Chapter 13:

Roots and Resonance: The Stolen Legacy

Rakkuhōshiten


A tense, expectant silence hung in the dome of Paxeotechastra, broken only by the low hum of ancient machinery and the faint whisper of artificial wind through the leaves of the two Ficus trees. Yorian stood between them, a conductor before his grandest orchestra. The air crackled with latent power.

All preparations were complete. Intricate silver and gold runes, inscribed on crystalline plates, formed concentric circles around the imposing Ficus religiosa—the Tomb-Tree. Each rune glowed with a soft, internal light, a web of potential waiting to be ignited.

"Stand back, Ariana," Yorian instructed, his voice calm but carrying an edge of profound focus she rarely heard. "The initial resonance pulse will be... intense."

Ariana took several steps back, her eyes wide. She could feel it—the sheer scale of energy being marshaled. It was a pressure on her soul, a weight in the air that made her newly-integrated Heicain Maoyoesu fire flicker nervously in her core.

Yorian closed his eyes, extending his hands. The six Fundamental Attributes within him stirred, not as weapons, but as precise, cosmic tools. Gravity, Electromagnetism, and the Strong Nuclear force began to align with the formation's geometry.

With a whispered incantation that sounded like the grinding of tectonic plates and the song of distant stars, he activated the array.

WHOOSH!

A vortex of visible, multi-hued energy erupted from the runic circles, spiraling upwards in a furious column. A gale-force wind, born of pure Quts displacement, tore through the dome, whipping Ariana's silver hair around her face and making the leaves of both trees roar in protest.

"Big Brother!" Ariana yelled over the din, her voice laced with awe and concern. "You're serious about this?! This is a Ni-Tier (God-Tier) formation! The Quts requirement is insane! It's equivalent to the total output of a Level 600 entity! Aren't you exhausting yourself?"

Through the maelstrom of light and wind, Yorian turned his head slightly. A serene, almost otherworldly smile touched his lips, visible for just a moment. "Relax," he said, his voice somehow carrying perfectly to her ears, calm amidst the storm. "I have a cheat code, remember?"

As he spoke, a platform rose from the grassy floor beside him. On it rested a cylindrical capsule, 82 cm tall and 29 cm in radius, forged from a translucent, superconductive alloy. Within it, visible through a thick viewport, swirled a concentrated ocean of pure, azure light—Quts in its most potent, stabilized form. This was his ultimate battery, painstakingly refined from cosmic dust harvested by the Accelerator Ring and catalyzed by the primordial energy of the Loeshinzang flower.

He placed a hand on the capsule. "Core, engage. Output level: Apotheosis Protocol."

The capsule hummed, and from its top and bottom poles, twin beams of blinding blue energy—Relativistic Quts Jets—lanced out. They didn't strike the tree directly. Instead, they fed into the heart of the spinning formation, supercharging the runes from within. The chaotic vortex tightened, becoming a controlled, brilliant pillar of power that bathed the Tomb-Tree in its radiance.

The ground trembled. The massive Ficus religiosa, roots and all, began to lift from the soil, hovering a meter above the earth, suspended in the column of light. Raw Quts, dense as liquid starfire, began to flood into its bark, its roots, its very heartwood, seeking the fragmented echoes within.

"The first stage is saturation," Yorian muttered, more to himself than to Ariana, his eyes reflecting the blue fire. "Filling the vessel with enough potential to attract and coalesce the soul fragments."

The next stage was infinitely more delicate. With micro-movements of his fingers, Yorian began to guide the millions of shimmering runes. They broke from their orbits and streamed into the floating tree, not as an assault, but as a gentle, invasive surgery. Each rune was a carrier of information, a command, a fragment of a grand spiritual algorithm designed to locate, identify, and gently gather the scattered psychic residue of his parents' souls.

"This is taking too long," Ariana whispered, feeling the strain even from a distance. The dome's environmental systems whined in protest, working overtime to dissipate the waste heat.

Yorian's brow was furrowed in intense concentration, sweat beading on his temple. "The formation of the soul-core is the hardest part," he explained, his voice strained. "Creating a stable matrix from echoes."

"Why wasn't it this hard with me?" Ariana asked, her own creation feeling simple in comparison.

"Your soul was intact. A complete, newborn spark I merely... relocated and modified," Yorian grunted, a rune flaring violently before he stabilized it with a pulse of Weak Nuclear force. "These... these are fragments. Shadows on the wall of a cave that's been sealed for centuries. And the beings they belonged to... their original level was Xiaohan, a Life Emperor. Level 600. We're not just assembling a soul; we're rebuilding a citadel from its ashes."

The complexity was staggering. The formation demanded a constant, insane throughput of Quts. The cosmic battery capsule's glow began to dim noticeably.

Then came the final, most material hurdle. A shimmering, ghostly outline began to form within the heart of the tree—not one, but two, intertwined. Faint, humanoid shapes of light. The soul-core prototypes. But they were ephemeral, unstable. They needed anchors. Vessels within the vessel.

"Ariana!" Yorian's command cut through the hum of energy, sharp and urgent. "I need physical catalysts! The soul matrix needs a skeletal framework to crystallize around!"

"I'm here! What do you need?"

"Go to Aelonisova. Now. I need bones. Not just any bones. The strongest, most Quts-saturated monster bones you can find from the high-level hunting grounds. And..." he hesitated for a fraction of a second, "...from the Isle of Va. Discreetly. I need a sample of primordial Va bone-matrix. Something with deep heritage. It's the only thing that might hold the resonance of a soul that powerful."

