My Shard Bearer System - Elias's Legacy
Chapter 147: The line

Chapter 147: The line

The words hung in the armory’s thick air, tension creeping into the cracks.

Zykra didn’t speak. She only nodded once, slow and heavy, her gaze anchored on Lyra.

Roachaline’s presence pressed sharper across the room. Her knife gleamed at her side, and the weight of her coercion bled into the space between them — not fully unleashed, but enough to turn the armory’s stale air thin and brittle.

"Show your shard’s heart," she said, voice hardening.

No patience left. No shelter for hesitation.

The accusation was clear beneath the words — Federation plant.

Lyra stiffened. Her wind Ikona stirred around her, the cyan shard flaring with a desperate light. She stepped forward, the knife in her hand forgotten, and forced the words out.

"I’m yours," she said, raw and pleading.

The believers’ chant roared through the walls outside — "Power reigns!" — the sound crashing into the armory like a living thing.

The dusk outside deepened. Shadows thickened between the broken crates.

And the trick — the test — loomed, waiting.

Elias sat rigid in Cube X’s command room, the chair creaking under him every time he shifted his weight.

Sterile metal walls boxed the room into a clean, cold silence. Modular screens flickered overhead, replaying the carnage from the Federation’s collapse.

Roachaline’s Chaos Reign. Soldiers shattered apart like glass.

Lyra’s Tempest Rush. A cyclone of blades cutting through the survivors.

Elias’s breath caught. His chest tightened as if the carnage on the screens had driven a blade straight through him.

Dot hovered quietly at his side, the faint hum of her blue glow the only thing soft in the room. His shard pulsed against his ribs, faint, unsteady.

Across the table, Geras leaned in. Grizzled, broad-shouldered, his hands were rough against the data stacks laid out between them. His eyes stayed cold.

The Chairwoman sat at the head of the table, fingers steepled, gaze sharp enough to cut steel. She didn’t move.

The hum of the command center pressed against the walls, low and constant. Dot hovered silently by Elias’s chair, her blue glow pulsing with a faint, steady rhythm. Across from him, Geras flipped through the top page of the drone report again, the crinkle of paper loud in the quiet.

On the screens overhead, the replay continued — Roachaline’s Chaos Reign fracturing soldiers in brutal arcs, Lyra’s Tempest Rush cutting the survivors down like wheat. The footage rolled on without sound, but Elias didn’t need it. The blood, the broken bodies — they were etched into every frame.

His fingers dug into the chair’s edge, the sharp bite grounding him. His shard pulsed faintly in his chest, sluggish, cold. He shifted, trying to ease the knot tightening in his gut, but the tension stayed.

Geras tapped the data stack, dragging Elias’s attention back.

"Drones caught it all," Geras said, voice rough with exhaustion. "Chaos Reign’s range. Tempest Rush’s speed. Good data." He paused, jaw tightening. "But they’re a storm."

The screens flickered overhead, casting a harsh blue light across the table. Elias kept his gaze forward, but the images burned at the edges of his sight. A Block’s defenses flashed through his mind — the weaknesses he knew too well. The cracks waiting to split wide open. Kikaru’s warnings echoed underneath it all, memories pressing heavier than the chair’s cold frame.

He didn’t look up until the chairwomen’s voice cut across the silence.

"Can you face that bloodbath, Elias?"

There was no heat in her tone, no challenge. Just calculation. A cold, clinical weighing of flesh and will.

He swallowed, throat dry, and forced the answer out.

"I’ll do what’s needed."

The words left his mouth steady, but inside, his heart hammered a frantic beat against his ribs. Dot’s hum buzzed faintly at his wrist, a small, familiar tether.

Across the table, Geras leaned back in his chair, watching him.

"Data’s gold," Geras muttered. "But they’re monsters. Might move you sooner."

Elias shifted in his chair, the old frame creaking under the motion. The screens overhead burned bright against the dimmed command room, the images searing into his eyes — Roachaline’s Chaos Reign, soldiers torn apart; Lyra’s Tempest Rush, bodies falling in broken arcs.

He forced himself still. His breathing came slow, shallow, the effort straining against the tight coil in his chest. Every muscle felt wired too tight beneath his skin, like one wrong move might snap something loose.

The sterile hum of Cube X pressed down harder. Walls, lights, the faint vibration of systems running — all of it blurred into a low, relentless drone. The air tasted dry, metallic.

Across the table, Chairwoman Veyra hadn’t moved. Her fingers stayed steepled, her gaze locked onto him with the same sharp focus she might use against a hostile system error — cold, clinical, unflinching.

The question she’d asked — Will you break? — still hung in the air, slicing the room apart. No louder than a whisper, but heavier than a shout.

Elias’s hands curled tighter against the chair’s worn arms, nails scraping faintly against the battered metal. The sound barely carried, but he heard it. Sharp. Too sharp.

Dot floated at his side, her glow dimmer now, the faint pulse of her hum brushing against his wrist. A small tether — enough to keep him grounded when everything else pressed too close.

His shard pulsed deep inside his chest, sluggish and uneven. It matched the frantic drumbeat of his heart in the worst possible way.

Outside these walls, Vardency’s dusk had already collapsed into full night. Inside, the command room felt colder, the sterile lights swallowing up the last breath of warmth.

Elias swallowed. His throat scraped dry with the motion.

Slowly — too slowly — he forced himself to lift his gaze, locking eyes with Veyra across the table.

She didn’t blink. She didn’t even tilt her head.

The tap of her nail against the tabletop sounded once, deliberate, breaking the silence like a metronome to his hesitation.

"I won’t," Elias said.

The words came steady, almost detached — armor slapped together over the tremor still running through his chest.

He held the line anyway.

Tip: You can use left, right keyboard keys to browse between chapters.Tap the middle of the screen to reveal Reading Options.

If you find any errors (non-standard content, ads redirect, broken links, etc..), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible.

Report