The pressure in the dining hall grew heavier.
The air didn't change. The room didn't shake. But every person seated at that long table could feel it—Alaric wasn't going to agree.
He stood at the far end, both hands pressed to the table, fingers curled slightly. The glass of untouched wine sat beside him, casting a faint red reflection on the polished surface.
At the other end, Malrik waited. Calm. Expectant.
The rift still hovered behind him. A slit in space. A thing that wasn't a thing, staring through.
It watched Alaric like it was trying to remember him.
Or maybe choose him.
---
"You want me to lead this house," Alaric said, voice low and steady.
Malrik nodded once.
"You want me to accept what you've done. To clean it. To carry it. To pretend like this family is something that can still be saved."
Vestra opened her mouth, but Alaric raised a hand. She stopped.
"No more games," he said.
"You think if I wear the ring and smile in public, it erases the bodies? The demons? The mind-breaking curses you tied to my sister?"
Malrik's voice was still gentle. "We did what we had to—"
"No," Alaric snapped. "You did what you wanted. What felt powerful."
---
He stepped back from the table.
"I'm not taking the name."
A silence fell over the room like cold snow.
One cousin let out a breath too loud.
A chair creaked.
Then Malrik leaned forward.
"I was hoping you'd say that."
The rift behind him pulsed.
---
The psychic field around the room changed.
It didn't just suppress now—it began to twist. Pull. Rewire.
Alaric felt the tug on his mind. Like hands reaching into his thoughts, trying to stir them.
But they didn't get far.
Anchor Field
— He summoned his defense in an instant, locking his core thoughts in place.
Clarity returned.
He took a step back.
Then another.
But the moment he turned toward the exit—
The room vanished.
Not physically.
But in the mind.
A complete field inversion.
The table, the walls, the light—all swallowed into a black sphere of psychic nullspace.
He now stood on nothing.
Weightless.
Empty.
And across from him, alone in this space—
Malrik.
---
No table.
No family.
Just father and son.
Alaric's voice cut through the dark.
"You built this field for me."
"Yes," Malrik said calmly.
"You learned from watching me fight."
"Of course."
"You copied my power."
Malrik gave the smallest smile.
"No, Alaric. I didn't copy you. I made you."
---
That broke something.
Not in Alaric—but around him.
The field cracked.
Vector Grip
— He seized control of the tension in the air and snapped it like a string.
The darkness trembled.
Malrik raised a hand to stabilize it, but Alaric was already in motion.
Vector Burst
— He launched forward, faster than the eye could follow.
Malrik blocked with a thought-shield. Barely in time.
Their powers collided—not as magic, not as spellwork, but as raw psychic will.
Sound didn't exist here.
But the pressure did.
Two waves pressing against each other, thought against thought.
Then—
Alaric's hand lashed out.
Not to strike.
To read.
Mental Rewind
— He pulled the last thirty seconds from Malrik's mind and saw—
A ritual.
A knife.
Seraphine. Bound again. This time not for bait—but for binding.
She was to become the host for the rift.
Not a sacrifice.
A vessel.
---
The field shattered.
The illusion broke.
They were back in the dining hall. The table split down the center. The wine spilled like blood. All the nobles had fled—gone. The rift behind Malrik was open wider now. A hum filled the room like thousands of thoughts whispering at once.
Alaric stepped back.
He was breathing harder now.
But his voice didn't shake.
"You were never going to give me the house."
Malrik's smile returned.
"No. I was going to feed you to it."
---
From the rift—
A shape stepped through.
Tall.
Hollow-eyed.
Its body was human.
Its mind was not.
It reached toward Alaric, not with a weapon, but with recognition.
> You… remember the Crown.
---
Alaric blinked.
And for one second—just one—his own reflection blinked back at him.
The thing that stepped through the rift wasn't human.
But it wore the shape of one.
Its body moved like it remembered how people were supposed to walk, but its steps didn't match the floor. Its skin had no color. Not pale. Not gray. Just… blank.
But the face—
The face was Alaric's.
Not an exact copy.
More like a drawing made from memory. Slightly off. The nose too sharp. The eyes too wide. The smile wrong.
And it never blinked.
---
Alaric didn't move. He kept his stance steady, eyes locked on the creature as it approached.
Malrik stepped aside without a word, giving it space like a priest welcoming a god into the room.
The creature stopped a few paces from Alaric.
Then it spoke.
But not with its mouth.
The voice filled the room like a whisper from behind the ears.
> "You know us."
Alaric's throat tightened.
> "You remember."
"I don't remember you," he said out loud.
> "You don't. But you will."
It took one step closer.
> "You carry the pattern. The thought-shape. The broken line left behind by those who vanished before this world remembered magic."
Alaric's heart pounded, but he didn't let it show.
"What are you?"
> "A copy."
> "A shadow."
> "A door."
The answers came not as one, but as many voices speaking at once—like thoughts layered over each other, echoing out of rhythm.
> "We were sealed. Split. Buried beneath faith and flame."
> "The Church thought they ended us."
> "They only silenced one page."
> "You are the next."
---
Alaric felt something stir in the back of his skull.
Not pain.
Not memory.
But a code.
A shape trying to reassemble itself. Something hidden deep in his thoughts—so deep he hadn't known it was there.
Seraphine.
He grabbed onto her name.
Focused.
Grounded himself.
"You came for her."
The creature didn't nod.
It didn't need to.
"She's not your host."
> "She's your anchor."
Alaric blinked. "What?"
> "You think you were born here."
> "You were placed here."
> "The girl is your point of contact."
> "Your tether."
His fists clenched.
"She's not a tool."
