The grand ballroom hung frozen around them, a glittering, silent specter of a mory. Towan sank into a phantom chair, the gesture heavy with the weight of unraveling identity. The opulent decorations and ghostly music felt suddenly oppressive, a stark contrast to the turmoil in his chest.
“Let get this straight,” he said, the words leaving him on a slow, weary sigh. He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, and stared at the floor as if the intricate patterns of the void-version marble might hold answers. “Our full na… is Towan Elaren?” He looked up, his eyes searching Voidwalker’s for any sign of a jest.
Voidwalker remained standing, his back to Towan as he observed a suspended crystal glass, its facets catching a light that no longer had a source. “Yup,” he replied, his tone casual yet final, like stating a simple law of physics. He finally turned, his dark-edged gaze eting Towan’s. “I an, that’s how things were etched in my tiline. But that’s a cornerstone. It should have stayed the sa.” A faint, knowing smirk touched his lips. “If it hadn’t, I wouldn’t have been able to connect with you. Our souls wouldn’t have recognized each other’s… signature.”
Towan’s hand rose, fingers threading through his hair in a gesture of familiar frustration. “I didn’t want to believe it…” he admitted, the confession quiet in the unnatural silence. “And there’s barely any info on House Elaren in any of the libraries I’ve checked. It’s like it was… erased.”
Voidwalker’s smirk softened into sothing more somber. He looked away, back toward the frozen celebration, his eyes seeing a different past entirely. “Well… I don’t know much more than you do. The house had already fallen to ruin long before we were born anyway.” He said it not with sadness, but with a stark, factual resignation, as if comnting on the fall of an ancient empire that was never theirs to begin with. The na was their inheritance, but the legacy was dust.
The frozen grandeur of the ballroom seed to press in on them, the weight of a na—Elaren—hanging unresolved in the air. Towan’s silence was a thick, heavy thing, filled with the ghosts of a history he never knew was his.
Sensing the spiral of his thoughts, Voidwalker’s voice cut through the quiet, gentle but firm. “Why don’t we continue where you left off?” It was less a question and more a lifeline, an offered distraction from a mystery they had no tools to solve here, in this place outside of ti.
“Right.” Towan seized the line, grasping for the solid ground of narrative. He pushed himself up, and the phantom chair he’d been sitting on dissolved into motes of darkness, as if it had never been. The action was a physical punctuation to his ntal shift.
“Nothing much happened after,” he began, his voice regaining so of its steadiness as he fell into the rhythm of the story. “I got back to the Drunken Hound, recovered my strength, and then… I left to train with Eryndar.” He paused, his gaze turning inward, looking back across a year of his life summarized in a single breath. The mory was a stark contrast to the opulent ballroom—all sharp mountain air and the burn of muscle.
“He trained for a year,” Towan stated, his tone becoming flat, deliberate. “We were completely secluded in the mountains. It was just the two of us.” The words were final, a door closing. He t Voidwalker’s gaze, his expression carefully neutral. “Nothing happened there.”
The sentence hung in the void, too clean, too simple. It was the kind of answer that begged for questions, the kind of silence that spoke louder than the mory it pretended to contain.
The void seed to constrict around them, the air growing heavy with the promise of a painful mory. Voidwalker’s question was a soft nudge toward an inevitable, dark turn.
“Then you went to the academy?” he asked, his voice low. He already knew the answer; he was simply guiding the story to the precipice.
Towan’s gaze fell, his focus dropping to the formless ground beneath their feet as if seeking an escape. “Yes…” The word was hollow. “Everything was going smoothly…” A bitter, ironic laugh escaped him, devoid of any real humor. “Hell, even the takeover didn’t seem to be that bad at first. It was chaos, but it was a chaos we were surviving.”
As he spoke, the void obeyed his will, the last of the mountain’s seclusion lting away. The air grew thick with the scent of ozone and damp stone, the prelude to a storm.
“Until Haeren got consud by the corruption.”
The sentence was a guillotine’s drop. With it, the mory slamd into place around them with the force of a physical blow.
They were suddenly on the rain-slicked academy grounds, the sky a bruised purple, torn open by a downpour that felt like the sky itself was weeping. The cold was imdiate and biting, the rain plastering hair to faces and clothes to skin.
And there, in the center of it all, stood Towan—younger, his face a mask of rain and sheer, desperate determination—squared off against a figure that was barely recognizable as Haeren anymore. It was a nightmare given form, a puppet of swirling darkness and malevolent energy, with Haeren’s face contorted in a silent scream sowhere deep within.
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The scene was frozen on the instant before the storm broke in earnest, a single, terrifying heartbeat before the world shattered.
The mory hung in the void, sharp and cold as shattered glass. Rain fell in silent, ghostly sheets, freezing Towan, Len, and Alira in their desperate sprint away from the chaos. Towan watched his past self—a lone, determined figure standing between his friends and the consuming darkness that was Haeren.
“This ti…” Present-Towan’s voice was low, thick with the mory of that resolve. “I was the one who had to protect, not be protected.” His gaze lingered on Rellie, Len, and Alira, their faces etched with fear and trust as they followed his order to flee. He had finally been strong enough to be the shield.
