A Dynasty Falls[Pt1]

The mountainous area North of Neo Arcturus. Powerful slabs of stone stagger towards the sky, peaking at a verdant, grass covered plateau. The Gafren Tribes call this area their home where they live in close harmony with the Spirit of the Land.
User avatar
Dalazar Denkou
Drifter
Posts: 233
Joined: Sat Feb 16, 2019 8:39 pm

Re: A Dynasty Falls Pt1

Post by Dalazar Denkou »

"In the kingdom of Denkou, I am heralded as a King, a savior, yet in the land of Edo, my name is marred by betrayal, labeled a tyrant, a madman who once tried to force all of Edo to yield under a single banner, my banner."

"But it is a lie, right?" His voice was a hopeful whisper, seeking reassurance from the man he revered. When Ains’s gaze remained fixed on the floor, Dalazar’s hope faltered. “Right?”

A slow, tired sigh escaped Ains’s lips.

"I wish I could say yes, Dalazar. But the monster they speak of… was me. It was my ambition that led to this cycle of chaos and death."

He looked up, his eyes seeming to peer through time itself. "I… was born a talented shinobi, learning to wield several naten natures at a young age. My grasp of the Ephemeral Arts was… mythic."

A bitter smile touched Ains’s lips. " But that gift was forged into a weapon by the Denkoushi clan. My father trained me to be cold, calculating, fierce. Victory was the only metric of worth. His approval was the only prize I sought. My brother Okina and I… we became specters of fear across the nations, all in the name of our clan."

He paused, the silence of the other kings a heavy, judgmental shroud. "And so, when the Tournament of Blood came, a crucible for the Chaos Rings, I was their champion. I laid waste to every opponent. Victory seemed inevitable… until I faced her. Ember of the Yaarou clan."

"The ancient rivals of the Shi," Dalazar murmured. Okina had mentioned them.
"The very same,"

Ains confirmed.

"It was as if fate itself had penned the matchup—a descendant of Tero against a descendant of Kaedae. I felt… something, Dalazar—a connection, a kinship that war had no place for. But there was no time to understand it. We fought for three days straight."

His gaze became distant, haunted.

"And she was winning. My talent, my power… it wasn't enough against the eons of finely-tuned hexcraft her clan had perfected."

"So what happened? How did you…?"

"The strain, her power burning against mine, the inherited hatred between our lines… it broke something inside me. Or rather, it awakened something."

A shadow passed over Ains’s face.

"The Aphosis curse, dormant since the time of Tero, roared to life. My eyes… they changed." He unconsciously raised a hand to his face. "The Danketsu opened."

"With my new power, and her weakened state… I…"

His voice cracked, the ancient shame still raw and bleeding in the timeless space.

"I devoured her soul. And in doing so, I absorbed not just her power, but also her clan's inherited hatred and their betrayal. Her final hex ensured the Danketsu would never close. Aphosis was free, its mind restored, and it began to whisper its dogma of chaos into my soul."

"The Endless Art, Dankestu Mugen manifest," Ains stated grimly.

He stood up, a caged god in his private hell.

"I became everything they say I was. A tyrant. I consumed those who opposed me. My clan… even my father, whose approval I had craved my entire life. I took his life and his title."

He stopped, his back to Dalazar, his shoulders slumped with the weight of patricide. "I raised a great army, promising glory to those who fed on power, and plunged Edo into a war that burned for thirty days and nights."

"…" Dalazar felt the floor sway beneath him, the obsidian reflecting a history far darker than he could have imagined.

"The other clans, led by the Owaki, the whole of Edo, who are always at war, united against me," Ains continued, his voice hollow. "They managed to sever my hands, breaking my connection to the rings of power. They had me. Defeated. But as the final blow was about to fall… a bolt of lightning tore the sky apart. Fulgora, the Djynn of ambition, appeared. In a flash, my loyal followers and I were gone, spirited away from Edo, the rings abandoned."

"So you fled. You came here."

"Not by my own design. Fulgora led us across the sea to the Emerald Ascension. It pointed me towards a 'heinous creature' that terrorized these lands—the Djynn of flames, Azar. It told me to defeat it, to claim its power."

"And you did," Dalazar said, the pieces of Denkou's founding myth clicking into a terrifying new shape. "This is how you became King of Denkou."