Ariana's eyes widened. The Isle of Va was the heart of demon territory, guarded and treacherous. But she saw the absolute necessity in her brother's glowing eyes. He was at his limit, holding the entire impossible ritual together by will alone.

"You can count on me!" she said, her voice filled with fierce determination. No teasing, no hesitation. This was for her family—the one she was helping to rebuild. "I'll be back before that battery runs dry!"

In a flash of light and a crackle of distorted spacetime, Ariana vanished from the dome. The mission was clear: raid the most dangerous repositories of power on the continent to steal the very foundations for a resurrection.

Alone now, with the groaning capsule and the screaming tree, Yorian poured every ounce of his being into maintaining the fragile balance. The ghostly outlines of his parents pulsed weakly within the sacred wood.

"Hold on," he whispered, not to Ariana, but to the faint lights. "Just a little longer. She's coming. We're bringing you home."

Propelled by urgency and a heart newly brimming with a confusing, warm certainty, Ariana shot through the atmosphere of Aelonisova like a silver comet. She executed a sharp, precise dive towards the heart of the continent, the grand capital of Litktra, before banking into a terrifyingly fast horizontal trajectory aimed at the northern sea. Her speed was a testament to her growth—Level 90 power thrummed through her veins, a tempest of Light, Darkness, and elemental forces contained within a small, determined frame.

Yet, a nagging thought persisted, cutting through her focus like a cold blade.

My level is 90... but Big Brother is still at 68. Why? He was always far ahead of me. Something's wrong. He's holding back, or... something is holding him back.

She pushed the thought aside. It was a mystery for later. The mission now was absolute. The coordinates were seared into her mind: The Isle of Va. 27,268.11 kilometers of open ocean and political no-man's-land lay ahead. She adjusted her flight, her form cutting through the air with a sonic boom that rattled the windows of coastal villages far below, but she paid them no mind. Her thoughts were a runaway train, and their sole passenger was Yorian.

The memories of their week on Earth flooded back, unbidden and vivid. Not the grand sights, but the small moments: his patient smile as she struggled with chopsticks, the warm weight of his hand in hers on a crowded Parisian street, the way he'd sighed in exasperation but still bought her that third stick of tanghulu. The "date" that wasn't a date. The hotel room that had been fraught with a tension she now recognized wasn't just mischief on her part.

A warmth bloomed in her chest, fierce and possessive. Was my anger over those four years just abandonment... or was it the fury of someone in love being ignored? Ah~ I think... I think it's both. I think it's yes.

For fifteen straight minutes, a continuous stream of thoughts about Yorian accompanied her supersonic journey. Did he remember to hydrate while holding the formation? Was he pushing himself past his limits again? Was he lonely in that dome with only the ghosts for company? She pictured his face, tight with concentration, and a powerful, protective urge surged within her, mingling with the softer, warmer feeling.

Yes... I love him.

It wasn't a shocking revelation; it was a quiet, definitive settling of truth. He was her creator, her brother, her anchor, and now, the object of a love that defied simple categorization. It was a fact as fundamental as her six attributes.

As the ominous silhouette of the Isle of Va finally pierced the horizon, her analytical mind re-engaged alongside her emotional one. The island was dominated by a monstrous, jagged mountain range that acted as a natural prison wall, shrouded in perpetual, violent-looking storm clouds.

This is where he took the part of me that is Va. My origin point. I'm... coming home, she thought with a strange mix of dread and curiosity.

She aimed for the peaks, rocketing upwards in a near-vertical climb. The air grew thin and bitterly cold. How does CAPAPASTAF even transport prisoners to Fanzung through this? she wondered, noting the peaks seemed to dwarf even Mount Everest from her Earth memories. The isolation was absolute.

With a final burst of speed, she pierced the dense cloud layer.

And the world changed.

The grey gloom gave way to a horrific, breathtaking vista. The sky above the Isle of Va was not blue, but a deep, bruise-like crimson, lit by a dim, bloody light from a hidden sun. Below her, the landscape was a graveyard of giants. Towering, petrified trees, black and leafless, clawed at the red sky like the skeletons of ancient behemoths. The ground was cracked and barren, a sickly grey-purple, with rivers that flowed not with water, but with what looked like sluggish, dark magma or congealed shadow. The air itself was thick, heavy, and carried a metallic taste—the scent of old blood, ozone, and profound, decaying magic.

This was no simple island. It was a scar on the world. A demonic heartland, sealed and cursed.

Ariana hovered, her stealth field flickering as the oppressive environment assaulted her senses. The horns on her temples, invisible to the human eye, throbbed with a sudden, deep resonance. The Va blood within her sang a dirge of recognition and warning.

This was where she needed to go. Somewhere in this dead, haunted land were the bones of ancestors powerful enough to serve as the foundation for a Life Emperor's resurrected form. She took a deep breath of the foul air, her eyes hardening with resolve.

For Yorian. For their family.

She dove down into the crimson sky, towards the forest of petrified death, a single point of silver light descending into a realm of eternal dusk.

The moment Ariana's bare feet touched the damp, spongy ground of the Isle of Va, a visceral shock jolted through her. It wasn't just soil—it was a thick, cloying mud saturated with what could only be old blood. A cold, sticky wetness seeped between her toes, carrying a faint, metallic tang that made her stomach turn. She recoiled, hastily pulling her boots from her spatial pocket and securing them. Each step now made a soft, sickening squelch.

As she ventured deeper, a profound resonance vibrated in her bones. The very air hummed with a power that was alien yet intimately familiar. The horns at her temples, no longer under stealth, pulsed with a dull, rhythmic ache. This... this is really where part of me comes from. This rot, this power.