His shoulders slumped, the brief pride dissolving into ash. “But I failed.”
On cue, the mory moved. Haeren’s arm—a weapon of solidified shadow—lunged forward. It passed through past-Towan’s chest with a terrible, silent ease. There was no sound, only the devastating image of Towan’s body buckling, his form collapsing onto the rain-drenched stone, life extinguished.
They stood in the heavy silence that followed, the weight of that death pressing down.
“Are you sure about that?” Voidwalker’s voice was calm, cutting through the grief without judgnt.
Towan turned to him, a flicker of frustration in his eyes. “Well… yeah? I died.” The words were blunt, final. What more was there?
“But they survived,” Voidwalker stated, his gaze unwavering. “Wasn’t that what you wanted?”
Towan’s breath caught. His eyes widened slightly, the simple truth of the words striking him with the force of a physical blow. He looked back at the mory, at his friends vanishing into the safety of the storm. His sacrifice hadn't been for victory; it had been for them.
“You were the strongest this ti around,” Voidwalker continued softly, stepping closer to the haunting scene. His form seed to blend with the rain. “And just like those who were stronger than you once protected you… you used that strength to protect those you love.” He finally turned his blackened eyes back to Towan. “Can that truly be called… failure?”
The question hung in the air, not as a correction, but as an offering—a chance to refra a mory of death into a legacy of love. The rain in the mory seed to still, waiting for Towan’s answer.
The void seed to hold its breath. Voidwalker took a slow step, the soundless space between them feeling imnse.
"Tell ," he began, his voice a low hum that vibrated in the stillness. "Do you want to return?"
Towan's head snapped up, his answer imdiate, born of instinct. "Of course I do."
Voidwalker's black eyes held his, seeing through the simple declaration. "Survival alone is not enough to forge a path back from this place. It is a reason to breathe, not a reason to live." He tilted his head, a ntor challenging his student. "What is it you truly seek to return for?"
Towan stared, caught off guard. "What do I... seek?" The question echoed in the hollows of his mind, louder than any mory. Why did he want to go back? What was the point, beyond simply existing again?
Then, it ca.
Not a single thought, but a flood. A cascade of light against the darkness of the void.
The burn of his muscles after a grueling session with Leon, followed by Elliot's terrible jokes that made them all forget the pain. The deep, patient rumble of Lytharos's voice explaining the flow of essentia, and Selene's sharp, insightful corrections. The warm, chaotic comfort of the Drunken Hound's kitchen, the clatter of dishes with Cassia, the quiet understanding in Rellie's crimson eyes. The dizzying whirl of a ballroom, Len's hand in his, her laughter a lody against the music. The exhilarating clash of practice with Sylra and Alira, the mutual respect forged in sweat and effort.
It wasn't about survival. It was about them. Every face, every mont, was a spark. And together, they had ignited a fla within him—a warmth that the void's endless cold could not extinguish.
A brightness spread across Towan's face, a genuine, radiant smile that chased away the lingering shadows of doubt. "I want to..." he said, the words filled with a newfound certainty, "...form more happy mories with my friends."
Voidwalker's usually impassive features softened into a warm, approving smile. It was a look of pride, of recognition. "Well said."
As the words left Voidwalker's lips, a soft glow began to emanate from the center of Towan's chest. It was a gentle, golden light at first, then it grew, pulsing in ti with his heartbeat, pushing back the endless dark around them. His body was no longer just a form in the void; it had beco a beacon, answering the call of his own rediscovered heart.
The light did not simply glow—it pulsed, a resonant rhythm that was the very echo of Towan’s own heart. With every beat, it grew brighter, weaving itself from ethereal luminescence into a solid, thrumming path beneath his feet. It was a road spun from starlight and intent, leading away from the endless nothing.
Towan took a step forward. Then another. The void itself seed to fold and contract with each movent, the infinite distance yielding to his will.
“Now cos the most boring part,” Voidwalker called out, his voice laced with a wry, familiar warmth that cut through the grandeur.
Towan paused, glancing back over his shoulder. “What?”
“Walking back to reality.” Voidwalker’s smile was a knowing thing, edged with the patience of one who had walked such paths before. “It’s not hard. No monsters, no trials. Just… walking. For quite a while.”
A genuine smile touched Towan’s lips, not of worry, but of acceptance. The journey was his to make. “I hope we’ll see each other again,” he said, the words carrying the weight of a promise. He already understood; this path was for him alone.
As the radiant glow swelled, engulfing him in its warm embrace, Towan caught one last glimpse of the other him. And for the first ti, Voidwalker’s face was not etched with loneliness, irony, or the weight of countless years. He looked… at peace. His work was done.
His final words were not a shout, but a soft imprint upon the fading air, a blessing and a burden offered with equal asure:
“Carry it well.”
And with that, the void did not vanish with a bang, but dissolved into a silent, brilliant dawn, leaving Towan utterly, wonderfully alone, yet carrying more than he ever had, on the path leading ho.
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