V3: C7: Crown Of Duality
V3: C7: Crown Of Duality
The echoing of the sanctum doors sealing shut faded into a silence so profound it felt like a physical void. King Ryo Oji now, seated on the Obsidian Throne, the cruel smile still etched onto his face, a rictus of triumph that felt suddenly hollow, a mask glued to skin that no longer felt like his own.The reek of the throne room, burnt stardust, decaying lilies, old blood, it all seemed to intensify in the absence of another living soul to share it with. It was his scent. The perfume of his power. But for the first time in years, it smelled only of isolation.
"Pathetic," he had said. The word lingered in the dead air, but its taste had changed. It was no longer a verdict on Nyxara; it was a question aimed at the man who had spoken it.
His hand, resting on the arm of the throne, began to tremble. He stared at it, a distant part of his mind fascinated by the minute, uncontrollable vibration. With a sudden, violent snarl, he slammed his fist down onto the petrified star wood armrest. The impact was a sharp, ugly that tore through the silence, a sound of splintering bone and rage. Pain, white hot and clean, shot up his arm. He welcomed it. It was real. It was his.
His breathing was ragged, his composure, the mask he had worn for hours, for years shattering into a thousand jagged pieces. He pushed himself from the throne, stumbling down the dais steps, his blood coloured robes whispering like a trailing wound against the stone.
the thought surfaced, unbidden, from a deep, locked chamber in his mind. The voice was not his own. It was younger, clearer, tinged with a scholarly curiosity he had murdered long ago.
The thought was a spark in the dark, and it made his heart give a single, painful , a fossilized tremor from a self he thought extinct. It was the ghost of the man who had once looked at the stars with wonder, not hunger.
The guilt was a sudden, hot knife in his gut. He had painted her as a monster, a harpy, a demon queen. He had weaponized her grief for Shojiki, her respect for his father's dream, and twisted it into proof of her treachery. And she had stood there and offered condolences for the man he himself had...
He clutched at his temples, fingers digging into his skin as if to physically tear the thoughts out. The Butcher King , a cold, familiar presence, uncoiled within him, its voice a silken, venomous rasp that overlay his own internal monologue. This was no mere aspect of himself; it was a symbiotic entity, nurtured and hardened over fifteen years by a constant, whispering influence.
it hissed, its tone one of bored disdain.
But the other voice, the ghost of the son, persisted, fuelled by the exhausting psychological battle he had just endured. Each word from the ghost was a tiny, internal earthquake, each one causing that same, disconcerting lurch in his chest, a heart trying to remember a rhythm of compassion.
His vision blurred. The obsidian walls of the throne room seemed to waver, dissolving into the sun dappled leaves of a memory he had entombed in ice.
The throne room snapped back into focus, the memory a fresh brand on his soul. He was on his knees, his breath coming in ragged, sobbing gasps, the cold marble a shock against his skin. The ghost within him wailed, a sound of pure, unadulterated agony.
the true essence of his being wept.
"You wanted everything," the Butcher King's voice countered, cold and absolute, now separate from his own thoughts, a distinct entity that filled the chamber. It was a creation he now shared with Kaustirix. "You wanted a power that would never slip, never fail, never be vulnerable to something as pathetic as accident or love. We gave that to you. We made you a god in a world of weak, sentimental fools. And you would weep for the architect of your weakness?"
The torches guttered violently, their flames stretching into long, hungry, jagged points, casting monstrous, leaping shadows that danced around the room. The temperature plummeted, the cold now an aggressive, invasive force.
And then, the third voice joined the cacophony. It did not come from within. It came from .
It was smooth and colder than the deepest glacial ice. It was the voice from the fissure, amplified a thousandfold, and it now dripped directly into his consciousness. Kaustirix had been a whispering partner for fifteen years; now he was a commanding presence.
"An fascinating pathology. Even after all this time, it continues to refine itself."
The voice was Kaustirix. It manifested not as a figure, but as a sensation, a swirling, invisible vortex of absolute cold and hungry intellect that coalesced in the centre of the room. The air around it shimmered, not with heat, but with a perfect, starless void. Ryo could feel it picking through the seams of his mind, its presence a psychological sword sliding between his neurons, dissecting his trauma with a bored, clinical precision. This was their long standing dynamic: Kaustirix, the architect; Ryo, the instrument.
"The accidental patricide. The cornerstone of our delightful collaboration," Kaustirix mused, his tone that of an artist revisiting his greatest work. "You built this entire persona, this beautiful religion of cruelty, to bury a moment of human error. Not to hide it from others. To annihilate it within yourself. You are not a king. You are a frightened man standing on his father's grave, screaming at the world so it cannot hear the guilt screaming inside you."