"I fought Azar, and with the Danketsu, I snatched its soul. But only then did I realize Fulgora's deception. It meant to overtake my body, to use me as its ultimate vessel of ambition. But something unexpected happened. Within Azar's soul, beneath the fire and rage, was the truth of his being.

Azar was the Djynn of Valor, one of Zincar's children given new life after the Beryl Sun's collapse… reborn as the leader of the Azerri, the original natives of where Denkou now stands. He held an immense and overwhelming love for his people. A protective instinct so pure, it changed my very nature. For the first time, I understood what it meant to be a king, not a conqueror. That new understanding gave me the strength to triumph over Fulgora. Instead of being consumed...I devoured Fulgora and took the fullness of his power as my own."


He turned to face Dalazar, his expression one of profound sadness. "But the victory came at a terrible price. Azar's burning hatred, combined with the chaos of Aphosis, caused the light of Zincara within me to… shatter. She became a being of pure, divine madness, threatening to unmake the entire continent. I had a choice. A final choice."
Last edited by Dalazar Denkou on Tue Jul 22, 2025 1:35 pm, edited 4 times in total.
Image

User avatar
Dalazar Denkou
Drifter
Posts: 233
Joined: Sat Feb 16, 2019 8:39 pm

Re: A Dynasty Falls

Post by Dalazar Denkou »

"What did you do?" Dalazar asked, his own voice barely a breath.

Ains placed a hand over his own heart, over the source of the hum that permeated the space.

"I used their combined, warring powers to turn them upon each other. I used the mad serpent Zincara as a divine chain to bind the vengeful spirit of Azar, sealing them both inside me—a prison of my flesh and soul."

Sealing away my Dankestu as well as those of all my followers. Then… to protect the innocent followers who had come with me, to spare them from my past and the gods warring within me… I erased their memories. I gave them a new beginning, here in Denkou. And the anthem of Lightning Magic..."


Dalazar stared, speechless. The entire history of his nation, the reverence for his king, the peace he had known his whole life—all of it was built upon a foundation of such epic tragedy. To know now the truth of who and what Azar was...to know now what fueled his hatred of the Denkou kingdom. A part of him questioned for a fleeting moment whether or not it was even right to stop him...

Ains returned to his throne, the weight of his confession settling upon him once more. "So you see, Dalazar. In Denkou, I am a King and a savior. In Edo, I am a tyrant and a monster. The truth… is that I am both. And forevermore, I must be the jailer." He looked at Dalazar, his ancient, haunted eyes filled not with a demand, but with a plea for understanding. "It is my penitence for the sins I forced upon the world."

The omnipresent hum seemed to intensify, no longer a chorus of power, but the faint, eternal screams of caged gods. Dalazar looked from Ains to the silent kings, to the scarred armor of Valerius and the benevolent design of Nivian, to the far-seeing gaze of Roric, and finally to his own father, who watched him with an expression of sorrowful pride. He was the sixth in their line, the inheritor of a truth far heavier than any crown. The obsidian floor reflected the emerald river above, and in its polished surface, Dalazar finally saw the truth: Denkou was not a kingdom built on victory, but on atonement. And its king was not a god, but a man serving an eternal sentence.

"And you've shoulderered this... all of this alone?"
Image

User avatar
Dalazar Denkou
Drifter
Posts: 233
Joined: Sat Feb 16, 2019 8:39 pm

Re: A Dynasty Falls

Post by Dalazar Denkou »

"An Emerald King is never alone."

Dracovis, the Fifth King, said, his voice a low, resonant rumble that seemed to settle the very air around them. Dalazar turned to his father, his presence a bulwark against any storm.

"Never alone," Dracovis repeated, his gaze meeting Dalazar's. "What do you think we are doing here, my son?"

Dalazar looked from his father to the other silent monarchs. Nivian, the Builder, sat with his hands resting on the arms of his throne, his posture one of perfect, architectural balance. Valerius the Iron Hammer’s spirit was a palpable force, a cage of unyielding order. And Roric the Star-Gazer’s eyes never left the celestial river, tracking its currents as a sailor tracks the sea.

