Roughly fifteen minutes after their departure, the valley fell into a hush so deep even ashes feared to stir.
The air above the gorge twisted like heated ss, and three figures d in pitch- ck soul armor slipped from the distortion without a whisper.
At their head hovered a middle-aged man whose face was carved in perpetual malice. He scanned the empty ravine, tasted the lingering shockwaves in the wind, and his brow knotted in cold displeasure.
Such savage ripples of vengeful spirits—and beneath them, something else entirely, a strange breath of power that makes my heart seize.
The man lifted his hand and pinched the empty air. A ribbon of grey mist peeled away from the atmosphere and hovered above his palm, innocuous at first nce yet humming with an appetite for annihtion.
He probed it with a thread of soul energy, but the mist bucked like a wild beast and swallowed half the strand in a heartbeat, turning his own strength against him.
A wet cough burst from his throat. Color drained from his face as he flung the haze away, scattering it before it could gnaw deeper into his essence.
Two Soul Hunters rushed forward, armor clinking, and shouted, "Sir!"
He waved them back, eyes flickering between rm and fascination. "This force devours soul energy as naturally as breathing. Report it to Mr. Puppet General at once, and scour a thousand-mile radius for anyone suspicious."
The hunters answered in unison, "Yes, Sir!"
With that, the three silhouettes melted into the dusk, gone as swiftly as they had appeared.
After a six-hour journey, Jared and hispanions stood before a ruin smothered by ancient vines and towering trees.
Jared parted weeds as tall as a man, revealing the shattered remnants of a stone array hidden beneath.
The tform had beenid with blue-grey spiritual stones, every surface etched in archaic beast runes now blurred by time.
At its center, the core stone was veined with cracks, a faint glow pulsing like a dying heartbeat.
"It is an ancient teleportation array," Winslow said, voice reverent.
He knelt for a closer look. "The script differs from ours, yet the principle matches. Restore the missing glyphs, heal the core, feed it power, and it should awaken."
Jared nodded and nced at his small fire unicorn. "Your turn, buddy."
Lucky leapt from his shoulder, trotting a quick circle around the array, snout pressed to broken sigils while it hummed soft, curious notes.
Momentster, it raised a forepaw. A bead of crimson-gold light blossomed at the w tip and touched a ruined line.
Buzz!
The tform quivered beneath their feet. The fractured rune red to life, the tiny light stitching its gap with trembling radiance.
"It works!" Selina eximed, delight sparkling in her eyes.
Jared crouched, letting chaotic celestial energy stream from his palm as he traced the array''s inner currents.
The primal energy could mimic anyw, giving him far keener insight than ordinary spiritual energy.
He soon located three key nodes thaty barren and five rune channels that had snapped like dry twigs.
"Leopold, Selina—stabilize the outerttice," he said.
"Mr. Vermilion, when I work on the core, burn the cracks with your demonic me so the stone can fuse anew."
Without further ado, the group jumped into action.
Leopold and Selina took opposite sides, sword light and rippling bell-tones weaving
a that cocooned the tform, holding every stray spark in check.
Jared pressed both hands to the heartstone, threads of chaotic celestial energy seeping inside like silver needles.
Although the core seemed ready to shatter, its innerttice was tenacious. His energy became a surgeon''s scalpel, excising grit from each fissure and coaxing the stone''s spirituality to knit itself whole.
At the same time, Vermilion Demon Lord''s dark me licked across the cracks, perfectly timed, melting the stone''s edges so Jared''s guiding power could seal them shut.
Crimson-tinged mes roared
beneath the array tform, so hot the air itself seemed to ripple and warp. Yet every tongue of fire obeyed an unseen will, never once exceeding the precise temperature at which spintual stones would melt. Under that masterful control, the cracked stones along the tform''s fissures began to liquefy, then fuse like molten gold poured back into a mold.
At the perimeter, Gerald and Winslow took up silent guard. Their auras pressed outward like ovepping shields, each man alert for any ripple that might disturb the delicate work at the center.
Two hours crawled past, measured only by the deep, steady breathing of those who watched.
Buzz!
A sudden, resonant thrum-so loud it rattled teeth-burst from the stone. Instantly, the entire tform red with brilliant aquamarine light, bright enough to chase every shadow from the surroundings.
Where runes had once been scarred and broken, fresh sigils now zed, their strokes seamless and whole. In the re, an ancient bestial carving seemed to wake, rising out of the stone until a chorus of phantom roars echoed across the chamber.
At the very heart of the tform, space twisted open. A whirlpool of turquoise energy widened, breath by breath, until it spanned nearly ten feet from rim to shimmering
rim.
"It''s done!" Jared''s voice cracked through the roar of power.
He lowered his hands, shoulders sagging. The color drained from his face, and
sweat dampened the cor of his robe, but a fierce light still burned behind his eyes exhaustion eclipsed by triumph.
e?
Winslow paced a slow circle around the formation. "The array is holding, though age will limit it. From the looks of it, it can only teleport five travelers at most, and you should expect a slight drift in thending point, he said, fingertips brushing. glowing sigils as though feeling their heartbeat.
"Five is all we need," Jared replied. "Great Elder Earthfire, Mr. Vermilion, Mr. Walden, Leopold, and I will go first. Selina, you and Lucky stay guard the array. If we have not
returned in three days et
if the
tforma shows the least instability-you destroy it and withdraw. No hesitations, understood?"
Selina''s lips tightened with reluctance, yet she bowed in swift agreement, silver bells
at her waist chiming a soft, forlorn note.
The small fire unicorn yipped once, pressed its warm nose to Jared''s hand, and fixed him with molten-gold eyes that promised utter loyalty.
The chosen five stepped into the turquoise vortex, and light swallowed them whole.
Inside the tunnel between worlds, everything became motion-up, down, and every direction at once. Space pulled like an ocean riptide, far stronger than any ordinary teleportation array.
Jared flooded his meridians with chaotic celestial energy, weaving a shield of rainbow aura around his limbs. Even so, he felt organs shift within his chest as
though dragged toward some invisible horizon.
Time lost meaning—perhaps a heartbeat, perhaps a lifetime—before the wrenching pressure vanished.