The stench was overwhelming—a cocktail of rotting vegetation, metallic blood, ozone, and something sweetly putrid, like decaying magic. She moved cautiously towards one of the colossal, petrified trees. Its bark was charcoal black, twisted and split as if it had been flash-frozen in the throes of agony. No life, not even lichen, clung to it.

She extended her senses, searching for the dense, ancient Quts signature of powerful Va bones. The chaotic, oppressive energy of the isle made it like trying to hear a whisper in a hurricane. She pushed on, the silence broken only by the squelch of her boots and the distant, mournful howl of wind through skeletal branches.

Then, a sound that didn't belong—a sharp, piercing scream of pure terror, followed by ragged sobs. Human. And young.

Her mission forgotten for a heartbeat, Ariana sprinted towards the sound, her form a silver blur against the grey-purple landscape. She skidded to a halt at the edge of a small clearing.

There, huddled against the base of a dead tree, was a girl. She couldn't have been more than twelve years old (2 Ovazhila), her clothes torn and stained, her face a mask of dirt, tears, and utter despair. She was shaking violently.

"Hey... are you okay?" Ariana asked, her voice softer than she intended.

The girl's head snapped up. Her eyes were wide, hollow pools of terror. "DO I LOOK OKAY?!" she shrieked, her voice cracking. "They're torturing us! Mom... I want my mom!" She dissolved into another wracking sob, curling in on herself.

Ariana's heart, already softened by her own newfound emotions, twisted painfully. She knelt, ignoring the bloody mud. "How... how did you even get here?"

Between ragged breaths and hiccups, the girl's story spilled out. "I... I killed the Aewu Chief in Pitra. He was going to steal my mother's research... claim her life's work. He was corrupt! They all are! And they sent me here! MOM!" She screamed the last word into the oppressive air, a sound of pure, childish loss that echoed terribly in the dead forest.

A wave of cold fury washed over Ariana. A child. A child sentenced to this hell for fighting corruption. The monstrous injustice of it burned alongside her pity. She couldn't fight the guards, not with her mission critical and the sheer number she sensed nearby. But she couldn't leave nothing.

Gently, she placed a hand on the girl's trembling shoulder. Channeling her Light attribute in its purest, most healing form, she etched a tiny, intricate rune onto the girl's collar—a mark of solace and minor regeneration, bearing the unique spiritual signature of Ariana Slyphina Novistri. It was a promise, etched in energy.

"Listen to me," Ariana whispered, her voice urgent. "You have to be strong. Hide this. I've left a little light with you. If I can... I will come back for you. But I can't fight them all now. I'm sorry. Stay alive."

Before the girl could respond, the heavy tread of armored boots and the crackle of low-level containment magic approached. Ariana gave the girl one last, desperate look before melting back into the shadows, her stealth field engaging just as three guards emerged from the gloom.

Their armor was dull and scarred, marked with the sigil of CAPAPASTAF's penal authority. They looked at the crying girl not with cruelty, but with a grim, weary resignation.

"Pitiful creature," one muttered, his voice gravelly. "But orders are orders. Pitra's corruption is their own affair; our duty is to contain what they send."

They hauled the sobbing girl to her feet. Ariana, watching from behind a petrified trunk, felt her fists clench until her knuckles were white. How? How does CAPAPASTAF justify this? Taking a child's life and throwing it into this meat grinder to appease a corrupt kingdom? The alliance she was vaguely part of as Tava's student suddenly seemed grotesque.

She forced herself to turn away. The fury was a luxury she couldn't afford. Big Brother. The tree. The bones.

Shoving the girl's haunted face to the back of her mind, she resumed her flight, this time with a colder, harder determination. The injustice fueled her focus. She would get what Yorian needed. She had to.

As she crested a ridge of jagged black rock, the landscape opened up, and she stopped short, her breath catching.

There, carved into the side of the colossal mountain, was Fanzung Prison. It wasn't a building; it was a wound. A massive, angular complex of dark stone and glowing, oppressive runes, built into the cliff face like a monstrous hive. From its lowest levels, a gaping, well-lit tunnel mouth belched out the sounds of industry—clanging metal, distant explosions, and the faint, collective groan of immense exertion.

Below the prison, sprawling across the valley floor, was the source: the Mines. Vast, open pits glowed with an eerie inner light, likely from exposed Quts crystals or molten rock. Ant-like lines of figures—prisoners—moved under the watchful eyes of guards and automated machinery. Clouds of dust and strange, colored vapors hung over the site. It was a panorama of industrialized despair, the engine that powered the continent's elite with the suffering of the damned.

And somewhere in that hellish quarry, or perhaps in the ossuaries of Fanzung itself, were the bones she needed. The bones of Va ancestors who had died in chains, their power waiting to be misused or, as Yorian intended, redeemed.

Ariana took a deep, steadying breath of the foul air. The mission had just become infinitely more complicated. She wasn't just foraging in a dead forest anymore. She was about to infiltrate the most heavily fortified, morally bankrupt penal colony on Aerca.

For Yorian. For the ghost of a crying girl. She dove towards the mines.

Ariana remained frozen on the obsidian outcrop, a silent witness to injustice. Through the grim, rune-etched gates of Fanzung, she saw the girl—Cyrin—being led away, not to the hellish mines, but to a separate, slightly less brutal compound for female prisoners. Their "labor" seemed to be preparing meager food under the watchful eyes of matrons. It was a small mercy in an ocean of cruelty.

Cyrin's ordeal wasn't over. Almost immediately, an older, haggard woman prisoner began berating her, shoving her for a spilled bucket. "Clumsy brat! You'll get us all whipped!" Cyrin flinched, fresh tears welling in her eyes.