"This place… this reflection," Dracovis explained, gesturing to the endless obsidian plane. "It is the antechamber to the prison. It is the first line of defense. Ains is the heart of the cage, his soul the very material of its bars. But a single jailer, no matter how strong, can tire."

Nivian, the Second King, spoke for the first time, his voice smooth and measured, like the slide of a perfectly cut stone. "My reign was one of construction. I built districts of stone and light, not just for the living, but to forge my will into a concept of structure, of unbreakable design. When my time came, I brought that design here. I am the architect of these walls you cannot see. I reinforce the integrity of the seal."

The grim Third King, Valerius, grunted, the sound like grinding metal. "Law is absolute. My conquests were not for glory, but to forge a kingdom of unbending rule. That iron will now serve as the chains. When the prisoners rage, it is my spirit that binds them, my judgment that holds them accountable." His scarred armor seemed to pulse with a dull, oppressive light.

"And I," Roric said softly, his voice a distant whisper, "watched the stars. I learned the language of the naten, the rhythms of the cosmos. The celestial river you see is the source of our power, the very lifeblood of this realm. I taught the Gamallow how to harness the power of Pana Chyo. But it is also the medium through which the prisoners' madness flows. I am the warden who watches. I calm the currents, divert the surges of chaos, and listen for the whispers that signal an attempt to break free."

The history of Denkou, the succession of its kings, was not a mere political lineage. It was a sacred, unbroken chain of sacrifice. Each king's life, their entire reign, was a forging of the specific spiritual tool they would become in this eternal afterlife. They were not just remembered; they were active.

"Father…" Dalazar whispered, turning back to Dracovis. "Your strength… in your final years, it was fading. I thought it was the sickness."

A sad smile touched Dracovis's lips. "The sickness was merely the vessel of my departure, my son. My strength was already being called here. When you were born, you inherited the Emerald Soul. From the moment of your birth, my power began to wane. Azar took advantage of this also in power and began his subterfuge. My will, the foundation of my reign, was needed to anchor the seal. I became the mountain at the base of the prison, the bedrock upon which the others stand. But weakened as I was, the veil...began to falter"

As if summoned by their words, a tremor ran through the obsidian floor. The placid emerald river above began to churn. A deep, discordant shriek echoed from its depths, a sound of pure, divine rage that grated on the soul. The nebulae of sapphire and amethyst writhed, and a violent burst of crimson light, jagged and angry, tore through the celestial canopy.

Instantly, the four kings on their thrones became pillars of light. Nivian’s form was overlaid with glowing blueprints of impossible geometry. Valerius became a figure of shadow and iron, chains of pure will lashing out from him into the ether. Roric raised a hand, and the emerald river seemed to answer, its currents swirling into a calming, hypnotic pattern around the crimson tear. Dracovis’s aura became immense, an immovable force that stabilized the very ground beneath them.

Ains stood among them, the epicenter of the storm. His body flickered, and for a horrifying moment, Dalazar saw what lay within: a vortex of shrieking flame, a cancer of chaotic whispers, and a shattered, weeping goddess of light, all tearing at each other and at their host. Yet Ains stood firm, a silent scream of endurance on his face, his own will the nexus that held the warring deities in check.

Dalazar could only watch, a helpless bystander to a war fought on a scale he could never have conceived. He finally understood. The hum of power in the air wasn't a chorus; it was the sound of the cage bars straining.

Slowly, with the combined might of five kings, the tremor subsided. The crimson gash in the heavens healed, and the emerald river returned to its slow, majestic flow. The kings relaxed, the light receding, but the effort was etched on their spectral faces.

Ains turned to Dalazar, his expression one of immense gravity and weariness. "However, Dalazar, your task...is far different than ours. For you have tasted the cacophony of Azar's flames...and lived."

He took a step closer, his eyes, which had seen the birth of gods and monsters, locking with Dalazar’s.

"Not only this, but you have inherited a fraction of Zincara's will...made manifest in a new evolution of the Dankestu. I believe...Dalazar, that you might be the key to curing Zincara and returning her to sanity."

"You mean...I can free both Zincara and Azar from their torment....that I can save my brother, Myos, and the Kingdom."

"If there is any one of us who can...It is you."

