Stuck in an Island with Twelve Beautiful Women -
Chapter 841 - 843
Chapter 841: Chapter 843
A whisper snaked through the air, clear this time. "Sorrowsteel." Both froze. Jude stepped in front of Nyra, his blade already half-drawn. "Show yourself." A figure emerged from the shadows near the far archway. She was tall, cloaked in something that shimmered between silk and smoke. Her eyes were the color of dawn, soft gold, but there was nothing gentle in them. "I did not think the blade would find another bearer," she said. Her voice was sharp, elegant, and it echoed with something not quite human. "Who are you?" Jude asked. "I am Keeper of the Hollow Gate," she said. "Once, I was called Lira of the Moon House. Now, I wait. And guard." "Guard what?" Nyra asked, stepping closer. "The Tear of Midnight," Lira replied. "And the path it opens."
The name meant nothing to Jude, but Nyra went still. "That’s a myth," she said. "A weapon spoken of in riddles. Said to turn despair into flame." "Not a weapon," Lira corrected. "A decision. A path. One you cannot return from." She looked directly at Jude. "And it cannot be touched by those who lie to themselves." Jude frowned. "I’ve faced my memories." "You’ve endured them," Lira said. "But have you faced the root? The first betrayal? The one that led you to take the blade?" Jude said nothing. Nyra looked at him, confused, but said nothing either. "The Tear rests beneath the citadel," Lira continued. "Guarded not by walls or beasts, but by what you bring with you. If you survive, you may take it. If not, it takes you."
Jude stepped forward. "I’ll go." "Alone," Lira said. "That’s not happening," Nyra cut in. "We came here together." "He carries the Sorrowsteel," Lira said. "It calls only to one. If he falters, you will not reach him in time." Jude looked at Nyra. "I need you to trust me." "I do," she said, though her voice trembled. "But if you die in there, I’m setting this whole forest on fire."
Lira led him through a narrow passage beneath the chamber. They walked in silence for a long time, the corridor winding downward like a spiral cut into the bones of the world. At the bottom was a chamber shaped like a tear, smooth walls, a single dais in the center, and upon it, a pool of dark liquid that shimmered like stars trapped in ink. "Step into the memory," Lira said. "Bring only truth." She vanished before he could ask more.
Jude stepped forward and placed a hand on the surface. The world vanished.
He stood in the rain. Cold, sharp. He knew this place. The alley behind the orphanage. A younger version of himself knelt nearby, clutching something close, his last piece of bread. Across from him, another boy, smaller, thinner, crying. The younger Jude looked at the bread, then at the boy, then ran. "No," Jude said aloud. "I didn’t mean to, " The vision shattered. Now he was older, standing above Mira’s broken body, surrounded by fire. He looked at her, but he didn’t cry. Didn’t scream. Just walked away, the blade still in his hand. "You could’ve stayed," a voice said, her voice. "You could’ve burned with us."
Again the scene changed. Now he was at the Iron Hollow, standing before the Hollowed thing that wore a face like his. "You think you’re different," it whispered. "You think guilt makes you good?" "I’m not good," Jude snarled. "I just haven’t given up." The thing smiled. "But you will. In time."
Jude fell to his knees. The weight of every moment, every decision, pressed down like stone. But then, he remembered Nyra’s voice. Her laugh. The way she threw herself in front of danger without flinching. He remembered Mira, not as a body, but as a light. He remembered the way he stood alone on the battlefield, not because he wanted to, but because someone had to.
"I see it now," he whispered. "It was never about what I failed. It was what I chose afterward. I chose to keep going." The chamber answered with silence. Then the liquid rose from the pool, coiling in the air like a living thing. It sank into the Sorrowsteel, and the blade shifted. The hilt pulsed, and new markings carved themselves into the metal. Jude felt a warmth in his chest. A memory made fire.
He woke on the dais, gasping. Lira stood beside him. "You carry the Tear now," she said. "What does that mean?" "You are no longer only a blade," she replied. "You are a question. And the world must answer you." Jude didn’t know what that meant, but he didn’t need to yet.
Nyra rushed into the chamber moments later, relief flooding her face. "You’re alive." "Mostly," he said, standing slowly. "The Tear?" she asked. He nodded. "It’s with me now." "Good," she said, voice fierce. "Because the forest is shifting again. Something’s coming." Lira raised a hand. "Then go. You’ve stayed too long already." "What about you?" Jude asked. "I wait for the next," she replied.
They left the citadel behind as the wind rose and the sky darkened. Storm clouds gathered above the forest, and the trees seemed to lean toward them as they passed, whispering of endings and beginnings. Jude felt the weight of the Tear inside him, not heavy, but alive. Waiting. The world would come for them. The Table. The Hollowed. Others still in shadow. But they would come bearing fire. And this time, they would not run.
The storm had followed them from the citadel, its presence more than weather, a living shadow overhead that churned with thunder and an unnatural silence between each rumble. Jude and Nyra pressed forward through the forest, their boots sinking into wet moss and blackened roots that seemed to move when no one was looking. The trees groaned and whispered, the wind playing with memories not their own. Neither of them spoke much. Every sound felt like a lie waiting to be revealed.
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