The scene shifted once more, and before Liam’s eyes, the hazy market of Lorr dissolved into the interior of a dim, cramped bookshop that looked as though it had been forgotten by ti itself. Dust danced lazily in the thin shafts of light that pierced through cracks in the wooden roof, and the scent of parchnt, candle wax, and mildew thickened the air. Shelves bowed under the weight of hundreds of books—so missing covers, others bound by fragile threads.
And there, seated by a flickering lantern, was the past Aesmirius. His figure was frail, his skin pale and sunken, yet his eyes were filled with a fierce determination that contradicted the frailty of his body. He was buried deep within an open to, his trembling hands turning pages with obsessive precision.
Standing beside Liam, the present Aesmirius floated silently, arms folded. His golden eyes glowed faintly as he watched his past self, his voice low and indifferent. "This was where it began," he said. "I spent years in that little place, reading everything that old shopkeeper had to offer—tales of myst, theories of alchemy, records of magic, and the writings of madn who thought themselves gods. I read until my sight blurred, until my hands trembled from hunger and exhaustion, yet I found nothing. No spell, no potion, and no cure."
Liam’s gaze shifted between the pages and the gaunt figure hunched beneath the lantern. He could almost feel the weight of those long years pressing on the air. "So what kept you going?" Liam asked.
"The will to survive," Aesmirius replied coldly. "Every breath felt like punishnt, but I refused to let the world end . When I realized the limits of that library, I left Lorr. I moved from town to town—reading, begging, offering to work for scraps of knowledge. I studied under scholars who threw out once they saw what I looked like. I tried to apprentice under mages, but none would touch . They said I was cursed."
He paused, his tone unchanged, but there was sothing sharp behind his words—an echo of buried fury. "After years of searching, I had nothing to show for it. No magic. No healing. Nothing but the sa wretched body. I was close to surrendering... close to believing the universe had no purpose for after all."
The scene shifted again. The interior of the shop dissolved into the faint blue shimr of moonlight filtering through a broken window. Aesmirius—his younger self—lay curled upon the floor of so abandoned ho. His chest rose and fell slowly. Rain fell through the open roof, tapping against the cold stone floor. And then, his body went still.
A faint hum of mystic light rippled through the air as Aesmirius continued, "But that night, I dread. Or rather, I was shown sothing."
The vision around them brightened—the ruinous room lted away into a vast, endless field of ethereal light. Trees of radiant crystal glowed with colors that shifted like the aurora. The sky shimred with floating rings of energy, and at the horizon stood a colossal sphere of silver mist—alive, breathing, and divine.
"That was Aetherion," Aesmirius said softly, eyes locked on the dreamscape. "The realm between realms. The cradle of life, of pure creation. I saw it as clear as you see it now. I felt it calling to , whispering my na. When I woke, I knew I had to reach it. That was the only way to find answers... to heal."
The celestial field faded away, replaced once more by the rough, rain-soaked world of the past. The younger Aesmirius now sat in the corner of a different room, surrounded by scattered papers and crude drawings of sigils. Cracked vials and potion bottles lay around him. His once hopeless gaze had changed—burning now with obsession.
"I had no space affinity," he continued. "So I could not open a portal. But I refused to stop. I devoted myself to alchemy and shard crafting. I studied from broken texts, stolen scrolls, anything I could find. My hunger for knowledge was all that kept alive. I sold what little I could, begged where I must, and after five years, I found an alchemist skilled enough to teach how to stabilize a teleportation shard. Five years of constant work, failure, and rebuilding. But eventually..."
A new image appeared before Liam—Aesmirius in his ragged cloak, holding a small, glowing shard. It pulsed faintly in his hand like a beating heart, inscribed with runes so intricate they seed to move on their own.
"...I succeeded," Aesmirius said. "I encoded the coordinates of Aetherion into that shard and prepared to leave Oline behind forever. I did not care if I died in the process. I had already lived a thousand deaths in that miserable world. What awaited beyond was either salvation—or oblivion."
The younger Aesmirius lifted the shard toward the sky, his expression cold and resolute. Lightning flashed in the distance, illuminating his frail fra like a shadow of defiance against the universe itself.
And beside Liam, the present Aesmirius watched in silence, golden eyes flickering with a mory he could never forget.
***
The world around Liam and Aesmirius twisted once again, folding upon itself like rippling fabric, until the darkness broke apart and light burst forth in blinding brilliance. The ground beneath their feet no longer held the rugged cobblestones of mortal towns, nor did the air sll of dust or sweat. Instead, a soft wind brushed against their faces, scented with blooming crystal flora and luminous mist that shimred in hues of blue, gold, and violet.
