Chapter 1194 A Cruel Twist
Their prison room''s window overlooked a city that seemed unable to find peace. The Knight of Courage, usually restless, now stood quiet, her eyes tracing the streets teeming with activity.
"This war…it''s not just chaos," she finally said, her voice quieter than usual. "It''s calcted. There''s something holding them here, trapping them in this conflict…"
Oriole ran a finger over the faded lines on the city map. "They worship a fragment of something…a relic. It''s in the old cathedral, a twisted symbol of their desperate hope."
The Knight considered this. "It''s the key, then. A direct assault would be madness, but…there might be another way."
His mind raced. Deception, not brute force, was his strength. "The chaos of battle. I can vanish within it, unnoticed. The perfect cover to reach their treasure."
Their nning became a dangerous dance. Oriole moved among the city''s defenders with purpose, his advice tactical and true, yet always edging him closer to his hidden goal. He learned the routines, the patterns of patrol, the macabre moments when their half of the relic was disyed for desperate crowds.
Then, the horns – that dreadful signal that meant another battle was upon them. This time, the chilling anticipation outweighed any lingering dread. As the defenders marched out to face the enemy, he was swept along, the ''Earth-born strategist'' whose presence might change the tides of war.
The battlefield was pure mayhem. Steel shed against steel. Oriole wove through, not a warrior, but a maniptor. With a quick gesture, an attacker stumbled on treacherous ice. A flick of a finger summoned a shield, just in time to save a trembling defender. His guards watched him, suspicion reced by a desperate faith in his power.
The moment arrived – a sudden surge by the enemy, a weakness in the lines! Fear spread like wildfire. Oriole seized his chance.
"They''re nking us!" he yelled, feigning panic. "I must find a different vantage point to assess the situation!" With a burst of telekic speed, he sprinted away, not towards safety, but directly into the swarming enemy ranks.
He dodged blows, stumbled over barricades. An echo of the fissure''s energy thrummed beneath his skin, a reminder of the Ancestor''s gaze, a chilling weight that pushed him even harder.
Then, it loomed in front of him – the cathedral, broken and shattered. Images danced in his mind: stained ss shards, a ruined altar, and the pulsating fragment – a twisted beacon of stolen power.
Hesitation warred with determination. This was about more than escape. This was deciding the fate of a world born of unintended creation. Yet, he couldn''t fail.He triggered a carefully hidden rune, a st echoing down an empty street, a distraction to buy him just a few more precious moments. Then, he slipped inside the desecrated space.
There it was. Not some grand artifact, but a shattered shard pulsating with an unsettling, familiar energy. It tugged at him, a chilling reminder of the world he''d unknowingly birthed.He reached out…
A gasp escaped his lips.Guarding the relic wasn''t just any soldier, but a man who looked exactly like the schr, his face marred by a horrifying scar that ran from his temple to his jaw.
"You shouldn''t be here, Earth-born," the schr''s doppelganger said, his voice a chilling echo of the real schr''s.Darkness swirled around his hands; a power Oriole had never witnessed before.
Before Oriole could react, the strange magicshed out, a tendril of inky energy wrapping around his throat, draining the air from his lungs. Panic surged through him, his vision blurring at the edges.
Suddenly, a blur of movement.The Knight of Courage, her face etched with fury, mmed into the doppelganger, knocking him away from Oriole. Gasping for breath, Oriole scrambled back, his hand instinctively reaching for a vial strapped to his leg.
The doppelganger snarled, his dark magic crackling around him.The Knight, ever the warrior, met his charge head-on, her de a whirlwind of steel.But the doppelganger''s power was unlike anything she''d faced before.
A desperate struggle ensued. Oriole, his vision clearing, knew he couldn''t stand idle.He uncorked the vial, a swirling concoction of shimmering light erupting within.With a cry, he hurled it at the doppelganger.
The vial shattered, the light bathing the doppelganger in its radiance. He screamed, a sound of pure agony, as the magic ripped through him.He stumbled back, dissolving into a swirling vortex of darkness that vanished with a final, echoing wail.The relicy unguarded, its pulsating glow momentarily dimmed.
Oriole slumped to his knees, his lungs burning, the echoes of the doppelganger''s power still prickling his senses.The Knight stood over him, her greatsword lowered but her stance tense, ready for further threats.
"What in the zes was that?" she gasped, her voice taut. "That...thing looked like the schr!"
Oriole coughed, trying to find his voice. "He…it said I shouldn''t be here. Like he knew I was from Earth." He struggled to sit up, his head throbbing.
