Penta-gram-onix
Elara’s breath came slow and measured, but her pulse betrayed her—a steady drumbeat in her ears, loud against the stillness. The chamber wasn’t silent, not truly. It thrummed, a deep, resonant hum just beneath the surface of hearing, vibrating through the stone floor and into her bones. It wasn’t merely sound—it was presence.
Lyra stood before the relics, utterly still, yet charged with an energy Elara couldn’t quite name. Her eyes, endless pools of abyssal black, shimmered with the eerie ebb and flow of concentrated Soul Magic. It was as if the cosmos itself had condensed within her gaze, vast and unblinking. The sight sent a chill creeping down Elara’s spine.
Then, the artifacts stirred.
Excalibur, the legendary aether sword, exhaled a slow, hypnotic glow—cerulean light pulsing in time with some unseen force. The radiance pooled around its hilt before cascading down the blade’s edge in thin, silvered rivulets. When the light touched the chamber’s walls, it refracted into a shifting dance of sapphire specters, ghostly figures moving in time with an unheard melody. The air around the blade bent, trembling in quiet reverence.
Beside it, Rhongomyniad waited—impatient, volatile. It crackled with caged power, golden arcs of energy snapping across its surface like a brewing storm. The sharp tang of ozone curled in the air, acrid and electric, stinging Elara’s nostrils. Beneath the weapon’s rune-etched surface, molten veins pulsed, as if the cannon itself was a living thing, coiled and waiting. A single touch could be enough to wake the tempest within.
Elara swallowed hard. These weren’t just weapons; they were entities, forces beyond mortal understanding. The sheer weight of their presence pressed against her, heavy as an unseen hand against her chest. She had read of them, studied their myths, but standing here—so close to their unbridled power—was something else entirely.
And yet, Lyra did not flinch.
She stood unmoving, her gaze locked on the relics, her expression unreadable. But there was something in the set of her shoulders, the way her breath barely stirred, that made Elara’s unease deepen.
Lyra wasn’t just looking at them.
She was listening.
Selene’s fingers tightened around Elara’s sleeve, her grip cold despite the waves of heat rolling off the weapons before them. Her touch felt almost fragile, as if the weight of what they were witnessing had drained the warmth from her skin.
Before them, Excalibur’s golden-white flames flickered like a living thing, shifting and twisting in an ethereal dance. Shadows stretched and coiled along the stone walls, warping in time with the sword’s slow, pulsing glow. The air around Rhongomyniad wavered, the scent of scorched metal curling into Elara’s lungs—sharp, electric. Beneath it, something sweeter, almost like burning incense, lingered, thickening the air with an ancient reverence.
“Their auras… they’re different,” Selene murmured. Her voice was barely more than a breath, edged with awe. “Golden white. I’ve never seen a flame like that.”
Something stirred.
Elara felt it before she heard it—a presence, vast and weighty, pressing against her thoughts. It was steady, patient, like the earth itself shifting beneath her feet. Then, a voice, deep and resonant, unfurled in her mind, carrying the weight of something ancient.
Elara stiffened. The words were not spoken, yet they moved through her thoughts with the certainty of a river carving stone. She turned sharply to Selene, finding the same wide-eyed shock reflected in her sister’s expression.
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“How do you know what she’s capable of?” Elara asked, her voice tighter than she intended.
The presence seemed to consider her, vast and unreadable.
The voice did not waver, but there was something beneath it—something old, something reverent.
Excalibur pulsed, his voice like the echo of a thousand years.
The chamber held its breath. The flickering flames seemed dimmer now, their glow barely touching the walls.
Selene swallowed hard. “Who… is this person?” she whispered, barely more than a breath.
For a moment, silence. Then, Excalibur spoke again.
As the name settled between them, the chamber seemed to darken, the golden flames flickering in Lyra’s endless black eyes, as if the abyss within them had deepened.
Rhongomyniad finally snaps, her tone laced with exasperation.
Excalibur clears his throat, his voice shifting to something more subdued. “As you wish, milady.”
Selene sways, the weight of Excalibur’s words pressing down on her like an unseen force. A sharp gasp escapes her lips as her legs weaken. Elara catches her just in time, steadying her with firm hands on her shoulders. Beneath her fingers, Selene’s skin is ice-cold, her pulse an erratic flutter, like a bird trapped in a cage. The golden glow of the artifacts flickers, their shifting light casting restless shadows against the tent walls.
Elara’s mind races, her thoughts a whirlwind of disbelief and dawning comprehension. A god. Not just a myth passed down in temple whispers, not a story etched in ancient scripture, but a being whose existence once reshaped the world.
Her throat tightens. “Who is this god?” she demands, sharper than intended. The words taste foreign in her mouth, as if by speaking them aloud, she makes them real.
Excalibur’s response is steady, measured, yet each syllable lands with the weight of centuries. “He is a god of the Eastern Archipelago Empire. The Shinkoku Dynasty. He is said to be one of the Founding Five.”
Selene stiffens beneath Elara’s grip. “The Founding Five?” she breathes, her voice barely above a whisper.
“Yes,” Excalibur intones. “The first Soul-Bound. The originals. The Progenitors.”
From the edge of her vision, Elara sees Garik’s expression shift—shock cracking through his usual skeptical demeanor. His mouth, often curled in doubt, now hangs slightly open, thick brows furrowed deep. At last, he exhales a rough chuckle, shaking his head as if trying to rid himself of an impossible thought. “Stones in my beard…” he mutters, dragging a hand over the braided length as though grounding himself. “The first to defy the Creators… and ascend.”
“Yes,” Excalibur confirms. His voice reverberates through the chamber like the toll of a distant bell. “The Monkey King, God of Mischief—Sun WuEma. The Dragon King, God of Philosophy—Gil’Jedalon. The Nine-Tailed Fox King, God of Fortunes and Omens—Inari Shinsei. The Peacock Queen, Goddess of Life—Oshuna. The Owl Queen, Goddess of Death—Micta.”
As their names are spoken, the very air seems to shift. The chamber darkens at the edges, the temperature dropping as though the presence of these names alone is enough to stir something old, something vast.
“These were the first to transcend Paragon and become gods,” Excalibur continues, quieter now, reverent. “Some call them The Progenitors. Their followers revere them as the Pentatonix of Ascendance. Their enemies…” He pauses, voice laced with something unreadable. “Their enemies call them the Pentagrams of Evil.”
The silence that follows is thick, heavy with unspoken thoughts.
Selene swallows hard, her throat bobbing. “And… what do you believe?” she asks, voice fragile in the dim light.
Excalibur hums, a sound both contemplative and distant. “Evil?” A pause, stretching just long enough for uncertainty to settle. Then, softly, “No. Not in the way mortals think. They are merely… misunderstood.”