The words were not an attack; they were an autopsy. Each one was perfectly calibrated to flay him open, to expose the raw, quivering nerve of his existence. It was psychological torture, a forced, brutal confrontation with the self he had desperately tried to kill.
"The 'Butcher King' is a magnificent construct," Kaustirix continued, the voice now taking on a possessive, proud tone. "So efficient. So predictable in its hatred. It is the perfect weapon. But it is not the truth. The truth is the man who wept when his father was gone in secret in silence. The husband who brought Kaya figs from the market because he loved the way she smiled. The father who held his infant son, Kuro, and felt a love so terrifying it made him vow to never be weak enough to lose it."
Visions, not of his making, flooded Ryo's mind. Kaya, her hair like spun moonlight, laughing as he presented the figs. Kuro, no older than four, his small face a mirror of his own, giggling uncontrollably as they sparred with wooden swords in the solar, clomping around in a crown too big for his head. The love was a physical agony, a heart attack in reverse. With each image, his heart and twisted, a dying animal reacting to memories of sunlight.
the ghost, sobbed, overwhelmed by the forced remembrance.
"And that love made you weak," the Butcher King snarled, its voice now fighting against Kaustirix's invasive presence. "It made you hesitate! It made you fear loss! It is the crack in our armour, and she saw it! Nyxara saw it and she aimed for it!"
"Precisely," Kaustirix purred, the sound like frozen oil flowing into Ryo's ears. "She found the flaw in our masterpiece. The one flaw we could never fully erase. And now, the great Ryo Oji is brought to his knees not by an army, but by the ghost of a man he killed and the memory of a family he destroyed. It would be hilarious if it weren't so... disappointingly mundane."
The three entities, the grieving man, the raging Butcher, and the cold, external Architect, collided inside his skull. It was a civil war fought on the battlefield of his soul. He clutched his head, a scream trapped in his throat, his body convulsing as the voices tore him apart from the inside. He was a puppet with three murderous puppeteers, each pulling him in a different direction towards oblivion.
The Butcher King persona, a structure of pure, cold will, raged against this internal cacophony. Its voice was a blade of ice scraping the inside of his cranium.
it snarled, its contempt a physical pressure behind his eyes. fracture
it hissed, the memory of the fallen insignia a fresh brand of humiliation. enjoyed
the Butcher King’s voice became a silken, venomous caress, laced with a perverse and intimate relish. lodestone her her
gasp pop
now
"Stop..." he pleaded, his voice a broken, trembling thing, reduced to the young boy who looked to the stars with curiosity. "Stop... I never wanted you"
"But you have it," Kaustirix whispered, the voice now intimate, inside his mind, behind his eyes. "And it is a wasting asset. Your control is fracturing. The rebellion has broken your finest weapon. Your own son fights for the other side. And this queen, this living reminder of everything you failed to be, has just exposed your instability to me. Our creation is wounded. And I do not waste my time with damaged tools."
The threat was implicit, final. Kaustirix was not here to help or to hinder. He was here to assess his investment. And he was considering cutting his losses.
The words were the final spark. The Butcher King persona, enraged by the threat, by the humiliation, by the weakness of its host, surged forward with a final, explosive effort. It consumed the grieving ghost of the man, silencing it forever. It rejected the assessment of its co creator.
The Butcher King’s voice became a final, absolute decree, a glacier sealing a tomb
It was not a request. It was an eviction. The True Ryo, the ghost of the son, the grieving husband, the guilty father, it was a weak, sputtering flame. And the Butcher King was the absolute, airless void. There was no fight left.
The internal storm ceased. The voices vanished.
Ryo's trembling stopped.
Slowly, mechanically, he rose to his feet. His breathing evened out. The pain in his hand was gone. The tears on his face were gone. He straightened his robes, a gesture of utterly cold precision.
His eyes, when they opened, were no longer voids. They were simply... dead. Cold, empty, and devoid of any warmth or conflict. The Butcher King was not a persona anymore. It was the only thing left.
He looked toward the spot where Kaustirix's presence had been, but the entity was gone, its work done.
"No more fucking weakness," Ryo declared, his voice a flat, cold, empty echo in the vast chamber. It was not a vow. It was a statement of fact.
He turned his dead gaze toward the throne room doors, toward where Nyxara had departed. The chilling resolve in his eyes was absolute. The parley was not a political event. It was a declaration of a new, more final war. One that would not be fought with words, but with absolute, unforgiving annihilation.
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