> "She was never meant to be."
> "She is why you stayed sane."
> "She is why your mind survived the shift."
---
Behind the creature, the rift pulsed again. Wider.
Something bigger moved behind it. Something that didn't step forward. Something that watched.
Waiting.
Not hungry.
Just… observant.
---
Malrik spoke again, softly. "They don't want to hurt you, Alaric."
Alaric turned sharply. "They want to use me."
"They want to unlock you," Malrik corrected. "They want you to remember who you really are."
Alaric's voice was cold now.
"I know who I am."
"Do you?" Malrik said.
"You're not from this world. You're not bound by its magic. You're not made of its laws."
"You don't have to be a Veyron."
He stepped closer.
"You don't have to be anything."
---
Alaric took a breath.
Long.
Controlled.
Then looked at the thing wearing his face.
And he asked one question:
"What happens if I say no?"
---
The creature tilted its head.
And finally smiled.
But not cruelly.
Not angrily.
With understanding.
> "Then we leave."
> "We close the door."
> "And you become a target for everything that fears it opening again."
---
Behind Alaric, the air shifted.
Not an attack.
A pulse.
From somewhere outside.
He turned just slightly, eyes narrowing.
Someone was approaching the manor.
Fast.
Powerful.
He recognized the signature before it even entered the gate.
Kaelion.
And someone else—
A priest.
A royal one.
The Church had arrived.
---
Alaric looked back at the creature.
"You brought them here."
> "No."
> "They followed you."
---
Malrik's smile faltered.
Just for a moment.
Then the creature stepped backward, back into the rift.
> "You chose silence."
> "But the world is already listening."
The rift closed.
Gone.
Just like that.
The light returned to the room.
Malrik stood alone now, breathing harder than he let on.
"You could have had everything," he said.
"I don't want everything," Alaric replied.
He turned away.
Walked toward the ruined doors.
And just before stepping out—
He looked back one last time.
"I just want you all to stop."
The manor gates exploded inward.
Not with fire. Not with magic.
With light.
Blinding, golden light, pouring through the shattered archway like a second sunrise.
Alaric stepped aside just as the courtyard cracked under pressure. He didn't need to ask who it was.
He could feel it.
Divine energy.
But not the raw, twisting kind the Inquisitor had used.
This was more refined. Controlled.
Disciplined.
---
From the glow stepped three armored figures.
All wore white.
All bore the crest of the Radiant Church—a sun with spears behind it.
But only one drew the eye.
She was tall. Graceful. Silver hair braided down her back. Her armor gleamed like it had never known a battlefield, though her eyes told a different story.
She walked with full authority.
And when she spoke, even the air listened.
"Alaric Veyron," she called. "You are requested by the Seat of the Saintblood to answer for the disturbance your presence has caused."
He didn't flinch.
Behind him, Malrik stepped into view again, brushing dust from his sleeve.
"Welcome," Malrik said smoothly. "You're late."
The woman ignored him.
Her eyes stayed on Alaric.
"You've been marked by forbidden resonance. You've interacted with a sealed psychic artifact. And now you stand as the last witness to a rift that should not exist."
"I closed it," Alaric replied.
"That's not the point," she said.
"Then what is?"
She took one step forward.
"The point," she said, "is that you survived it."
---
The soldiers behind her moved slightly.
Not to attack.
To remind him: they could.
Alaric remained still.
"I'm not going anywhere," he said, "unless someone explains exactly what you're accusing me of."
"You're not being accused," she said. "You're being studied."
That made something cold stir in his chest.
"I'm not a subject."
"No," she said softly. "You're a problem. One we're not ready to solve… but must contain."
---
Kaelion arrived with less light but more weight.
His boots crushed gravel. His coat flared behind him. His expression unreadable.
He stepped between Alaric and the Church envoy like someone moving through the middle of a chessboard.
"No one is claiming him," Kaelion said calmly.
The Church woman frowned. "We are not claiming."
"You're threatening."
"Your silence says you understand the risk."
Kaelion didn't smile.
"If I understand anything, it's how fast you'll burn through your blessings if you try to detain a psychic in front of an imperial witness."
She didn't answer.
Because he was right.
Alaric didn't need to fight.
He just needed to stand there.
---
A long pause followed.
Then the Church envoy reached into her cloak and pulled out a folded scroll.
She offered it to Alaric.
He didn't take it.
She let it fall to the ground.
"It's not a warrant," she said. "It's an invitation."
"For what?"
"To confession."
---
The soldiers turned.
She did too.
But her final words lingered:
"The last time the world heard that kind of whisper," she said, "cities burned. Kingdoms fell. Entire languages vanished from memory."
Alaric stood still.
And she added:
"Don't be the next chapter in that story."
---
They vanished into the white light again.
Leaving behind cracked stone, torn banners, and the scent of incense that refused to fade.
---
Kaelion waited until they were gone, then turned to Alaric.
"You've made a mess."
"They came to me."
"They always do," Kaelion muttered.
He pulled something from his coat—another letter, this one marked with a royal seal.
"What's that?"
Kaelion handed it over.
"Recognition."
Alaric unfolded it.
Read one line.
And for the first time in hours, his chest tightened.
> By order of the Imperial Court, Alaric Veyron is hereby recognized as the acting heir to House Veyron.
---
"I didn't ask for this," he said.
"No," Kaelion replied. "But you earned it."
"And now?"
Kaelion started walking back toward the gate.
"Now you find out what it means to be the one everyone's watching."
---
Alaric stood in the rubble.
Family behind him.
The Church ahead.
And in his pocket—
A sealed book, waiting to be opened.