"I can feel Okina's presence within you...my brother entrusted you with his will, with his soul. Okina...has never trusted a single soul in his entire life besides me. And when I betrayed him and sealed him in the final resting place of the Shi who would not follow me, I was sure his hatred would burn for all eternity."


"But you, Sixth King, through your valor were able to piece the veil of his malice and offer his soul something I could never grant him..."

Ain's said, turning to Dalazar before resting on his throne.

"Peace"

Dalazr eyes widned

"So I, the First King, wish to place the same faith in you that my brother did. And grant you the vestiges of my power. So that you can finally put an end to this cycle of sadness...."
Image

User avatar
Dalazar Denkou
Drifter
Posts: 233
Joined: Sat Feb 16, 2019 8:39 pm

Re: A Dynasty Falls

Post by Dalazar Denkou »

The weight of Ains’s words settled upon Dalazar, a mantle heavier than any crown. The First King, the legend whispered in cradles and classrooms, stepped back, his form shimmering with the strain of his long vigil and the release of his ancient power. A current of pure, primordial energy, tremendous and white like distant starlight, flowed from him into Dalazar. It was not a violent transfer, but a willing gift, a river finding its new course. The Zen Dankestu, his eyes flowing with its majesty, that nascent evolution of his Emerald Soul, drank it in, humming with a power it had never known.

Before Dalazar could offer his doubts, as if they could feel his trepidation, Nivian the Builder inclined his head. His throne of polished basalt seemed to fade, leaving only the king, his spirit a latticework of ethereal, golden light.

“My power is in foundations, in the logic of stone and the integrity of the arch,” Nivian stated, his measured voice a calming influence in the face of such cosmic turmoil. “But a structure is only as strong as its purpose. I have watched you, Sixth King. In the mortal realm, while your power was but a flickering ember, you saw what others missed.

You did not seek to build monuments to yourself, but to mend the bonds between your people. A granary for a starving province, a bridge to unite feuding houses, a reinforced wall for a vulnerable town. You built not with stone, but with unity. You showed them that Denkou's strength is not in one house, but in all of them standing together. You are a builder of a different kind, Dalazar. You build hope. Take my blueprint. May it grant you the wisdom to reconstruct what has been broken.”


A web of golden light detached from Nivian’s spirit, floating towards Dalazar. It folded in on itself, becoming a single, perfect cube of light that sank into his chest. He felt a surge of understanding, a grasp of systems and structures, not of buildings, but of societies, of souls.

Next, the oppressive presence of Valerius the Iron Hammer made itself known. The shadows around his throne deepened, and the air grew thick with the scent of cold iron. He did not rise, but his voice was a commander’s edict that could not be defied.

“Law!” he barked, the sound like a hammer striking an anvil. “My reign forged a kingdom from chaos through unbending rule. I broke men and nations that would not submit. I see that same iron in you, but it is tempered differently.

You hold yourself to the same standard you hold the lowest peasant as well as the nobility. That is not the strength of a tyrant, which I was. It is the strength of a true king. The chains I forge bind the guilty. Your integrity will be a shield for the innocent. Take my judgment. May it be the weight that keeps your path true.”


A single, iron-grey chain uncoiled from Valerius’s arm, slithering through the air. It did not bind Dalazar, but dissolved against his skin, sinking into his bones. He felt an unshakeable resolve settle within him, a certainty of purpose, the unyielding force of righteous conviction.

Then came the soft, ethereal whisper of Roric the Star-Gazer. His eyes, which had never left the celestial river, finally turned to Dalazar. They held the depth of the cosmos, swirling with nebulae and ancient light.

“Pana Chyo is knowledge. It is magic. It is the great current of existence,” Roric murmured, his voice seeming to come from every direction at once. “Many have sought to dam its power for their own, to command it. They see only a tool.

But you… You approached magic as a student. You spent years in the archives, not seeking spells of power, but lore of understanding. You sought to learn the rhythm of the naten, to respect its flow. To heal the land, not command it. True power is not dominion, Sixth King. It is harmony. You listen to the song of the world, where others only shout their name. Take my sight. May you read the currents of fate where others see only chaos.”


A sliver of the emerald river above detached itself, a liquid ribbon of starlight and time. It flowed down and touched Dalazar’s forehead, cool and clarifying. His mind expanded. He could feel the hum of this entire plane, the rage of the prisoners, the strain of the kings, the sorrow of Ains, and the steady, quiet flame of hope within himself, all as distinct notes in a single, complex chord.