Ariana's hand shot out, gripping the black rock until it cracked. I can't... I can't fight the entire alliance. The scale of the system was too vast. Maybe... maybe Tava doesn't know? Could I tell him? It was a thin hope, but it was all she had for the girl. For now, the mission came first. She had to believe there would be a later for Cyrin.

She turned her back on the prison, the image of the crying girl seared into her mind, a new fuel for her resolve.

Blending into the chaotic flow of workers entering the main mining trench was easier than expected in the general gloom and dust. Disguising herself as a male human laborer required minor physical illusions—broadening her shoulders, roughening her features, hiding her hair under a grimy cap. The rough, sack-like tunic chafed against her skin, a far cry from her usual attire, but it masked her feminine frame and mage's complexion. She adopted the hunched, weary gait of the others, falling into line.

The descent into the pit was a journey into a mechanized Hades. The air grew thick with dust, heat, and the acrid smell of broken stone and sweat. Overseers, armed with shock-prods crackling with low-grade Quts, barked orders and occasionally lashed out at a worker who stumbled. Ariana kept her head down, her senses screaming at the proximity of such raw suffering. These weren't all criminals; many were political dissidents, victims of corrupt kingdoms like Pitra, or simply those born with the wrong blood—like Draven had been.

Yorian's words echoed in her mind, a guiding star in the darkness: "Draven found the ancestor's bone and crystal deep in the mines, but he only took a fragment. Take it all! I'll spoil you rotten later."

The promise of his attention, of his gratitude, sent a thrill through her that was utterly at odds with their grim surroundings. I'll hold you to that, Big Brother, she thought, a determined smile touching her disguised lips.

As the line of workers branched into deeper tunnels, she began to subtly break away, choosing passages that led downward, following a faint, ancient pulse that called to the Va blood in her veins. The other workers cast wary glances her way.

At a depth her internal mapping calculated as roughly 11 kilometers, a grizzled old miner with eyes like chips of flint grabbed her arm as she passed a junction leading to an even darker, less-traveled shaft.

"Hey, lad. Not that way," the man hissed, his voice gravelly with dust and fear. "That's the Deep Vein. No one comes back from there who goes looking. The air turns to poison, the rock gets hungry. It's not for quota. It's a grave."

Ariana met his eyes, her own glowing faintly with an inner light he mistook for desperation or foolish courage. "I have to," she said, her voice artificially gruff. "Debt. Family debt."

The old man released her arm, shaking his head as if she were already dead. "Your funeral, kid. The mountain eats the brave first."

Unfazed, Ariana pressed on. The tunnel narrowed, the ambient light from glowing moss and sparse crystals dying out. The heat intensified, becoming a dry, oppressive blanket. The oxygen grew thin—a fatal problem for any normal human or even a low-level mage.

For Ariana, who had trained by punching through the dense, turbulent atmosphere of Aelonisova and had floated in the airless void of space during their battle in orbit, it was merely uncomfortable. Her body, enhanced by Yorian's design and her own formidable level, efficiently recycled her internal Quts, creating a self-contained life-support system. She breathed shallowly, not out of necessity, but out of habit.

She left the last echoes of mining activity far behind. The only sounds were the crunch of her boots on loose scree, the drip of distant, superheated water, and the low, sub-audible thrum of something powerful sleeping in the stone.

Finally, after what felt like an eternity of descent, the tunnel opened into a vast, cathedral-like cavern. The air here was different—not just thin, but charged, vibrating with an age-old power that made the horns on her head ache gloriously. The walls were not plain rock; they were veined with pulsating strands of deep gold and crimson crystal that emitted their own hellish glow, illuminating the chamber in a dim, bloody light.

And in the center of the cavern, partly embedded in the floor and radiating an aura of terrifying majesty, was the source.

It wasn't just a bone. It was a skeleton. Or rather, the fossilized, crystalline remains of one. It was massive, vaguely humanoid but with extra joints and great, wing-like structures of solidified Quts extending from its back. This was no ordinary Va—this was an Ancestor, a being from the primordial age of demons. Draven's fragment had come from a single rib. The rest of the colossal skeleton, along with a central, heart-sized core of condensed golden energy that pulsed like a dying star, remained.

This was it. The ultimate catalyst.

But as Ariana stepped forward, awe-struck, the ground around the skeleton shifted. The very stones stirred, not as a cave-in, but as if waking up. From the shadows coalesced forms—not guards, but wardens. Ancient, semi-corporeal entities of stone and shadow, bound to protect this sacred/accursed relic. Their eyes opened, points of baleful crimson light in the gloom. The air grew heavy with a malice far more intelligent and ancient than anything in the upper mines.

Draven had snuck in and snatched a piece. Ariana was here for the whole prize. And the tomb's guardians had no intention of letting it go.

The creature that emerged from the shadows was a monument of the earth's deep-time fury. It stood like a gorilla carved from mountain bedrock, its form a deep, dusty brown laced with veins of raw, jagged platinum crystal that pulsed with a contained stellar energy—an internal Quts reserve exceeding a trillion units, putting it far beyond Level 110. Its most horrifying feature was its face—or lack thereof. Where a mouth should be, four stony plates opened like a gruesome flower, revealing a central, burning orange eye and four prehensile, whip-like tongues of glowing magma that lashed the air around it.

This was the Warden. A primordial guardian bound to the Ancestor's remains for eons.

Ariana's heart hammered against her ribs. Panic screamed at her to run, to seal the tunnel behind her with a wall of earth and flee. But she planted her feet, channeling her Earth attribute, ready to fight for her prize.