Before them stretched Aetherion—exactly as Aesmirius had described it in his dream. A realm untouched by decay or ti, where the sky was a living tapestry of light. Vast floating isles hung suspended in endless space, connected by bridges of translucent stone that pulsed with energy. Rivers of pure myst flowed through the air like liquid stars, spiraling upward into an eternal aurora that stretched across the heavens. Every breath shimred with life, every sound resonated like a divine lody echoing from creation itself.
"This," Aesmirius said softly, almost reverently, "was the first ti I understood what divinity felt like."
His golden eyes glowed faintly as he looked around the radiant landscape, the reflection of long-buried awe returning to his face. "The mont I stepped into this realm, I felt it. The air itself... healed . My lungs no longer burned and my body no longer scread. Even my heartbeat felt aligned with the rhythm of this place."
The scene below them shifted—showing the past Aesmirius erging from a shimring portal, falling to his knees upon the crystalline soil of Aetherion. His body trembled as he gasped for breath, eyes wide in disbelief. Every inhalation seed to fill him with energy. Faint light began to course through his veins, as though the realm itself recognized him and reached out to nd his broken form.
Liam stood silently, watching the awe-stricken version of Aesmirius clutch his chest, his frail figure trembling in both fear and wonder.
"I wasted no ti," Aesmirius continued, his tone steady but filled with the weight of mory. "The mont I drew that first breath, I knew what I needed to find. The pool. The place I’d seen in my dream."
The vision moved swiftly as Aesmirius spoke. The younger version of him began to run—his steps uneven at first, but with every stride he seed stronger, faster, and more alive. He sprinted through fields of glowing grass and across bridges of solidified light. His cloak fluttered behind him like a dying shadow beneath the brilliance of that realm.
"I didn’t think. I didn’t rest. I just ran," Aesmirius said, his voice growing distant, as if speaking from sowhere deep within mory. "Every part of was consud by the need to reach it. I didn’t care if I died there. I just knew... that pool held the answer."
And then the scenery opened wide into the heart of Aetherion—a vast circular basin of radiant, liquid energy. It wasn’t re water; it was light made fluid, shimring with every color imaginable. The surface rippled like molten glass, reflecting stars that weren’t even in the sky. Around it, ancient runes glowed faintly, whispering to one another in forgotten tongues.
"There it is," Liam murmured, his eyes widening.
"Indeed," Aesmirius replied, his gaze locked on the sight before them. "The Well of Genesis. The source of creation’s breath."
The past Aesmirius stumbled forward, his frail figure illuminated by the glow. And before any hesitation could form, he leapt—diving straight into the divine pool. The mont his body struck the surface, the entire realm pulsed. Rings of pure energy rippled outward, and the water embraced him as if alive. He swam with reckless abandon, gasping and laughing, drinking from the luminous liquid as though it were the nectar of life itself.
As he did, Liam could see it—his bones thickenin and skin brightening. The sunken hollows of his cheeks began to fill; veins once blackened by sickness now coursed with gold. His body, once frail and broken, began to nd in real ti.
"I felt it the mont I drank," Aesmirius said softly, his tone distant yet filled with quiet awe. "Flesh knitting itself, bones reforming, the pain fading into warmth. I was becoming whole. I had found it—my cure, my salvation... and my awakening."
The vision slowed as the past Aesmirius sank completely beneath the glowing surface. The light around the pool intensified, flaring like a newborn star. For a mont, the entire realm went white—silent, vast, and eternal.
Then... stillness.
Years seed to pass in seconds. The pool, once radiant, now shimred gently. And from its center, a faint shape began to rise.
Liam’s eyes widened as the figure stepped forth—no longer frail or human in the sa sense. His skin glowed faintly, smooth and flawless like sculpted ivory. His once-black hair had turned a brilliant white, flowing like strands of moonlight, with streaks of deep violet tracing the tips. His eyes, once dim and dark, now burned with golden brilliance, reflecting power, purpose, and sothing far beyond mortal comprehension.
Around his arms and legs, intricate markings of luminous purple danced like flowing ink, pulsating with life. The very ground beneath his steps resonated with power, causing ripples of myst to bloom wherever his feet touched.
Liam could only stare in silence. The sight was overwhelming, divine—watching a man reborn into sothing that defied the laws of existence.
As the past Aesmirius stood at the edge of the pool, the light reflecting off his now radiant form, even the air bowed to him.
He had beco sothing more than mortal.
He had beco what legends would later call—a god born from light and will.
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