching him with naked urgency.

"Are you hurt?" Zerat demanded. "Are you well, consort?"

Levin shook his head slowly. He was not afraid.

He was... overwheld.

"I’m fine," he said, then faltered, his gaze lifting to Zerat’s.

"Zer... why?" His voice softened, unsteady for the first ti. "Why do I have this?"

Zerat pulled him close—not crushing, not restraining—just enough to remind him that he was not alone. One hand cradled the back of Levin’s head, the other was firm at his spine.

"We will find the reason," Zerat said, low and certain. "And—" his voice hardened with promise, "—this husband of yours will stand between you and everything that dares reach for you."

Levin exhaled against his chest; he was not frightened—but he understood. Power of this magnitude was never left in peace. If this truth escaped these walls, it would not be curiosity that followed—it would be hunger, and worse... consequences not just for him.

But for the life he might one day carry.

Arkhazunn rose slowly, wiping the remaining blood from his lip. He bowed again—lower this ti.

"My lips are sealed, Malika," he said solemnly. "By oath, by blood, and by survival." His gaze flicked briefly to the Sirrash heart, then back to Levin. "I will uncover why this power answers you. That is why this sanctum exists."

Levin nodded once. "Then I will wait for the truth."

Zerat turned to Arkhazunn. "You may use this sanctum whenever necessary; its protections answer to ."

Arkhazunn inclined his head. "You have my gratitude, Malik."

Zerat’s arm slid back around Levin’s waist.

"Co," he said gently. "Let us leave this place."

Levin nodded, casting one last glance at the still-pulsing well and the fractured heart that had revealed a fate he had never sought.

Together, they walked out of the Hidden Sanctum. Behind them, the ancient chamber settled once more into silence—not empty, not asleep—but watchful. As if sothing very old had just confird what it had known all along.

***

[Outside the Temple — Later]

The inner sanctum released them slowly, as if reluctant to let go.

Levin and Zerat passed through the final corridor, their footsteps echoing against stone worn smooth by centuries of prayer and judgnt. The air grew lighter with each step, the weight of the hidden sanctum loosening—yet not fully gone.

At the threshold, Levin paused.

He turned.

The vast statue of Lord Urzan rose behind them, half-shadowed now as clouds drifted across the open sky. Gold-lined eyes stared outward, ancient and unreadable. For a heartbeat, Levin felt it again—that pressure, that quiet awareness.

’Why...’ he wondered, chest tightening. ’Why burden with sothing this vast?’

He searched the stone face for an answer that had never been carved there.

Beside him, Zerat stopped as well, but where Levin questioned, Zerat burned. His golden eyes lifted—not in reverence, not in fear—but in cold, unflinching challenge. He did not bow. He did not lower his gaze.

He glared at the god.

A promise passed silently between serpent and stone—one ruler to another.

’You chose him,’ Zerat’s look said. ’Then answer to if this power destroys him.’

Without another glance, Zerat turned and walked away.

Captain Varesh waited at the foot of the steps, posture rigid, helm tucked beneath his arm. He straightened at once when he saw them erge, eyes flicking briefly behind them as if expecting the temple itself to move.

Zerat did not slow.

"Let us go, Captain," he said.

"Yes, Malik," Varesh replied, already signaling the carriage forward.

Levin and Zerat stepped inside, the doors closing with a solid, final thud. The carriage rolled forward, wheels turning over sacred stone, then onto the long road leading back toward Silthara.

The temple receded behind them—silent, watchful, eternal.

Far below.

Deep beneath the temple’s outer foundations, where sunlight had never reached and prayers had long since decayed into dust—Sothing stirred.

Stone cracked without sound.

A coil of darkness slid free from the earth, scales black as void, eyes burning with ancient malice. The serpent rose, massive and patient, then folded inward—bone bending, shadow reshaping—

Until a man stood where the serpent had been.

Azhrakhaal.

Lord of the Black Serpents.

His gaze followed the imperial carriage as it disappeared down the road, his lips curving into a slow, knowing smile.

"Soon," Azhrakhaal continued softly, "I will see this Malika—the one who is too stubborn to die."

His smile sharpened.

"Let us see," he whispered, eyes gleaming with hunger, "what kind of power refuses the grave."

The shadow rippled.

Azhrakhaal returned to his true form, vast and terrible, and sank back into the stone as if he had never been there at all.

The temple stood unmoved.

The empire breathed on, unaware.

And sowhere between god and monster, fate tightened its grip—quietly, inexorably—around the Mother of Zahryssar.

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