Finally, Dalazar turned to his father. Dracovis, the Fifth King, the bedrock, rose from his throne. The sad smile was gone, replaced by an expression of profound, overwhelming pride that shattered Dalazar’s composure.

“Father…” he whispered, his voice cracking.

“My son,” Dracovis’s voice rumbled, not with the authority of a king, but with the deep, resonant love of a father. “Nivian gave you structure. Valerius gave you resolve. Roric gave you wisdom. But what can I give you that you do not already possess in abundance?

I watched them torment you. Azar’s whispers, the court’s poison, the weight of a kingdom that saw you as a crippled heir. Every day was a battle: every night, a siege upon your soul. I felt my own strength wane, called to this place, unable to shelter you as I wished. And I watched you, in that crucible of suffering, refuse to be hardened. You did not answer scorn with scorn. You did not answer hatred with hatred.”


Dracovis stepped forward, his spectral hand resting on Dalazar’s shoulder. It felt as solid as the mountains of their homeland.

“That, Dalazar, is the greatest power of all. Not the strength to conquer, but the strength to endure. Not the will to break others, but the heart to forgive. Your tenacity, your refusal to let the darkness consume you, is the one force in this universe that can counter the divine rage we have caged. It is the alchemy that can turn their madness back into sanity. My reign was the anchor. Let my legacy be your strength.”

The immense, grounding aura that was Dracovis flowed into Dalazar, not as a tool or a weapon, but as an embrace. It was the memory of a hand on his head after a nightmare, the sound of a steadying voice in the face of fear, the unwavering belief of a father in his son.

The spectral forms of the five kings shimmered, their light dimming not into darkness, but into Dalazar himself. A final chorus of voices, a convergence of their essences, echoed in the space where they had stood.

Dracovis: Our hope…

Nivian: builds now.

Valerius: stands now.

Roric: sings now.

Ains: lives now.

The powers of the five kings converged within him. The white light of Ains, the gold of Nivian, the grey of Valerius, the emerald of Roric, and the deep, earthen strength of Dracovis. They did not clash but braided together around his Emerald Soul. The Dankestu ignited, flaring into a sun of multifaceted light before settling into a prevasive silver glare. He felt himself changing, reforged. He was no longer just the Sixth King in a line of jailers.

He was the culmination of their reigns, the focus of their sacrifice, the vessel of their unified hope. He was the key. And for the first time, looking at the impossible task ahead—to face gods, to save his brother, to heal his kingdom—Dalazar did not feel fear. He felt ready. He was their song of hope, finally prepared to be sung.
Image

User avatar
Dalazar Denkou
Drifter
Posts: 233
Joined: Sat Feb 16, 2019 8:39 pm

Re: A Dynasty Falls

Post by Dalazar Denkou »

The silence that followed was not empty. It was a held breath, a moment of profound tension before the snap.

It was torn asunder by a sound like a universe of crystal shattering at once, and a choir of a billion voices singing a single, piercing, impossibly high note. The oppressive, divine pressure that the kings’ combined will had held at bay for centuries slammed back into reality. The very air grew heavy, saturated with an ancient, implacable purpose.

Before Dalazar, the space warped and coalesced. Light, pure and blinding, twisted into the form of a great, celestial serpent, its scales shimmering with the colours of nebulae and dawn. Its body was a living axiom, a flowing proof of its own perfection. Its eyes were not eyes, but twin suns of unwavering, fanatical order. This was Zincara. It did not roar; it spoke, and its voice was the sound of reality being bent to an unbreakable, geometric will.

"The cage is broken. The jailers fade. And they leave behind… a patchwork. A vessel of compromise. You stink of mortality..."

Zincara hissed, and the sound was a razor against the fabric of space-time.

Dalazar stood his ground. The storm of Zincara’s presence washed over him, a psychic gale that would have atomized a lesser being. But within him, five pillars of legacy held firm. The frantic, desperate energy of the Zen Dankestu that had seen him through his trials was now a steady, thrumming star in his eyes, guided by a new, profound understanding gifted by the five who came before.

