The silver-lit stairwell descended into silence, not the emptiness Thalen had grown used to but a silence that was full. It pulsed with energy, vibrating slightly beneath each step, as though the ground itself was holding its breath. He walked with renewed clarity, Kindle at his side and the chain secure once more on his arm, but there was no comfort in the return of his tools. What he had experienced in the chamber above had stripped him bare and it had built him anew.
No one had told him that the Tyrant Spirit Exam was more than physical. But it made sense now. Power was not only something to be wielded it was something to be understood, earned in the bones and soul.
The stairway ended at a narrow corridor carved from smooth, shimmering stone, unlike anything he'd seen in the Citadel. The walls reflected faint glimpses of light reflections of Thalen himself, but distorted. In one panel, he looked older. In another, he wore armor he didn't recognize. One reflection bore golden eyes. Another showed his body wrapped in black flame.
He tore his eyes away.
The corridor ended in a large chamber that opened suddenly, revealing a high ceiling and smooth white stone floor. In its center stood a figure.
A man.
He was tall, hooded, and clad in robes of layered silver and violet. His aura was unlike anything Thalen had ever sensed calm, ancient, yet unmistakably alive. His sword was sheathed across his back, longer than most and humming quietly, like it sang only to him.
"I've been waiting," the man said, voice deep and even.
"Who are you?" Thalen asked, his own voice cautious but steady.
"One of Nine," the man replied. "I am called Velis. I am the Warden of the Deep Flame. And you, Thalen, have passed further than most. You've earned the right to be seen."
Velis stepped forward, his gaze measuring but not unkind. "Not many take both the torch and the chain. That was your first test."
"You mean I could've failed just by choosing?"
"No," Velis said. "You would have failed if you didn't choose fully. Half-measures are not welcome where tyrants tread."
The word stung not for its weight, but because Thalen still wasn't sure what it truly meant.
"Tyrants," Thalen echoed. "Why that name? If they protect the world, why are they called that?"
Velis's eyes flickered. "Because the world does not love those who hold it together through force. Because people remember power and forget sacrifice. Tyrants are feared long before they are praised. And those with the Tyrant Spirit… their existence alone challenges the balance."
Thalen nodded slowly. He understood. Even now, he felt something stirring in his chest something that hadn't been there before the chamber above.
"So this is the end of the exam?" he asked. "Have I passed?"
Velis smiled, but it was not a pleasant smile. It was the kind of smile one wore when seeing someone about to walk into a storm.
"No, Thalen. You've reached the middle."
He raised a hand. Fire leapt to his palm not orange or red, but deep violet laced with silver, coiling like smoke made of stars.
"This is the True Flame. It lives only in those who have awakened the Tyrant Spirit. But it cannot be given. It must be born."
"I'm not ready," Thalen said again.
Velis chuckled. "Good. Those who think they are… break."
He lowered his hand. "But you are ready for the next stage. To train with one of us. Each candidate who reaches this chamber is chosen by a Wielder to be shaped."
"Why would you choose me?" Thalen asked. "I'm not special. My aura is just Blade. The others in my group some had Elemental, one even had Echo."
"Do you know why the Blade Aura is feared by those who understand it?" Velis asked.
Thalen shook his head.
"Because it's pure. No element, no trick, no flair. It's aura in its rawest, most disciplined form. Your aura doesn't grant you flashy techniques. It sharpens what you already are. That makes you dangerous, because the only thing between your blade and greatness is how far you're willing to push yourself."
Thalen stood a little straighter.
Velis stepped forward, his aura suddenly rising like a wall of pressure. The chamber darkened. His violet fire danced along his shoulders, coiling around his sword.
"You want to train under me, Thalen?" he asked.
Thalen met his eyes. "Yes."
"Then draw your sword."
Thalen blinked. "Now?"
"Now."
Kindle slid into his palm like a whisper, its hilt warm, its edge glowing faintly with the fire from earlier. He took a stance, feet firm, eyes narrowed.
Velis didn't move. His sword remained sheathed.
Thalen waited.
Then, without warning, he leapt forward, blade flashing in a clean arc toward Velis's chest.
He struck nothing.
Velis had vanished.
A boot connected with Thalen's back, sending him sprawling across the floor. He rolled and rose instantly, swinging wide, but the space was empty again.
"Too slow," Velis's voice came from somewhere behind him. "Too loud in your movement. Too hesitant in your mind."
Thalen took a breath. Cleared his thoughts.
He focused not on where Velis was, but where his aura bent the air.
He moved again, faster, blade striking the spot
Velis's sword met his with a crash.
The Warden of the Deep Flame had finally drawn it.
Thalen pushed forward, his blade locked with Velis's, teeth clenched. But Velis did not yield. With a casual movement, he sent Thalen flying again, sword clattering across the floor.
But he didn't mock him. He only nodded.
"You're raw," he said. "But not dull. I will forge you."
Thalen rose again. "When do we start?"
Velis smiled this time with something close to respect.
"We already have."