Chapter 532: Inevitable XVII
The Tower’s pulse did not fade.
Instead, it deepened—like a drumbeat buried beneath every stone, every echo of silence, every breath of those who lived within its endless reaches. The battlefield they stood on began to mend in strange, unnatural ways. Shattered ground knit together not with healing, but with purpose, arranging itself into lines of trenches, ridges, and scarred pathways as though preparing for armies yet to march.
Naval’s grip tightened around his trident. "...It’s rearranging itself."
Roselia groaned, pushing herself upright on her blade. "Not rearranging. Aligning. The Tower isn’t waiting—it’s shaping the war before it even begins."
Roman spat blood into the dirt, his tone sharp. "Then we’re already inside it. Every floor’s about to become a battlefield."
Milim finally stirred, her aura still crackling faintly from holding Leon. Her gaze was not on the sky, nor on the Tower’s shifting bones—but down. Past the cracked stone, past the shifting veins of light, into the abyss where that laughter had echoed. "No... it’s worse. Something’s coming from under the Tower."
At that, Liliana froze. Her threads quivered, faint spiderwebs in the air unraveling as if plucked by invisible hands. "...I feel it too. It’s not a Throne. It’s not bound to their cycle. It’s something... else."
Leon stirred, his body a wreck but his voice edged with the certainty of someone who had stared too long into the fracture between truths. "That’s the listener. The one that waited. The Thrones weren’t first—they just claimed the Tower after it was already built."
The words fell heavy, colder than any wound.
Naval’s head whipped toward him, disbelief flashing. "What do you mean... not first? The Tower is the Thrones’ domain. Always has been."
Leon shook his head, eyes half-lidded, glowing faintly still with the afterburn of Fracture Requiem. "...No. The Tower is older. It had a heartbeat before they carved their names into it. Whatever’s stirring... it remembers. And it’s answering the call I just gave."
A silence followed—thick, dangerous.
Then, from far above, the constellations of Thrones flickered one by one. Not in anger this time, but in recognition. Some withdrew further, as though unwilling to face what stirred. Others shone brighter, eager.
Roman’s jaw set, voice steady as he looked over the others. "So we’re not just fighting Thrones." His fists clenched until blood dripped fresh. "We’re fighting whatever they stole this Tower from."
The ground split with a thunderous crack—not upward, but outward, as rivers of black-gold light surged across the horizon like veins awakening. The battlefield wasn’t just a place anymore. It was a stage.
The war had begun.
And the Tower wasn’t waiting.
It was hungry.
The rift widened.
Black-gold light bled like rivers through the battlefield, searing trenches into the earth, then stretching further—up cliffs, across broken skies, down into seas that should not have existed. The whole floor shifted as if an invisible architect were dragging quills of fire across its skin, drafting a war map that spanned dimensions.
Roselia gritted her teeth as her ember blade hummed and flared, nearly tearing itself from her hand. "That’s not just energy. It’s command. The Tower’s scripting its own war."
Liliana pulled Leon closer against her chest, her threads weaving frantically, trying to steady his pulse. Her voice was soft but cracked. "...It’s rewriting every rule we thought bound it."
Milim rose to her feet at last, eyes hard, hair wild around her shoulders as her aura burned in defiance. "No. It’s not rewriting. It’s remembering. Something buried deep just opened its eyes."
Leon stirred weakly, his voice rough but steady. "The Listener." His gaze flickered with shards of the Fifth Pulse’s glow, even as blood stained his lips. "The Thrones weren’t first. They chained what was first. It’s been silent all this time—waiting. Watching."
A tremor answered him. Not rage. Not welcome. Recognition.
The very air quaked, and for a moment every sound across the Tower died. No wind. No shifting stone. No heartbeat, save the one that thrummed from deep below.
Naval swore under his breath, knuckles white on his trident. "If you’re right, then we’ve got Thrones above and... whatever the hell that is below. We’re caught between gods and ghosts."
Roman’s jaw locked as he stared at the horizon. His voice was iron. "Then we don’t get to flinch. Not now. If we’re Flamebreaker’s blades, we fight where the cracks open first. We buy him time to stand again."
Roselia let out a bitter laugh, though her eyes glowed with fire. "Hah. Typical Roman. Always the wall. Fine. But don’t expect me to go quietly if we’re trampled under two wars at once."
Above them, the Thrones stirred again. One voice, silken and cruel, rippled like silk across glass:
"Let it rise. Let it crawl from its pit. Flamebreaker will be the first to feed it."
Another voice, weary and grave, rumbled faintly in answer:
"If it wakes, even Thrones will bleed. Do not be so eager."
Their presence dimmed once more, leaving only weight.
Then came the laughter again.
From below.
Closer this time.
Not echoing, not distant. Rising.
The Listener was no longer content to watch.
The war had begun.
And now, so had the awakening.
The battlefield cracked again, this time not from the sky, but from beneath.
Stone, metal, and void peeled away like old bark. What lay below wasn’t soil or bedrock—it was eyes. Countless, vast, unblinking. Each one etched with spirals of runes so old even the Thrones hadn’t spoken them aloud in eons.
The ground heaved, and every soldier still clinging to life across the broken floor screamed as those runes bled light through their bodies. It was not killing them. It was marking them.
Liliana gasped as her threads writhed violently against the surge. "No... these symbols—they’re not Thrones’ bindings. They’re older." Her trembling fingers pressed against Leon’s chest, her voice breaking. "It’s choosing."
Milim’s wings snapped wide, fury burning hotter than her tears. "It doesn’t get to choose him! He’s mine!"
The laughter rumbled again, loud enough that the void cracked like glass. Not cruel. Not kind. Simply endless, as if it delighted in the storm it had waited for.
Roselia raised her ember blade, fire spilling down her arm despite her exhaustion. "Then cut it out of the sky before it speaks again. I don’t care what it is—Throne, ghost, Listener—if it thinks it can claim him, it’ll burn."
Naval shook his head, eyes narrowing as he planted his trident in the ground. "You don’t get it. If the Listener is moving, it’s because Leon forced it to. He broke inevitability, and that broke its silence. This thing isn’t our enemy. Not yet."
Roman clenched his bloodied fists, stepping forward. "Enemy or not, it’s here. And everything’s about to turn inside out."