Yet, the Warden didn't attack. It lumbered closer, its massive head tilting. It sniffed the air around her with deep, rumbling breaths, the stone plates of its "mouth" flexing. Then, one of its magma tongues darted out with shocking speed, not to strike, but to gently—almost curiously—lick her cheek. The heat was intense but controlled, leaving a smoldering, non-harmful trace.

A voice echoed in her mind, ancient, grating, like continents grinding together. "What does a scion of the Va seek here? One came yesterday—a half-breed with a coward's mind, who stole a sliver and fled like a thief in the night. But you... your bloodline sings. A Royal Va."

Ariana swallowed, forcing her voice steady. "I... I wish to inherit the power of our ancestor. Is that allowed?"

The Warden's central eye blinked slowly. "Oh, it is permitted. But are you worthy? The legacy is not for the weak. First, you must face my trial."

Without further warning, a massive stone fist, studded with platinum spikes, blurred towards her. Ariana crossed her arms, bracing with all her strength and reinforcing her bones with Quts. The impact was like being hit by a landslide.

BOOM!

She was launched backwards, crashing into the cavern wall with enough force to send a web of cracks through the stone and a plume of dust billowing into the air. Pain blossomed across her forearms and back, but she pushed herself up, coughing. Her Level 90 body, honed by Yorian's design and her own relentless training, had absorbed the blow. Her disguise, however, hadn't. The rough tunic was torn, and as the dust settled, her slender, feminine frame and the tell-tale horns at her temples were revealed.

The Warden grunted, its psychic voice amused. "A female? Hah! You are sturdier than the last sniveling mind-trickster who dared to come. He ran. You stand."

"Enough talk, old rock!" Ariana snapped, wiping dust from her face, a flicker of her fiery spirit overriding the pain. "That hurt! What are your damn conditions for the skeleton?!"

"You wish to take the bones without the heart-crystal? I will grant you both, should you prove yourself. First: defeat me. Or at least, survive me. Then, we shall discuss the second condition."

The Warden charged again, but Ariana was ready. She sidestepped, fluid as water, and stomped her foot. From the ground beneath the Warden, a forest of sharp, crystalline spikes—a fusion of Earth and her Light attribute's solidifying power—erupted, catching it off-guard and sending it stumbling back several paces with a grating shriek of stone on crystal.

"Interesting!" the Warden's voice boomed in her head, sounding genuinely pleased. "What other elements do you command, little scion? Show me! Show me all of it!"

Its four magma tongues lashed out, not at her, but at the shadows around it. The darkness seemed to congeal, twist, and then step forward—a perfect, solid shadow-clone of the Warden. Now there were two.

Ariana's eyes widened. She was forced on the defensive, dodging and parrying a relentless, coordinated assault from both stone behemoths. Fists like meteors crashed around her. She was backed against the cavern wall, the air driven from her lungs by the onslaught. Gritting her teeth, she focused. Teleportation was not her forte—Yorian made it look effortless with Gravity—but she could manage a short-range blink with pure Light.

In a flash of golden radiance, she vanished from the corner and reappeared across the chamber, gasping. The strain was immense.

The Warden and its clone turned in unison, their central eyes narrowing. "Clever. But can you outlast?"

They pressed the attack. Ariana felt her Quts draining rapidly from constant defense and that single teleport. I can't just block. I have to break one. Her mind raced, analyzing the shadow-clone. It was born of Darkness.

She raised a hand, palm outward. Not a blast, but a pulse of pure, purifying, mid-day sun intensity—a technique she'd honed in the dome. "Solar Scourge!"

A wave of silent, blinding white light filled the cavern. The shadow-clone didn't just dissipate; it screamed—a soundless shiver in the Aetherish—as if its very essence were being boiled away by holy fire. It vanished, leaving the true Warden stumbling back, its stone plates clattering in shock and pain. The residual Light seemed to burn where it touched, searing the ancient stone.

"Now!" Ariana yelled, channeling another attribute. She shot forward, a simple water jet, even at 620 Megapascals, would be like spraying a garden hose against a fortress wall made of neutron-star matter. She knew this.

So, she synergized her attributes.

At the tip of her finger, the "Aqua Lance" formed, pressurized to its screaming limit. But then, she sheathed it in a helical vortex of compressed airWind attribute focusing and accelerating the water to hypersonic speed. Next, she superheated the water's core with a thread of her Heicain Maoyoesu (Fire), not to boil it away, but to create a state of supercritical water within the jet—a fluid with the density of a liquid and the penetrative power of a gas, capable of dissolving and eroding almost anything.

Finally, as the moment of impact neared, she cloaked the very leading edge of the jet in absolute Darkness, not as a blade, but as a null-field that temporarily suppressed the defensive Quts resonance emanating from the platinum crystals embedded in the Warden's arm. It was a split-second vulnerability window.

The technique was no longer just "Aqua Lance." It was a "Maoyoesu-Forced Supercritical Abyssal Jet."

It struck the Warden's swinging arm with a sound that wasn't a crash, but a violent, hissing SHREEEEEEEE— like a god's teakettle boiling over. The supercritical water, accelerated by wind and intensified by fire, didn't cut; it violently eroded and thermally shocked the osmium-iridium alloy at a microscopic level. The momentary Darkness null-field allowed it to bite deep before the crystals could fully react. The result wasn't a clean slice, but a jagged, rapidly-quenched severance—the metal looked molten and then instantly frozen, with glittering, dead crystal shards spalling off from the impact site.

