Chapter 237: The Reaper''s Wish (Three)
A torrent of emotions assaulted Vir as his predecessor stepped through the Ash Gate into the City of the Gods. Emotions that stemmed as much from Ekanai as it from himself.
From Ekanai, Vir felt the tion one can only feel after having finally taken thest step of a decades-long journey, along with the reliefand regretthat apanies it. He felt longing for the Demon Realm, a faint sliver of hope that, when this was all over, he might be able to return home. And he felt sad that his journey might soon be at an end.
Virs own emotions took a different turn. The ck spires of Mahdi served to remind him of Ashani and his bitter failure. He thought of her cloistered within Janaks home, hibernating her life away. Did she hold out hope that Vir woulde back for her?
<em>How could she? </em>Vir thought. She knew exactly how unlikely that proposition was.
And yet, Vir would find a way. Hed named Shan to remind him of that promise. Of the great debt hed owed her. It was why Vir was so gutted that Saunak hadnt proven entirely trustworthy. If only he had, they mightve worked together to devise a way back. To allow her to escape that horrible ce.
Ekanai took a step. His knees immediately buckled. Vir knew exactly what he was going through, even though the memory suppressed the pain the demon felt.
Prana Poisoning was one of the worst ways to go. Vir could almost feel the prana overloading Ekanais blood.
And yet, despite the pain, Ekanai soldiered on. He never once considered retreating through the Ash Gate behind him. If he did, hed be forever doomed to wander aimlessly upon the realms. Only by progressing could he fulfill his purpose. Or <em>find </em>his purpose, Vir realized.
<em>Its not blind zeal that drives him. Its a desire for his life to have had meaning.</em>
Vir understood then, in that moment, that through Ekanais entire life, it was <em>this </em>desire to uncover his purpose that drove him. A desire that was painfully rtable.
It wasnt glory or fame or riches. Ekanai cared nothing for his titles. Hed never exploited his status as the Akh Nara, unlike some whod preceded him.
No, Ekanai cared about one thing and one thing onlythat, when his time in the realms was over, that hed have found his calling.
The demon fought off Ash Wolves and Phantomdes, squashing dozens at once with <em>Bncer of Scales. </em>With <em>rity </em>and <em>Yumas Embrace, </em>it wasnt even a contest. Ekanai would not be harmed. Not by beasts, anyway.
Vir watched as the demon fell to his knees. A der skewered his chest from behind. Ekanai saw iting, but allowed it to pierce him. Healing injuries wasnt difficult. Stopping Prana Poisoning was.
<em>Why, though? Surely he knew this would happen? </em>Vir wondered, before the truth dawned upon him.
<em>None of the others ever made it this far</em>
Ekanai had been the first to venture into the Mahdi Realm. Which meant Virs featentering, and <em>surviving</em>had been far beyond anything theyd managed. Hed relied on them. On their hard-won experiences to survive. Even then, it was only thanks to Ashanis pranites and the collective effort of Ekanai, Shardul, Parai, Jalendra, and Narak that had allowed him to survive.
The realization hit Vir like a raging Garga. Whether or not he despised Ekanai, Vir had benefitted directly from his life experience.
Ekanai struggled to stay conscious, but against the sheer prana density, his sight dimmed, and he copsed.
As the demons vision went dark one final time, just before the Ash Beasts tore into him, what he felt was not anger, or frustration, or even regret.
Uwfully taken from Royal Road, this story should be reported if seen on Amazon.
It was a profound, bottomless loneliness, and a sincere, earnest wish to be held by someone in his final moments. To be consoled and loved.
The memory faded, leaving Vir alone in a strange space hed ever seen before. He sat cross-legged in a green grassy meadow in the middle of a forest.
<em>Another of Ekanais memories? </em>But no, it wasnt.
Vir recognized it immediatelyit was the Godshollow.
He was alone, though he knew he was still in his mind. The world possessed a hazy, dreamlike quality to it. He feltforted by the Godshollows sturdy presence.
Birds chirped merrily, and a gentle breeze ruffled the ferns and shrubs that nketed the forest floor. Light filtered through an opening in the canopy, its rays ying upon the untouched dirt.
<em>This is my mindscape?</em><em>No way!</em>
Virs excitement soared at the thought. Cirayus had mentioned that upon fully opening the Foundation Chakra, Vir would gain ess to a mindscapea personal sanctuary where one could meditate. A ce where hours or sometimes even days could pass with only moments passing in the real world.
