Arc 2 Chapter 10: The Titan’s Legacy
The Vanishing Flame
The chamber lay in silence, yet an unseen weight settled over Ireliaâs chestâheavy, oppressive, as if the very air carried the presence of something vast and unseen.
She stood before the Statue of Pyraxis, its outstretched hand reaching toward the heavens as if still holding onto the final remnants of his power. The obsidian surface gleamed in the golden light of the braziers, each carved detail painstakingly preciseâthe towering frame, the intricate lines of molten gold running through the stone, the solemn expression that bore neither rage nor sorrow, only acceptance.
Irelia took a slow breath. Her legs still ached, her body exhausted from the battle above, but something deep inside her urged her forward.
She placed one hand on the statueâs heart. The stone was warm beneath her palmânot the lifeless cold of an idol, but something alive. With her other hand, she touched her own chest, fingers curling over the leather of her armor.
The moment she made contact, the world around her vanished.
She was no longer in the shrine.
She stood in fire.
Not the raging, untamed inferno of destructionâbut something older. Something eternal.
In the heart of the flames, a colossal figure stood waiting.
Pyraxis.
His form was not stone, not molten rockâbut fire itself. A titan wreathed in golden flames, his presence vast and overwhelming. His faceâif he even had oneâwas indistinct, shifting and changing, yet she understood him. Felt him.
Felt his pain.
Felt his sacrifice.
Images flooded her mind. The Great War. The world breaking. Sutir falling, holding the land together with his final breath. The sky itself fracturing.
And Pyraxisâ¦
He had stood at the edge of the world, watching it crumble, knowing that even his strength was not enough to stop it.
So, he had done the only thing left.
He had offered himself.
Not as a ruler. Not as a conqueror.
As a foundation.
The pain of it was immeasurableâshe could feel it as if it were her own. To take his very essence, his power, and break it into piecesâscattering it across the land, knowing he would never be whole again.
Knowing he would be forgotten.
Ireliaâs chest ached.
She felt the weight of itânot just the power, but the understanding. The acceptance of an inevitable fate. The resolve to do what had to be done for a world that would never remember his name.
The flames surged. The vision wavered. And in that last moment, as Pyraxis faded, his voiceâdeep, vast, ancientâspoke.
But she couldnât understand.
The words slipped through her fingers like smoke, distant, unreachableâjust like before.
Thenâ
The fire vanished.
Irelia gasped, the vision snapping away like a thread cut too soon.
She was back in the chamber, her hand still pressed against the statueâs heart.
Her breath came shallow, her pulse thundering. Her hands trembled as she clenched them into fists. The fire was gone, but the weight remained.
Her vision blurred. She barely registered the sensation of something warm sliding down her cheeks.
Tears.
A single tear fell and it landed against the statueâs outstretched palmâ
And the chamber trembled.
The air shifted.
The braziers flared brighter, the runes along the walls reacting as something ancient stirred.
From the hand of Pyraxis, a radiant light flickered to life.
Irelia stepped back as the orb of pure golden light emerged, hovering above the statueâs palm. It pulsed slowly, like a heartbeatâsmall at first, then growing, glowing, burning.
Nariel moved immediately, sensing the power. She took a step forward, reaching outâ
But the light rejected her.
The moment her fingertips brushed the edge of the radiance, searing heat lashed out, an invisible force burning her palm. Nariel hissed, pulling back, her other hand instinctively summoning a protective ward of light magic.
âIrelia, donâtââ she warned, her voice sharp with urgency.
But the light was already moving.
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Irelia wasnât reaching for it. It was reaching for her.
The golden glow curled toward her fingers, wrapping around her like a lost thing returning home. And the moment it settled against her palm, the light fadedâleaving behind something solid. Something alive.
An Egg.
No larger than her fist, yet pulsing with a presence that defied comprehension.
Its surface was mesmerizingâgold and crimson entwined like the last embers of a dying star, shifting, alive, as if the fire within was in constant motion. Etched flames coiled along its shell, never still, dancing in an endless cycle of creation and destruction.
Irelia held it carefully, reverently, the weight of it far heavier than its size should allow. She knew exactly what this was.
Behind her, Nariel exhaled sharply. Though her voice was steady, it carried the weight of something inevitable.
âThatâs what theyâre after.â
Irelia nodded, her grip tightening. âThe cult isnât just gathering fragments of Pyraxisâ power.â
She lifted the egg slightly, watching how its glow cast flickering light against the ancient stone. The warmth it radiated wasnât searing or scorchingâit seeped into her bones, familiar, like something reaching for her in return.
âTheyâre trying to take back what he gave away,â she murmured.
Narielâs expression darkened. âAnd if they succeed?â
Ireliaâs stomach twisted.