The massive arm fell, hitting the ground with a heavy, definitive THUD that shook the cavern floor, trailing wisps of steam and the scent of ozone and hot metal.

Before the Warden could react, she followed up, snapping her fingers. A torrent of her Heicain Maoyoesu—holy semi-plasma fire—engulfed the stump and licked up its side. With a gust of Wind, she fed the flames and used the air pressure to slam the wounded guardian back into the wall with a final, resounding CRACK.

Silence, broken only by the crackle of fading plasma and Ariana's ragged breathing. Her back ached. She glanced over her shoulder; her tunic was shredded, revealing smooth, pale skin now crisscrossed with angry, shallow abrasions from being ground against the crystalline, sandpaper-like floor. With a minor surge of healing Light, the cuts closed, leaving faint pink lines. "Tch. This was my favorite disguise shirt. I'm making Big Brother buy me a whole new wardrobe for this," she grumbled to herself.

Then, the rubble shifted. The Warden pulled itself from the wall. Its severed arm lay still, but the fire on its side was dying out, leaving blackened, glassy scars on its stone flesh. It lumbered towards her once more, and Ariana tensed, ready for a final, desperate round.

But the Warden stopped a few paces away. Its central eye regarded her, not with anger, but with a deep, resonant approval. Its psychic voice, when it came, was warmer, filled with a gruff admiration.

"I was not serious... BUT YOUR POWER IS TRUE! YOU HAVE A WARRIOR'S SPIRIT! I GREATLY APPROVE OF A STRONG VA DESCENDANT SUCH AS YOU!"

It let out a sound that might have been a rocky laugh. "The first condition is met. You have not defeated me, but you have earned my respect and proven your right to the legacy. Now, for the second condition..." The massive creature settled into a crouch before the colossal Ancestor skeleton, its gaze intense.

The adrenaline that had sustained Ariana through the brutal fight evaporated, leaving behind a bone-deep exhaustion and a symphony of pain. She felt a coppery tang rise in her throat and couldn't suppress it—she coughed, spattering the crystalline ground with dark blood. Wiping her mouth with the back of her torn sleeve, she tasted defeat and iron.

The Warden, observing her state, gestured with its remaining arm, its psychic voice losing its combative edge, becoming almost... paternal. "Rest, scion. You have fought well. The second trial is not of the body, but of the spirit. You must be whole to face it."

Grateful, Ariana nodded and tried to sit, hissing in pain as the rough, crystalline floor scraped against the raw abrasions on her back and legs. "No wonder my clothes are shredded," she groaned, finally settling into a meditative posture.

She closed her eyes, entering a deep recovery trance. She drew upon the ambient Quts in the cavern, thin but potent, focusing on knitting her minor fractures and replenishing her depleted reserves. The Warden watched, a silent, mountainous guardian.

As Ariana's consciousness sank into the restorative rhythm, she didn't notice the Warden gently lifting her with a tendril of earth and placing her directly before the Ancestor's colossal heart-crystal. The moment her back touched the pulsating gemstone, the world dissolved.

She stood in a void of swirling crimson and gold mist. Before her, towering and ethereal, was the spirit of the Va Ancestor—not a skeletal monster, but a magnificent, regal being of shadow and molten light.

"You have come seeking an inheritance," the spirit's voice echoed, not in her ears, but in the core of her soul. It was a statement, not a question. "Answer truthfully."

"I... I have," Ariana replied, her spirit-self bowing slightly.

"You lie."

An immense, psychic pressure slammed down on her, forcing her to her knees. It was the weight of millennia, of judgment.

"I came for your bones!" she gasped out.

"For whom?" the voice boomed.

"For m— AGH!" Another wave of crushing force.

"Again, you dissemble!"

The truth, the one she had only just admitted to herself amidst the crimson skies, burst forth. "For the family of someone I love!"

The pressure paused, then intensified, now tinged with icy disapproval. "Of what race is this... someone?"

"Tra," Ariana whispered, the word hanging in the psychic space.

A wave of pure, ancient revulsion hit her, colder than any ice. "You understand the taboo? The profanity of such a union? It is an abomination woven into the very laws!"

"I am not born of a Va womb!" Ariana screamed back, defiance flaring even in her spirit-form. "This blood is in my veins, but I was crafted! I am not bound by your ancient hatreds!"

"AND THAT MAKES YOU UNWORTHY!" The Ancestor's spirit roared, the final judgment. "You are not a true daughter of the Va. You are a construct, tainted by forbidden affections. You have no right to our legacy."

With a final, contemptuous surge of will, the Ancestor's spirit hurled Ariana's consciousness out of the spiritual plane.

Back in the cavern, Ariana's eyes snapped open. She was gasping, tears of frustration and spiritual pain streaking through the dirt on her face. The heart-crystal behind her hummed, now feeling alien and rejecting.

I failed.

The thought was a dagger to her heart, sharper than any physical wound.

If I fail... I won't get his affection... Will he... push me away? No... NO!

A primal, desperate panic overrode all reason, all honor, all fear. The memory of Yorian's tired, hopeful face as he activated the formation flashed before her eyes. She couldn't return to him empty-handed. She wouldn't.

With a speed born of sheer desperation, she moved. Her body screamed in protest, but she ignored it. Channeling a sliver of her remaining Darkness attribute, she formed a blade of spatial negation and sliced through the base of the heart-crystal and the major skeletal connections holding the Ancestor's frame to the stone. In one fluid, sacrilegious motion, she scooped the entire, shimmering skeleton and its core into her dimensional pocket.

