Chapter 385: Translations (3)
They pressed onward.
The first chamber lay beyond the altar, its entry framed by two massive doors. Each door bore a carving, one a dragon descending in flame, the other a dragon rising in water. Their eyes had been inlaid with stone long since shattered, leaving hollow sockets that seemed to glare at the intruders.
The doors should not have moved. Stone that size should have defied them. But when Lindarion laid his palm against one, it shifted. Effortless. As though the temple itself recognized his touch.
The commander stiffened. "What sorcery is this?"
"An open door," Lindarion said flatly. He pushed, and the chamber revealed itself.
It was smaller than the hall, but no less deliberate. The walls were covered in murals, painted in pigments that hadn’t faded despite centuries of stone and silence.
Dragons coiled through skies of gold. Figures with half-scaled faces raised weapons against armies of men. Serpents writhed beneath oceans of fire. The scenes carried no words, only images, but the story pulsed with violence and reverence alike.
One soldier muttered, voice cracking: "They worshiped monsters."
Another whispered: "Or they were the monsters."
Lindarion’s hand clenched at his side.
[System Notice: Murals identified.]
[Partial translation:]
The covenant was forged.
The blood of two became the breath of one.
The serpent chained, the sky divided.
[Error: translation incomplete.]
The words burned against his vision before flickering out.
He stepped deeper into the chamber, eyes fixed on the largest mural: a dragon and a man standing together, their hands clasped, light blazing between them. Behind them, six figures stood like sentinels. Before them, a serpent writhed, its body wrapped in chains that dug into its flesh.
Ashwing whimpered, curling tighter against him.
Nysha’s voice broke the silence. "This isn’t just worship." She moved closer, shadows flickering like smoke. Her crimson gaze narrowed at the mural. "This was covenant. Pact. Binding."
The humans shifted uneasily. One spat into the dust, muttering about demons and false gods. Another turned his back to the murals entirely, refusing to look.
Lindarion’s chest throbbed with the pulse of his core. ’Selene.’
Her warmth stirred faintly in response, drowsy, reluctant. Master...
’Stay asleep. Just... feel this with me.’
Always. Her presence curled faintly against him, grounding, though she did not fully wake.
He exhaled and forced his focus back to the chamber.
The murals ended at a pedestal in the center of the room. Upon it sat a bowl of stone, empty but carved with such precision it seemed delicate, fragile. Etched spirals ran along its rim, sharper than knives.
The commander caught sight of it and swore. "We should break it. Burn this place before it poisons more minds."
"No."
The single word cut across the chamber, sharp as a blade. Every head turned toward Lindarion. His eyes remained locked on the pedestal.
"This temple has slept for centuries," he continued, voice steady. "It did not wake for you. It woke now. That means it waits for something."
The commander’s jaw tightened. He wanted to argue. But he did not. Not with the prince who had cut through mutants like fire through dry grass.
Instead, he gave a curt nod. "Then what do you command?"
Lindarion’s gaze lingered on the bowl. His system flickered again.
[System Notice: Object identified.]
[Designation: Vessel of Offering.]
[Status: dormant.]
[Requirement: ████ bloodline activation.]
His teeth clenched.
’I know what it wants,’ he thought darkly. ’And it will never have it.’
He turned sharply from the pedestal. "We search the other chambers. No one touches this."
The soldiers exhaled in quiet relief, though the unease clung to them still. They shuffled toward the next door, eager to leave the murals behind.
Nysha lingered at his side, shadows curling faintly around her wrists. Her gaze flicked to him. "You saw something more."
He met her eyes. For a heartbeat, he almost answered. Almost let her in. But then the weight of the soldiers’ eyes pressed against his back, their whispers of savior, prince, leader. He could not fracture here.
Instead, he said flatly: "I saw enough."
Her eyes narrowed, but she did not push. Shadows coiled tighter, silent as ever.
Together, they turned from the mural, the bowl, the statue of chained serpent.
The temple had given them its first secret.
And Lindarion knew, six chambers waited. Six seals. Six truths buried in stone.
—
The third chamber’s doors were heavier, their carvings strange. Not dragons soaring. Not humans kneeling. Chains. Endless, twisting chains, carved with such detail that the torchlight made them slither.
Lindarion pressed the stone open. The hinges groaned like something long buried.
Inside, the air was colder. The ceiling drooped low, carved with great nets of links that looked ready to fall and strangle whoever stood beneath. The walls told no tales of glory, only wings bound, jaws shackled, scales pierced with spikes hammered through.
At the center stood a dais, its surface cracked, the stone stained darker than age should allow. Grooves spiraled from it, fine channels etched to carry whatever once spilled there.
The soldiers muttered uneasily. One spat. "That’s no altar."
"A drain," another whispered, pale. "For blood."
Nysha’s shadows curled closer to her like wary hounds. Her eyes flicked to Lindarion, hard. "Not worship. Punishment."
Lindarion stepped closer, the torchlight dragging the grooves into harsh relief. His chest tightened, not from fear, but from the weight pressing on the chamber. A memory that wasn’t his own.
’Don’t touch it.’
The voice came small and sharp in his mind. Ashwing.
The "lizard" on his shoulder was rigid, claws hooked in his cloak. His scales flickered faintly, light beneath the dull brown facade.
Lindarion stilled. ’Why?’
Ashwing’s answer came quick, unsteady, like a child blurting before thinking. ’It’s bad. It drank. A lot. Too much. I can smell it even though it’s old. If you put your hand there, it’ll try to drink you too.’
Lindarion glanced at the dais again. ’Drink what?’
Ashwing’s tail lashed. ’Blood. Fire. Souls. Everything. I don’t know! His tone cracked higher, the way it always did when he was rattled. But it’s not for praying. It’s for breaking.’
The system jittered across Lindarion’s sight.
[System Notice: ██Sanguine Siphon██ detected.]
[Function: Extraction → Conversion → Binding.]
[Warning: Anomaly linked to bloodline resonance.]
[Error: Corruption threshold exceeded.]
[Error: ███████ interference.]
Then static tore through the words until nothing remained but blurred light.
"Lindarion."
Nysha’s voice cut through the noise. She stood nearer now, eyes burning red in the dim. "You’re too close."
He didn’t answer. His hand hovered, but he didn’t reach.
Behind them, the commander barked for rubble. Soldiers obeyed quickly, dragging fallen stone to seal the doorway. Not from order alone, fear lent speed to their hands.
Ashwing pressed tighter to Lindarion’s neck, his thoughts tumbling clumsy and quick. ’Don’t look at it anymore. It feels like it’s looking back. Can we go now? Please?’
Lindarion’s gaze lingered one heartbeat longer on the dais, then he turned.