His voice, when he spoke, was calm and clear, carrying the weight of ages and the focus of a builder’s eye. "I see you, Zincara. A light so bright it has blinded itself. A dogma so absolute it cannot tolerate the beautiful, chaotic symphony of life. You call my inheritance a patchwork. I call it unity."

The light around Zincara intensified, the crystalline choir in its voice rising in pitch until it threatened to crack the world. "UNITY?! Unity is a single, perfect note! One law. One will—one light. Your ‘unity’ is a cacophony of weak, dissonant voices. A chorus of filth that muddies the purity of existence. I will silence the noise. I will bring the peace of perfect, silent glass. Discord must cease to be!"

Dalazar took a step forward, the ground solidifying beneath his feet not by its own nature, but by his will.

"The kings before me served as your jailers," Dalazar said, his voice gaining the resonance of an oath. "They bound you with their power, hoping only to contain you. But I come with a different purpose."

He raised a hand, not in aggression, but as if presenting a thesis. Around his palm, the five legacies swirled into a visible corona. The incandescent starlight of Ains, the brilliant gold of Nivian, the stoic grey of Valerius, the deep emerald of Roric, and the unwavering, grounding brown of his father, Dracovis. They did not blend into a single colour, but orbited each other, a system of balanced, harmonious power.

"I will not build a new prison, but a sanctuary. I will not chain you, but shatter the delusion that binds your own mind. That stifles you. And with a heart that learned to endure hatred rather than reflect it, I will show you that true strength is not a single, sterile note. It is a chord, made stronger by every voice that joins it. My reign will not be an extension of your cage. It will be the end of it."

Zincara reared back, its form rippling with incandescent rage. The crystalline choir shattered into a shriek. Its voice lost the last vestiges of celestial harmony, becoming a razor of pure, divine fury.

"YOU ARE CHAOSSSS! A LEGACY OF BLOOD AND HATRED, DISORDER! A MONGREL KING CHAMPIONING IMPERFECTION! I WILL STERILIZE THIS REALITY, I WILL QUELL YOU STORM!"

Lances of solidified law, shimmering with geometric light, erupted from Zincara’s body, screaming towards Dalazar. They were not designed to kill, but to correct, to erase the "flaw" of his existence from the universal equation.

Dalazar’s eyes ignited with the full, unified power of the Dankestu. Lightning coursing through him in copious amounts, the very boundaries of the Sovereign plane sparking to life around him.

"My name is Dalazar, Sixth King of Denkou," he stated, his voice a bedrock against the storm. "I won't deny your words...not after what you have suffered."

He met the assault not with force, but with understanding. "You have chased a single purpose the whole of your existence, sang a single song, held a single tune... To correct the world that Aphosis tried to tear asunder. To protect this world from his twisted desires..."

As the first lance of pure order reached him, he didn't block it. Instead, the golden light of Nivian bloomed from his chest, projecting an intricate barrier. The lance struck the ethereal architecture, and instead of shattering it, was caught, its energy refracted and redirected, forced to flow along the beautiful, complex curves, its singular purpose diluted into a thousand lesser streams of harmless light.

"Your child Azar's anguish is the root of this. Fulgora's betrayal has warped him from a creature of honor to a malicious curse that is burning my home from the inside out. From Valor to vengeance."

Dalzar said as the power warped around him.

The celestial serpent bellowed its frustration, its sun-eyes blazing. It unleashed its very essence, a storm of perfect angles and crystalline shards designed to overwrite reality itself, to turn the world into a flawless, lifeless diamond.

Dalazar moved through the storm. Roric's emerald sight showed him the path, the infinitesimal gaps in the god's perfect assault. Ains’s starlight flared from his hands, not as a weapon, but as a seed. Where the sterile light of Zincara touched it, it did not annihilate, but created—birthing tiny, fleeting nebulas of chaotic potential, momentary sparks of imperfection that caused the god's attack to stutter.

"Right now, he is rampaging in my kingdom. I wish to bring peace to him...peace to you."

He was close now, within the maelstrom of Zincara’s being. He could feel its core—a cold, hard knot of fear. The fear of being flawed. The terror of the chaos it was born from.

Finally, he brought forth the power of Dracovis. The deep, grounding brown light, the light of love and patience, of enduring pain without breaking. He reached out his hand, palm open, and pressed it against the radiant scales of the serpent god.

