The twist hit his gut first—literally. Yun doubled over, not from pain but from wrongness, like the tunnel had turned inside out while he was still in it. His vision sared: silver, shadow, silver again. He tasted copper.
Then—
He hit sothing soft that chid—ash and glass, or what mory might feel like if you could walk on it. Every step made faint ringing sounds, like far-away bells being tapped gently.
Xie Ren landed hard, skidded, caught himself on one knee. "Damn." He didn't stand imdiately. "What kind of place is this?"
Shen Yu ca down last. His knees buckled—he caught himself, but Yun saw the tremor in his hands. The Restriction Brand on his arm flared, gold lines racing up toward his shoulder before the law forced them back down.
"Shen Yu—"
"Still here." He straightened slowly, not looking at his arm. "Just… winded."
The Under-Origin.
It wasn't dark. It was hollow. Yun caught himself holding his breath, listening for sothing—wind, water, the distant groan of Celestial Sky's machinery. Nothing. The silence had weight, like pressure inverted.
Then it found him.
Not a voice—a leaning, like standing in a current too subtle to see. Yun's hand drifted to his chest. The pull ca from behind his ribs, warm, patient, knowing. He'd felt this before. He couldn't rember when.
"Don't follow it," Shen Yu said. Then, quieter: "I did. Once." He didn't elaborate.
Yun nodded.
His feet moved anyway. He told himself he was choosing to walk. He wasn't certain.
They walked through a narrow corridor that slowly shaped itself around them. Walls grew upward out of nothing, ford of layered, translucent plates filled with drifting symbols. So symbols flickered when Yun passed.
"They're reacting to you," Xie Ren said.
"I'm not doing anything."
"That's what worries ."
The corridor widened.
At the center waited a platform made of pale crystal, cracked in strange spiral patterns. Above it floated a broken ring of light, incomplete, as if sothing had bitten a piece out of reality itself.
Yun stopped. His heartbeat slowed—no, he slowed, ti thickening around the crystal platform. This was it. The thought arrived complete, unquestioned, which made him want to question it. But his blood said yes. His bones said yes. Only his mind hesitated, and too late.
"This is where it's calling ."
The air shuddered.
A figure ford.
Not summoned.
Revealed.
It was tall — too tall — its shape shifting slightly depending on where Yun focused his eyes. At tis it looked like a robed scholar. At tis like a shadow wearing armor. At tis like a fragnt of a star bent into human shape.
Its face was blank.
Yet Yun felt… watched.
Not hunted.
Examined.
"Star-blood carrier," the being said.
Its voice did not echo.
It simply existed.
Xie Ren's hand went to his weapon instantly.
Shen Yu stepped half a pace in front of Yun without thinking.
The being tilted its head.
"I tend what remains," the being said. "You would call Custodian. The First Root has had many."
Yun's breath caught.
First Root.
Sothing deep in his bloodline reacted violently to those words.
Not fear.
Recognition.
The Custodian's gaze shifted slightly, focusing fully on Yun now.
"The Calling you feel… is not a summons."
"It is alignnt."
Yun swallowed.
"What… does that an?"
The Custodian raised one hand.
The platform below them shimred.
The surface unfolded into moving images.
Worlds.
Collapsed worlds.
Burned skies.
Broken continents drifting in dead orbit.
And beneath them all, faint but undeniable, thin luminous threads running through reality itself.
Roots.
The Custodian spoke softly.
"All higher realms are anchored by Origin Threads. They stabilize growth. They prevent uncontrolled divergence."
Another image ford.
A colossal structure buried beneath countless layers of space — sothing like a tree, but inverted, its branches piercing through worlds.
"This is the First Root."
Yun's chest burned.
Xie Ren whispered, "You're telling … this thing holds realms together?"
"Not holds," the Custodian replied calmly.
"Guides."
The images shifted again.
This ti, Yun saw sothing else.
A distorted region.
A wound.
Reality folding inward unnaturally.
Black structures embedded into the Root's outer layers like parasites.
Hunters.
Not the ones Yun had seen before.
Bigger.
Older.
Their forms were carved from void-matter and bound with alien sigils.
The Custodian's voice lowered.
"The Hunters are not chasing you because you are powerful."
Yun felt cold.
"They are chasing you because your bloodline can interfere with the Root's alignnt."
Xie Ren turned sharply.
"…Interfere how?"
The Custodian's blank face shifted, just slightly.
"Change its future paths."
Yun's throat went dry.
Shen Yu stared at the images silently.
"So the Calling…" Shen Yu said slowly.
"…is the Root responding to him."
"Yes."
Yun clenched his hands.
"Why ?"
The Custodian was silent for several seconds.
Long enough for the quiet to beco unbearable.
Then it answered.
"Because your bloodline was not designed only to inherit power."
A new image appeared.
The image that ca was broken—soundless, color leached. Two figures at the edge of sothing burning. Yun knew their stances before their faces resolved: his father's weight on the back foot, his mother's hand half-raised, ready to sign or strike. Younger. Strangers who would beco his parents.
The Custodian continued.
"Your parents altered the inheritance pattern."
Xie Ren's eyes widened slightly.
"Altered…?"
"They removed a stabilizing limit."
Yun felt dizzy.
Shen Yu's expression darkened.
"They made him incompatible with fixed destiny."
The Custodian inclined its head.
"Correct."
Yun's heart pounded.
"So what does it want from ?"
The Custodian looked directly at him.
Not through him.
At him.
"For now…"
"…to enter synchronization."
The broken ring above the platform began to rotate slowly.
The air grew heavy.
"What kind of synchronization?" Yun asked quietly.
The Custodian lifted its hand again.
The space around Yun tightened.
Not painfully.
Precisely.
"To allow your bloodline to briefly connect with the First Root's outer perception layer."
Xie Ren snapped, "You're insane. You'll tear him apart."
"Unlikely," the Custodian replied.
Xie Ren's jaw dropped.
"…Unlikely?"
The Custodian corrected itself.
"Statistically acceptable."
Shen Yu swore softly under his breath.
Yun stood still.
He could feel it.
The pull.
Not stronger now.
Clearer.
If he refused… nothing would force him.
That sohow made it worse.
"What happens after?" Yun asked.
The Custodian paused.
Then spoke truthfully.
"You will no longer be invisible to higher-world causality systems."
Xie Ren froze.
Shen Yu's face tightened.
Yun exhaled slowly.
"So… everyone important will start noticing ."
"Yes."
Yun laughed quietly.
It ca out rough.
"Feels like that already happened."
The Custodian regarded him.
"There is also… a secondary effect."
Yun lifted his eyes.
"What?"
A faint distortion passed through the Custodian's form.
"You will begin attracting entities that were previously incompatible with your existence."
Xie Ren muttered, "That sounds like a very polite way to say monsters."
The Custodian did not deny it.
Silence returned.
The broken ring waited.
The Root waited.
The Under-Origin waited.
Yun thought of Starfall.
Of chickens fainting.
Of warm nights and cracked rooftops and his mother yelling at him for glowing.
He looked at Shen Yu.
Then at Xie Ren.
Then back at the platform.
"If I do this," Yun said, "can I protect them? My village. Starfall." He nad it, as if the na mattered here.
"You will possess capacity you lack now," the Custodian said.
Not yes. Not no. Yun heard the space between the words.
"Capacity," he repeated. "Not certainty."
The Custodian said nothing.
Yun stepped onto the platform.
The mont his foot touched the crystal—
The ring ignited.
And sowhere above, a chanism in Celestial Sky that had been silent for centuries ticked once, and began to warm.
---
User Comments
0 comments from readers