"YOU WRETCHED, STUBBORN CHILD!" The Warden's psychic bellow shook the entire cavern, this time filled with genuine, volcanic fury. "YOU FAILED THE TRIAL! THIS IS NOT A PRIZE FOR THIEVES!"

Ariana didn't listen. She was already running, cloaking herself in a mirage of Light and Shadow, becoming a ghost in the tunnels. She was invisible to the panicked miners and guards as she shot past them.

But the Warden was not so easily fooled. It tore after her, a rampaging avalanche of stone and fury, ignoring the guards' pitiful attacks that sparked harmlessly off its crystalline hide. Alarms blared throughout Fanzung, but it was chaos—a primal guardian was destroying its own prison to catch a thief.

Ariana burst out of the mine entrance and into the cursed crimson sky, shooting upwards like a silver bullet. Relief, wild and giddy, flooded her.

YES! I GOT IT! AND I'LL GET HIS HEART— eh... I MEAN, FOR YORIAN!

Her triumph was short-lived. She hadn't noticed the Warden, instead of chasing her directly, had sunk into the ground.

From the very earth of the Isle of Va, a hundred meters ahead of her, the Warden erupted like a geyser of living stone, its form reassembled in mid-air.

"YOU'RE NO BETTER THAN THE COWARDLY MALE!" it roared, and one massive, remaining hand shot out, faster than thought, and closed like a mountain vise around her ankle.

There was a sickening CRACK. Then she was being whipped through the air and thrown back towards the earth with the force of a celestial hammer.

The impact was cataclysmic. She struck the barren ground, creating a small crater. Every bone in her body screamed in agony, then went silent—a network of fractures and breaks. Only her skull, reinforced by her dense magical core and Va heritage, remained intact, protecting her fading consciousness.

Her vision blurred, tunneling. The world was a smear of red sky, black stone, and the looming, furious shadow of the Warden approaching. She tried to move a finger. Nothing. She tried to channel Quts. A feeble, dying flicker.

This is... the end? No... I want to be with him...

But as much as her spirit screamed, her broken body had nothing left to give. The darkness at the edges of her vision crept inward, swallowing the light, along with all her desperate hopes.

The darkness was a cold, welcoming tide, promising an end to the searing pain in her shattered body. Ariana's last blurred sight was the monstrous silhouette of the Warden, blotting out the bloody sky as it thundered toward her for the final, crushing blow.

I'm sorry, Big Brother... I couldn't do it... I just wanted... to be with you...

Then, a tear in reality. Not a sound, but a silent rip in the fabric of space itself, right between her and the descending fist of stone.

Yorian appeared.

He looked terrible. His face was pale, etched with deep exhaustion, dark circles under eyes that still burned with the residual glow of the Ni-Tier formation. His robes were singed, and he trembled slightly from the monumental strain of sustaining the soul-resurrection ritual. But he stood, a defiant pillar between his broken sister and oblivion.

The Warden, focused on its quarry, barely registered the new arrival—just another insect to be swatted.

Yorian's gaze swept the scene, taking in the crater, the stolen skeleton's absence in the air, and finally, the small, broken form of Ariana. Something inside him, something colder and more absolute than any cosmic void, snapped.

The air around him distorted. His six Fundamental Attributes, usually precise tools, screamed into overdrive. He didn't have time for finesse. He had one mathematical, brutal solution.

Exponential Overdrive.

The core principle of his power—1/6 Quts = 1 Quts via Strong Nuclear conversion and redistribution—wasn't used for an attack. It was turned inward, into a suicidal feedback loop of energy generation. His mind became a quantum furnace, his soul the crucible.

*Mₙ = M₀ · 6ⁿ · η*

M₀ = 90,000,000 Quts (his base, Level 68 reserve).
η = 0.75 (His soul efficiency, crippled and scarred by Sova's ancient, hidden seal—a wound he'd never fully revealed).
N = 6 (The number of iterative multiplications his fraying consciousness could withstand).

In 42 nanoseconds (7 nanoseconds per agonizing cycle), his Quts count violently inflated.
90,000,000 → ~1,000,000,000,000.

The raw, screaming power of Level 110 erupted from him. But the cost was immediate and visceral. Sova's seal, meant to curb this exact kind of reckless exponential growth, reacted like a psychic landmine detonating in his soul. Meneg (Mental Negative)—waves of crushing despair, phantom guilt over 22 billion deaths, and the soul-deep agony of spiritual laceration—assaulted his mind. He tasted blood in his mouth, his vision swam with phantom horrors.

He ignored it all.

With a roar that was pure, undiluted rage, he unleashed a sphere of Gravitational Annihilation at the Warden. The force wasn't meant to kill; it was meant to crush, to pin, to scream "GET AWAY FROM HER!" The titanic guardian, caught mid-lunge, was slammed into the ground, the earth fracturing for meters around it.

Yorian didn't even look at it. He was already beside Ariana, his trembling hands hovering over her. A gentle, impossibly precise stream of his newly-created, unstable Quts flowed into her, not to heal, but to stabilize. To fortify her flickering life force, to put her broken biology in a state of quantum stasis, buying the minutes she desperately needed.

Only then did he turn his hellfire gaze back to the struggling Warden.

What followed wasn't a battle of martial arts or magical skill. It was a brutal, clinical dismantling by a genius in the throes of sacrificial fury.

They traded blows, shockwaves leveling the dead forest around them. Level 110 vs Level 110. But Yorian fought with the deranged focus of a cornered animal, his every move calculated through a haze of soul-deep pain. He analyzed, adapted, exploited.