She already knew the answer.
This wasnât just a relic.
It wasnât just some lost artifact buried beneath the weight of forgotten history.
This was Pyraxis.
A fraction of his essence.
Her breath hitched as she stared down at it, her fingers curling instinctively around the shell. The cult wasnât after simple power or knowledge.
They were after the Titan himself.
Her mind spun, the weight of that realization settling over her shoulders. If the cult was after the Eggs, they werenât just after magicâthey were after something far greater.
If they gathered all the fragments⦠What then?
Would they resurrect Pyraxis?
Or worseâsteal his power for themselves?
She swallowed.
She didnât know.
But whatever their purpose, nothing good would come of it.
Irelia clenched the Egg tighter, its warmth pressing against her palm.
They could not let the cult get their hands on this.
No matter what it took.
Nariel stood a few feet away, watching silently.
She hadnât spoken for a while. Hadnât moved closer.
But her blue eyes never left her.
She wasnât just watching.
She was studying her.
Her piercing blue eyes flickered to the Egg in Ireliaâs grasp, its ember-like glow pulsing in slow, steady waves. It looked harmless. Beautiful, even. But Nariel had seen the brazierâs runes flare to life at Ireliaâs touch. Had watched the Ifrit hesitate, its molten gaze locking onto her, not with rage, but with recognition. And now, this Eggâthis fragment of a Titanâhad chosen her.
Was it fate? Or something far worse?
Nariel wanted to trust her. She truly did.
But something in her gut twisted. A whisper of unease. A warning she couldnât quite name.
âAre you sure youâre the one meant to hold that?â she asked, her voice quieter than she intended.
Irelia hesitated.
And for the first time, Nariel saw something unexpected in her emerald eyes.
Doubt.
Ireliaâs breath hitchedânot at the question itself, but at the realization that she had no answer.
Nariel hadnât accused her. Hadnât even questioned her outright.
But there was something else in her words. A quiet wariness. A hesitation.
Like she wasnât sure if she was questioning Ireliaâor something much bigger than her.
Irelia exhaled slowly, tightening her grip on the Egg.
Was she meant to hold this?
She hadnât chosen this. But the Ifrit had spoken to her. The brazierâs runes had flared beneath her touch. And now, the Egg pulsed in her hands, responding to her, as if it had been waiting.
Her stomach twisted.
Something deep inside herâa voice she didnât want to acknowledgeâwhispered that none of this was coincidence.
That it had never been a coincidence.
Moving to Ignisia of all places, a town so close this these ruins. Accepting Pipâs quest. Neither were coincidences, she knew it.
But she didnât have an answer.
Yet she did know one thing.
She lifted her gaze to Narielâs, determination solidifying in her chest.
âI donât think it matters,â she said quietly. âBecause I wonât let the cult have it.â
Narielâs jaw tightened, but she nodded.
She wasnât convinced.
Not entirely.
But she trusted Ireliaâif only for now.
And for now, that would have to be enough.
The ride back to Ignisia was quiet.
Too quiet.
With the Egg secured in Ireliaâs satchelâwrapped in layers of cloth to dampen its unnatural warmthâthe two warriors rode together, just like they had years ago.
Aurelia, Ireliaâs trusted mare, moved with practiced ease beneath them, her strides steady despite the exhaustion in her riders. The rhythmic motion of the horse should have been comforting.
But the silence between them was heavy.
Unspoken words lingered.
Questions neither of them were ready to ask.
Nariel sat behind Irelia, her hands resting lightly on the saddleâs edges instead of gripping her waist like she once would have. It was a small thing.
But Irelia noticed.
She felt the distance between them.
And the fragile thread still holding them together.
Aureliaâs hooves clattered softly against the worn stone path, the only sound cutting through the weight of the nightâs revelations.
What now?
Would the cult come after them?
Did they already know?
Irelia pressed a hand to her satchel, feeling the warmth pulse faintly through the fabric. The Eggâs presence was unmistakable, like a beacon calling to somethingâor someone.
She didnât know what was coming.
But she knew one thing.
This wasnât the end.
This is only the beginning.
The ruins faded behind them, swallowed by the jagged mountains and scorched valleys of the Ignisian borderlands.
The burning glow of Ignisiaâs torches shimmered in the distance, a beacon of civilization after the depths of the templeâs darkness.
But they were not alone.
Something watched.
High above the cliffs, where the mountain shadows swallowed the light, a figure stood watching.
They did not follow. Did not move. Did not need to.
Golden eyes flickered in the darkness, embers dancing at their edges.
The Egg had been taken. Just as expected.
A slow breath. A quiet shift of movement. Then, the figure turned, vanishing into the blackened rock, leaving only a whisper of smoke in their wake.
The hunt had begun.