Suddenly, a flicker at the shattered entrance – enemy soldiers pouring into the cathedral.No time for questions, only action. With newfound urgency, Oriole snatched the relic fragment, securing it into his prepared container.
The Knight met his gaze, questions burning in her eyes, but survival instincts took over. "Escape first, answerster." She gestured towards a side exit hidden amidst crumbling stonework."There''s another way out, known only to a few…hopefully."
Their escape was less heroic, more a frenzied scramble through the decaying heart of the city.Every turn, every shadowed alcove was a gamble, yet somehow, they emerged into the rtive safety of the chaotic, war–stricken streets.
It wasn''t until they were back in the schr''s cell, the barred window offering a tantalizing glimpse of potential freedom, that they finally dared to breathe.
The schr, waiting for them with a mix of relief and dread etched on his face, gasped the moment he saw the relic fragment in Oriole''s grasp."You survived…but how? It is heavily guarded, always…"
Oriole copsed onto his cot, the relic a dull weight in his hands. He nced at the Knight, who mirrored his exhaustion."Things gotplicated," he said with forced lightness.
He recounted the doppelganger, the strange, consuming magic, their desperate fight.The schr paled with each word, his hand clutching at his chest as if struck. n/?/vel/b//in dot c//om
"He… it can''t be…" the schr whispered, his voice cracking."After all these years…I thought he was dead."
The Knight, her usualposure shattered, mmed a fist on the table."Dead or not, that thing…it was powerful! Who was he? What was that magic?"
The schr sank to his knees, his voice a broken sob. "My brother. He was twisted…corrupted by this war, by the relic itself.He tried to take it all for himself, but I…we fought, he was banished…or so I believed." He raised tear-stricken eyes to Oriole.
A heavy silence fell over the schr''s makeshift haven. The relic fragmenty nestled in a in wooden box, its pulsating glow a constant, unsettling presence. The doppelganger''s death was no simple victory, but rather the ominous herald of a greater darkness, a threat that now echoed in the schr''s despairing eyes.
"We can''t rest," he finally whispered, his usually gentle voice rough with newfound urgency. "If my brother wasn''t just an echo from the past…if the power of this relic corrupts even those you trust … then every moment is precious."
Oriole nodded grimly. "We need the other half," he said, "The lord has it. Then, we find a way out of this dungeon, away from everything that has been poisoned."
The Knight paced the cramped room. "That gilded snake won''t give it up willingly. If brute force is out, then we need a n. Something clever, misleading…"
The schr''s gaze flickered towards the relic fragment. "Perhaps…if we offer him the whole. To believe he holds the key to absolute victory…"
It was a dangerous gamble, one that filled Oriole with unease. Yet, the weight of the relic in his hands, the thrum of the energy that whispered of both salvation and doom, pushed him on. The next day, under the pretense of strategic discussions, they confronted the lord.
The audience chamber was oppressive, its opulent furnishings a grotesque reflection of the brutal realities beyond its tapestried walls. The lord eyed them warily, his victory-earned confidence tinged with a newfound wariness.
"The schrs speak of a…possibility," Oriole said carefully, keeping his tone level. "If the relics were reunited, perhaps then we might unlock this dungeon''s true secret."
The lord leaned forward, his eyes glittering with greed. "The means to escape? To hold victory not just over this city, but over…" he paused, savoring the thought, "…over the world itself?"
The schr stepped forward. "Indeed, my lord. With your bravery and Earth''s wisdom, imagine what we could aplish." It was a masterfully woven lie, and the lord fell for it entirely.
The vault was a ce of grim contrasts. Candbras cast flickering shadows upon bare stone walls, and within the heart of this fortified chamber sat a gleaming pedestal – their prize. The two relic fragments seemed to pulse in unison, a chilling testament to their fractured origin.
"This is it," Oriole murmured, his voice barely a whisper. The moment the second fragment left the pedestal, the room surged with energy. The relics spun towards each other, drawn by an irresistible force.
With a sh of blinding light, the fragments merged, bing not a relic, but a key – intricate, and pulsing with a golden radiance. Oriole lifted it, a strange familiarity settling over him, a memory from a world he barely knew, where such an item was merely a concept.
"It''s… beautiful," the Knight breathed, a glimmer of hope recing her warrior''s scowl.
Hope, however, was short-lived. A st of darkness swept through the chamber. The lord stood transfixed, eyes burning with a terrible hunger. But it was the schr who had moved, a cruel twist to his lips.