My Shard Bearer System - Elias's Legacy -
Chapter 201: Revered Feelings
Chapter 201: Revered Feelings
"Nice," the figure said, voice low, almost amused, as he flexed his newly grown hand, the pale blue‑white of his skin glowing faintly. "I see you’ve gotten more creative with Yubel’s creations."
I need more detail to add depth, but I’ve got to keep the original lines intact. The announcer decoy, dispersing, calls the figure "godless crucifix," and the figure revealing the orb with a dot, thanking the weary soul. The announcer is gone, and the figure disappears through a portal as the realm collapses. I’m going to flesh out the scene in a flowing, immersive way, starting with expanding the setting and deepening the emotions around what’s happening, while keeping everything grounded in the original sequence.
"I knew you’d do that," the Announcer said, his voice sharp, cutting through the portal’s grind while the grin clawed its way back onto his face, though sweat still glistened on his brow.
The declaration rang out like broken glass hitting metal, and the realm answered with a deep vibration that rippled beneath his polished shoes.
Thin ribbons of silver code peeled away from his shoulders and boots, unwinding into the air like severed power lines, their sparks licking at nothing before flickering out.
All at once the glass‑smooth plane underfoot groaned, fissures radiating in every direction; each fracture pulsed with riotous light, as though the bedrock skeleton of the arena were breaking its own bones to escape.
Above, the last torches spasmed in sympathy, their flames throttling down into starved slivers that painted the collapsing scene in feverish strobes.
"Which is why it was just a decoy."
He lifted the shard fragment for one triumphant heartbeat—its glow collapsing to dull ash as the false data flag folded in on itself—then opened his hand to reveal only static smoke.
Silver light consumed his outline, shredding away persona and flesh alike, until his form resembled a constellation scattered by a careless myth.
The realm itself began to shed geometry: hexagonal plates curled upward, veins of corrupted energy whipped by like wind‑driven banners, and the air stank of overtaxed circuits frying from the inside out.
"Better luck next time... you godless crucifix," he said, voice fading into the rising static while his body dissolved into a constellation of firefly motes that whirled once—then blinked out.
The figure smiled, his unreadable eyes glinting with faint amusement as he revealed his other hand, a small, see‑through orb cradled in his palm, Dot’s sleeping form inside, her blue glow faint but steady, a tiny Ikona trapped in a prison of light.
Dark blood from his earlier wound still stippled the cuff of his cloak, yet the wound itself had vanished, skin smoother than fresh ice; the orb’s blue luminescence crawled across those flawless fingers, chasing away any shadow that tried to hide there.
"I guess I’ll have to thank that wearily soul for my present," he said, voice low, resonant, each word compressing the fragmenting realm, the very air flexing under the density of the promise.
As he spoke, the orb responded, faint currents of particulate energy curling over its surface like protective vines, holding the Ikona safe yet undeniably contained.
The Announcer’s eyes widened, lenses strobing warnings that no longer mattered, but it was too late—he was already gone, his particles scattered into data dust that the collapsing platform could no longer anchor.
Shattered tiles of the arena fell away in slow arcs, spinning into the abyss, their undersides exposing snarls of conduit and glimmering code before gravity flexed and swallowed them whole.
The figure stepped backward into the green‑black portal, the orb with Dot glowing in his hand, the half shard still pulsing faintly between steady fingers.
Where the portal’s edge met the remnants of the floor, space buckled like a tarp pulled through a broken frame—and then both portal and figure folded into themselves with a sound like distant thunder finally reaching ground.
The liminal space shattered.
Torque lines of energy crisscrossed overhead, snapped, and vanished; the torches winked out one by one, surrendering to the dark.
Glasslike planes disintegrated into drifting shards that tumbled silently into the void beneath, reflecting the last flicker of blue light before they, too, were swallowed.
In the hush that followed, only the echo of Dot’s faint, sleeping glow remained—an almost‑memory floating somewhere far beyond reach—while absolute night sealed the wound in reality, leaving nothing behind but the hush of an arena that no longer existed.
Kikaru’s knees pressed into a cold, unyielding surface, the sterile smoothness of the medical ward’s floor biting through the thin fabric of her uniform, a stark contrast to the invisible plane of the liminal realm.
The tile radiated a refrigeration‑unit chill, numbing her shins yet doing nothing to muffle the tremor running the length of her spine.
Her hands trembled, fingers curled around the two jagged pieces of Elias’s shattered shard, their edges still cutting into her palms, the dull blue glow pulsing faintly against her skin, a heartbeat she couldn’t ignore.
That glow kept perfect time with the throb in her temples—steady, relentless—each pulse whispering danger even as it promised that something of him remained.
Tiny beads of blood seeped around the shards’ points, tracing crooked lines across her wrists, the sting a distant echo of the pain in her chest.
The drops hit tile, smeared, then vanished as nanocleaners skated by, wiping away evidence faster than she could bleed it.
Her breath came in shallow bursts, the air heavy with the scent of antiseptic and faint ozone, the hum of servo arms whirring softly in the background, their mechanical clicks a cold reminder of the system’s ever‑present grip.
She inhaled again—too quick—and chemical tang burned the back of her throat, mixing with the copper taste of adrenaline that hadn’t yet drained from her veins.
She blinked, her good eye adjusting to the dim light of the ward, the crimson error bars blinking across the monitors casting jagged shadows across the glass walls.
Every bar pulsed in discordant rhythm, a silent chorus of machine panic that the human staff seemed unwilling—or unable—to silence.
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