He did not push. He did not strike. He connected.

Into that perfect, sterile being, he poured not an attack, but a memory. The memory of his father's sacrifice. The feeling of holding a dying bird as a child. The taste of shared bread with his companions. The quiet joy of watching a flawed, misshapen tree grow against all odds. He poured in the entire, messy, beautiful, painful, glorious cacophony of life.

Zincara’s single, piercing note wavered.

For the first time, it fractured. A second note joined it, then a third, discordant and jarring. The pure white light of its body flickered, and a speck of blue appeared on one scale. Then a splash of red. Then a swirl of green. The colours of nebula and dawn on its scales were no longer just a shimmer, but began to bleed into its very being.

The serpent convulsed, not in rage, but in confusion. Its sun-eyes, for a millennium the source of unwavering law, flickered. And in them, for a single, infinite moment, Dalazar saw not a god, but a frightened child, terrified of the dark.

"I offer you the chance," Dalazar said, his voice soft now, a balm on the psychic wound. "To be free of your solitude....let someone else... carry the weight."

"Those eyes... That Dankestu is unlike the one Aphosis created..."

Zincara said as his silver eyes shone bright.

"It was born from you light, this light I was born with, this light I cultivated that has connected me to the world. It is because of you...Zincara. Even in blind fury, you have been protecting us, shepherding us."

Dalazar's hand lay now on his chest, the warmth of the fragment of Zincara he had inherited shining brightly, ebbing warmly within him.

"I...was faced with great sorrow as well, a terrible hatred. But...I wish to believe that order is not so definitive. That is, like love, can take many forms."

Dalazar stated.

"Let us create an order in which all things can exist in peace..."

Dalzar extended his hand toward the cosmic serpent.
Image

User avatar
Dalazar Denkou
Drifter
Posts: 233
Joined: Sat Feb 16, 2019 8:39 pm

Re: A Dynasty Falls

Post by Dalazar Denkou »

The universe held its breath.

On the Sovereign Plane, where thoughts were landscapes and will was weather, Dalazar, King of Denkou, stood before a god of absolute order. The cosmic serpent, Zincara, was a being of such terrifying purity that its presence was actively unmaking the messy, chaotic concept of life around it. Its scales were a storm of blinding light, its voice a crystalline choir of a billion souls singing a single, perfect, crushing note of law. Worlds had been turned to silent, flawless glass under its gaze.

Dalazar had climbed the spire of reality to face it, bearing the five legacies of mortal champions, a patchwork of courage and sorrow woven into his own soul. He had weathered the psychic storm, stood firm against the axiomatic onslaught, and offered a truth the serpent had long forgotten.

He had offered his hand.

And the cosmic serpent did not take it.

Instead, it recoiled, a movement so vast it felt as though a constellation had flinched. The blinding, absolute light of its form softened, the pressure on reality easing from a crushing weight to a profound, heavy presence. The twin suns of its eyes dimmed, the fanatical certainty within them dissolving into a swirling nebula of confusion and a pain so ancient it predated mountains.

The crystalline choir was gone. When Zincara spoke again, its voice was not a universal axiom, but a sound like a glacier calving, a breaking of something that had been frozen for millennia. It was a single voice, rough and cracked from disuse over an eternity.

"Peace..."

The word was not a statement, but a question. An echo from a forgotten time, spoken by a being that had conflated the concept with silence and stillness. The idea that peace could exist amidst the "cacophony" that Dalazar championed was a paradox that its very existence struggled to comprehend. The roar of cities, the weeping of mourners, the laughter of children—to Zincara, these were the sounds of shattered glass, the noise of imperfection.

"It is the sound of living," Dalazar replied, his voice gentle, his hand remaining outstretched, an unwavering offer. "It is grief, and joy. It is a struggle and a triumph. It is the friction that creates the spark. You believe life is a flawless crystal, Zincara. But life is not crystal. It is a forest. It grows, tangles, dies, and is reborn from the decay. That is its order."