He disengaged, creating space. His exabyte brain, even while fracturing, ran the analysis: Osmium-Iridium-Platinum-Vanadium matrix. Crystalline Quts reinforcement. Weakness: Material science.

"High melting point... but not infinite," he hissed, blood dripping from his lips. "Osmium: 3306 K. Vanadium: 2183 K. Alloy variance... target 3318 Kelvin. And vanadium... without chromium alloying, it's oxidation-prone."

He didn't create fire. He engineered an execution chamber.

With a sweep of his hand, he compressed and purified the surrounding atmosphere, summoning a dense, high-pressure dome of pure oxygen around the Warden. Then, from his fingertips, he unleashed not flame, but a focused beam of energy mimicking the core of a star—a micro-sun born from manipulated Strong Nuclear force.

The temperature inside the oxygen-rich dome spiked instantly to over 3300 Kelvin. The Warden's stony flesh didn't just heat up; its metallic components underwent catastrophic failure. The osmium, under extreme heat and stress, became brittle. The vanadium erupted in violent oxidation, burning from within. The platinum crystals, their Quts disrupted by the gravitational onslaught and thermal chaos, shattered like glass.

The Warden didn't scream. It came apart—cracking, flaking, melting, and burning in a silent, horrifying spectacle of applied physics. In moments, the primordial guardian was reduced to a bubbling, glowing puddle of slag and dead crystal, sinking into the bloody earth of its own island.

Yorian swayed, the Meneg threatening to pull him into the abyss. He coughed, a spray of crimson staining the ground. He didn't have a second to lose.

Stumbling back to Ariana, he gathered her limp, stabilized form into his arms with heartbreaking gentleness. He looked at her pale, peaceful face, smudged with dirt and blood.

"I'm here, Ari," he whispered, his voice raw. "I'm not leaving you again. Never again."

A final, desperate warp of Gravity folded space around them.

They vanished from the Isle of Va, leaving behind only a smoldering crater, a pool of cooling celestial metal, and the stolen, silent legacy of a Va Ancestor.

Back in Paxeotechastra's med-bay, Yorian laid Ariana gently on the biobed. His movements, though weary, were precise. With micro-manipulations of Gravity, he realigned shattered bones and reconnected severed tissues. Next, he channeled a steady, gentle stream of Quts into her core—not to heal, but to anchor. To tether her fragile Rish to her broken body, preventing it from slipping into the Aetherish Medium. A soul lost there would be a tragedy beyond retrieval.

He finished, placing a soft kiss on her clammy forehead. "I'll be right back," he whispered to her unconscious form. The ANIs whirred to life, forming a vigilant perimeter around the med-bay.

In a ripple of distorted space, he was gone.

He reappeared on the Isle of Va, standing amidst the devastation of their battle. The air still crackled with residual heat and the sharp scent of ionized air and scorched metal. Before him lay the epicenter: a vast, glassy crater of solidified slag—the cooled, conglomerated remains of osmium, iridium, platinum, vanadium, and carbon.

Yorian's eyes, still flickering with the afterglow of his forced ascension, scanned the wreckage. He wasn't there for the slag. He sought two specific signatures: the impossible density of a Platinum Crystal and the fading pulse of a primordial consciousness.

He raised a hand. Gravity obeyed like a sculptor's tool, carefully peeling back layers of debris.

First, it revealed the Platinum Crystal. It was the size of a human head, emitting a cold, steady luminescence that seemed to bend the light around it. Mythical Uncommon grade. Over a trillion Quts of raw, stable power. Enough to power the fortress for a century, he noted clinically, storing it away.

Then, he found it. The Warden's Monster Core.

It was shaped like a twisted, obsidian heart, darker than the void between stars. Across its pitch-black surface, rivers of molten gold—pure, liquid Quts—pulsed in a slow, dying rhythm. This was no mere power source. It was a reliquary of consciousness, holding the final memories, the essence, the very soul of the ancient guardian.

As his gravitational field brushed against it, the core convulsed. A torrent of chaotic psychic frequencies erupted—primordial rage, ancient pain, a vigilance that had lasted eons. Yorian focused his formidable mind, filtering the noise, decoding the dying waveform.

The message emerged, fragmented yet heartbreakingly clear, an echo from a time before hatred:

"...THIEF... YET... FOR LOVE... AS ONCE... BEFORE... THE HATRED..."

The words hung in the charged air, heavy with an ageless sorrow. Yorian paused. Even in its final moments, consumed by fury, the Warden had recognized the driving force behind Ariana's theft. It had seen love, and that recognition had touched a memory of an era "before the hatred" that divided the races.

"My sister is impulsive," Yorian murmured, his voice softer than he intended, speaking to the dying core. "She is reckless and has much to learn. But her heart... was in the right place. Your strength will not be wasted or left to decay into cosmic dust. I will honor it by putting it to worthy use. That is a better end."

The core pulsed once more, a faint, final beat, as if sighing in resigned acceptance. The golden rivers dimmed.

Without another moment's delay, Yorian secured the Warden's Heart and the Platinum Crystal within his spatial pocket. Two trophies of immense power, paid for with sacrifice and pain.

He cast one last look at the ravaged island beneath its bleeding sky, then folded space around himself and vanished.

Back in the med-bay, he knelt beside Ariana once more. His touch was different now—laced not just with urgency, but with a newfound, grim purpose. He hadn't just retrieved medical supplies. He had retrieved legendary catalysts capable of changing everything, and a tragic truth that even an ancient guardian understood: that some actions, even forbidden, are born of a love that transcends ancient laws.


Euis Aisyah Lituhayu
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View from inside the dome of Yorian's giant space headquarters

Rakkuhōshiten