It was primarily useful for meditation, contemtion, and, upon opening theter chakras, even training. Each Chakra expanded the mindscape, allowing for increasinglyplex scenarios.
Vir stood up and walked to the edge of the meadow. As he neared the ancient trunks, he felt a pressure push back on him, preventing him from venturing into the forest, which he intuitively understood wasnt actually there. This was all an illusion, and his mindscape couldnt support anymore.
That was all well. Vir gazed up at the enormous trees, wondering in amazement. How much had he yearned for this breakthrough, these past months?
It urred to him now that he mightve had an easier time opening the Foundation Chakra if hed used the Godshollow as the basis for stability instead of the mountains as Cirayus had taught him. It was much closer and more real to him than any peak had ever been. That the mindscape took the form of the Godshollow only proved it.
<em>Was this how Cirayus maintained his sanity? Was he escaping into a mindscape of his own, simr to how I fled into the Shadow Realm?</em>
Vir had initially pitied the giant, not having such a ce to retreat into. Now, however, he envied him. Given a choice between total ckness and a beautiful, crisp forest or something analogous, there wasnt even a contest.
Vir returned to the middle of the pristine meadow and sat crosslegged, allowing his eyes to defocus as he thought about the memories hed been shown.
He now had a hunch about what had triggered it. The key was Ekanai.
For so long, Vir had rejected the demons existence. As Maiya had somehow known, hed <em>feared </em>the demon. Feared that hed take over. That hed harm Maiya. That hedmit atrocities with Virs body, and that Vir would be unable to lift a finger to stop him.
The Ekanai Vir knew was a ruthless killing machine. More at home in the Ashen Realm standing on a pile of corpses than a real, living being with hopes and dreams.
Vir knew now that this couldnt have been further from the truth. Shardul had once said that with each reincarnation, his identity as the Primordial degraded. Memories from past lives became fragmented. Diluted, but also warped.
The Ekanai that had made it through that process was a horribly broken, distorted version of the real being.
The demon didnt shun familial ties because he thought them dead weightVir knew that now. Hed <em>felt </em>Ekanais thoughts. The demon had never allowed himself to grow close to anyone because he knew just how dangerous itd be for them.
Hed isted himself to <em>protect </em>them. To shield them from those whod see harme to the Akh Nara. Ekanai wasor had beena gentle soul at his core. Someone who wished to shoulder all the burden of the Akh Nara alone. A demon whose only wish was to find some purpose in his long life. To fulfill his destiny, so he could return to his n with his head held up high.
His course required him to kill, and he took on that burden withoutint. But he never once enjoyed it.
<em>I see</em>
The Ekanai that had manifested <em>wasnt</em> real. Whatever contraption had transported him to the underground world with its floating inds and its caves had used Virs own memories of Ekanai to create a caricature of the demon.
<em>He isnt real. Hes a figment of my mind. None of it is real.</em>
Vir gulped at that. Then what of Maiya? What of the moments theyd shared together? What of her bravery and sacrifice? Was <em>that</em> also a fabrication? She felt so <em>real!</em>
He didnt want to believe all of this had been a hallucination. He <em>couldnt. </em>Even knowing Ekanai wasnt real didnt reduce the threat. Vir had bled when attacked. Worse, his very <em>soul </em>had been siphoned. The consequences were real.
Except now, Vir knew he had nothing to fear. For if Ekanai was generated from his mind, then Vir suspected the Ekanai hed face in light of these revtions would be quite different. Thanks to the new knowledge hed obtained.
Knowledge hed gained by restoring his memories of Ekanai with the power of the Foundation Chakra.
Vir stood, leaves crunching softly under him. While his predecessors hadnt saved himand wouldnt, ever againhed nheless gained something valuable from these memories. Hed understood the person Ekanai was. The person he strove to be. And in the process, Vir understood himself.
Because Vir <em>was </em>Ekanai in a previous life. The demon was as much a part of him as Shardul, Parai, and the others. For the very first time, Vir could ept that. eptand embrace.
You failed so close to your goal. But where you failed, I will seed. I will learn from your mistakes, and I willplete your quest. I will honor those who have zed the trail by seeing it to itspletion.
Vir closed his eyes and exited the mindscape. Not as a scared, panicking demon, but a master of the Foundation Chakra. At peace with himself.