The serpent's form drifted, its great head lowering until its nebulous eyes were level with the mortal king. The raw fury was gone, replaced by a deep, resonant sorrow that vibrated in the air. For an eon, it had sought to scrub the universe clean of the chaotic taint of Aphosis, the Unraveling Void. It had seen its child, Azar, born of that cosmic struggle —a flaw, a living embodiment of chaos that had to be contained, erased, and perfected into nothingness. This quest had become a crusade, consuming its identity until only the crusade remained.

Dalazar countered gently. His outstretched hand remained. "My father, Dracovis, taught me that love is not a feeling, but a choice. An action. A decision to build, to protect, to endure with someone, not just for them. Your order is one of isolation. The order I propose is one of connection. Your child, Azar, is not a curse to be erased. He is a wound to be healed. A wound you share."

The colours on Zincara's scales stopped swirling randomly. They began to flow, to organize, not into a single, uniform hue, but into a breathtaking, living tapestry. The deep blue of a lonely star, the fiery orange of a defiant sunset, the gentle green of new growth. The billion fractured voices in its soul did not return to a single note, but found their places in a chord of unimaginable complexity and beauty.

Slowly, hesitantly, the titanic head of the divine serpent lowered. Its sun-like eyes, now softened and filled with the colours of its own changing nature, focused on Dalazar’s hand. It saw the scars on his knuckles, earned defending a city wall. It saw the resolve in his grip, forged by a promise to his people. It saw not a jailer, not a conqueror, but an equal.

"You... would share this burden?" The voice was no longer a shriek or a choir. It was a harmony, vast and deep as space itself. "The vigilance against the echoes of Aphosis... the shaping of a world that is not glass, but... a garden?"

"A garden," Dalazar affirmed, a smile finally touching his lips. "One that needs both a gardener's gentle hand and a bedrock of law to grow upon. One that is stronger for its diversity, not weaker."

With a motion infinitely slow and yet which shook the foundations of the Sovereign Plane, the snout of the great divine serpent touched Dalazar’s palm.

There was no cataclysm, no explosion of power. There was only a connection—a pact. The light of Zincara flowed into Dalazar, not to overwhelm him, but to join the five legacies already swirling there. The souls of the previous kings—the steadfast king, the raging king, the relentless one, the deep one, and the whispering one—churned within him. Zincara's essence became a brilliant, silver-white thread, weaving them together, giving their patchwork of power a divine, cosmic context. He felt Zincara's eons of loneliness, its profound grief for Azar, its terror of the Void. He accepted it all.

In turn, Zincara felt the king’s love for his city, Denkou. It felt the sting of his losses, the simple joy of a shared meal, the fierce determination of a father, the raw grief of losing his twin brother, and the crushing weight of his duty as the sixth inheritor. It felt, for the first time, not the flaw in the mortal's soul, but the strength forged by that flaw.

The oppressive pressure on reality vanished, replaced by a sense of boundless potential. His eyes, once mortal, now ignited with a fusion of his own will and Zincara's cosmic sight. The light of the Dankestu, the Emerald Ocean's gaze, shone from them, a constant, living beacon. Dalazar's eyes would never close again; eternally, they would be a bastion, the bearer of the pact, Zen Dankestu. He had sacrificed his rest, his quiet moments of humanity, to become a perpetual warden. But he was not alone.

The great serpent rested its head on the conceptual ground before him, its form no longer a weapon, but a landscape of nascent stars and nebulae. For the first time in millennia, it felt not the drive to purify, but the desire to create.

“Show me, Dalazar of Denkou,” the harmony of Zincara resonated, filled with a fragile, dawning wonder. “Show me how to build with flawed stones.”

Dalazar looked down at his hand, now glowing with a soft, silvery light, then back at the god who had become his partner. Together, they turned their shared gaze back towards the tapestry of reality, towards the vibrant, messy, beautifully imperfect world of Vescrutia. The Sovereign plane dissolved, and standing vigil over him was Emerion.

"My Lord...you have just been standing here...are you alright?"

Her voice was laced with concern. Dalzars' eyes were closed, but after a deep breath, he slowly opened them. When his gaze rested on Emerion, she felt the vastness of eternity before her, like looking into the eyes of divinity itself. Her eyes began to swell with tears.

"I am fine, Emerion...better"

He looked toward his hand, the soft ebbing of light seeping from him.

"Come, let's go save our home..."
Image

Post Reply

Return to “Emeralds Ascension”