The stairs spiraled downward into darkness, but it was not the absence of light that made Thalen hesitate it was the weight. Each step dragged at his body like a thousand invisible hands, pressing down, testing not his strength but his will. The chain wrapped around his left arm pulsed with a soft hum, while the torch in his right hand flickered gently without flame, a phantom reminder of what it could become.
Behind him, the entrance to the bridge had vanished. The obsidian titan had folded shut again, sealing off the path to the others. He was alone now, deeper than anyone had descended in two decades. The silence was thick, broken only by the faint sound of his own breathing, and the low whisper of something ancient threading itself through the very walls.
His fingers tightened on the torch. It was warm but never burned. The chain clinked with each step, but never slowed him. They felt more than objects like symbols, like burdens and flames passed down through generations of those who had failed this place. Maybe that's why no one had taken both. Maybe that's why none had returned from this depth.
After what felt like an hour, the stairs ended.
A circular room awaited, wider than any chamber above. The walls were smooth obsidian and etched with runes too old to decipher. At the center stood a pedestal with no torch, no sword, no scroll. Just a single chair throne-like in shape, cracked down the middle, half-sunken into the floor.
And then the voice came.
It was not loud. It didn't need to be. It echoed through the chamber like it had always been there, waiting for someone to finally listen.
"So... another dares to descend."
Thalen turned in place, searching for the speaker, but saw no one. The voice was not coming from a body. It came from the room itself, from the stone, the air, even the weight of his own thoughts.
"You took both. The fire and the chain. Why?"
"I couldn't choose one over the other," Thalen answered, surprised at how steady his voice was. "Power without responsibility becomes cruelty. Responsibility without strength becomes despair."
Silence followed, but it was not empty.
Something stirred beneath the floor, like a deep breath being drawn for the first time in centuries.
"Many before you came with swords sharper than yours. Auras brighter. Wills louder. But none could say what you just did."
A faint light shimmered along the throne's base, casting runes into view that weren't there a moment before. They moved like water, shifting in rhythm with the voice.
"I am the Gatekeeper," it said. "Not of the stone. Of the flame. Of the tyrant's spirit."
Thalen's breath caught.
He wasn't supposed to know about the Tyrant's Spirit yet not really. It had been hinted at in ancient texts and whispered between elite aura masters, but no one alive, save the nine, had ever encountered it directly.
"I'm not ready," Thalen said quietly. "I'm not strong enough."
"And yet you are here," the Gatekeeper replied. "That makes you more ready than you believe."
A circle of fire suddenly erupted around the base of the throne. Not hot, not consuming just… alive. The torch in Thalen's hand flared to life for the first time, glowing with a silver flame. The chain around his wrist tightened, then loosened again, as if measuring him.
"You carry the Blade Aura," the Gatekeeper murmured. "Simple. Direct. Often dismissed. Yet it is one of the oldest aura types, forged in clarity and focus. You have not unlocked its true depth."
Thalen looked down at the torch, then at the chain.
"Why show me this now?"
"Because this is the edge of the world you know. Past this point is not just trial it is transformation. If you step forward, you will begin the path of those who might awaken the Tyrant's Spirit. But you must still walk far before you earn its name."
"I thought no one was supposed to reach this until the final exam," Thalen said, narrowing his eyes.
The Gatekeeper didn't laugh. But if it could have, it would.
"This is not the Tyrant's Spirit. It is the echo of the one who first wielded it. A whisper. A measure."
"So what is this trial, then?"
The flames rose. The throne cracked louder. The room trembled.
"You will see who you are when your aura is stripped. When your sword is taken. When no one remembers your name. When you are forgotten."
Suddenly, the chain uncoiled itself, falling to the floor. The torch's flame extinguished. Kindle vanished from Thalen's belt like smoke. His aura so familiar, so hard-earned flickered and went silent inside him. It was like losing a limb, like being unmade.
He dropped to one knee, the weight of emptiness crashing over him. His breathing quickened. Panic clawed at his chest.
The Gatekeeper spoke again, softer now.
"Without aura. Without steel. Without name. Who are you, Thalen?"
The darkness closed in.
Thalen gasped.
And then he remembered.
He remembered training at dawn when others slept. Remembered falling in sparring matches and rising again, bloodied but unyielding. Remembered defending weaker classmates despite being called weak himself. Remembered choosing Maika. Remembered not out of pride or pity, but belief.
"I'm not my aura," he whispered. "I'm not my sword. I'm not even my victories."
He stood.
"I'm the one who keeps walking."
The flame returned not to the torch, but to his chest. It burned quietly, without consuming, silver and calm. The chain lifted itself and wrapped gently around his forearm once more, like an old friend. Kindle appeared again at his side, but different now etched with new runes, its edge faintly glowing.
And the Gatekeeper said no more.
The flame circle vanished.
The throne cracked fully down the middle and then crumbled into dust.
A new stairway opened in the floor, lit by silver light.
Thalen did not run.
He walked.
And above, far in the heights of the ancient citadel, the nine watched in silence as the tenth flame flickered to life.