The Sovereign

V2: C18: Wall of Silence



V2: C18: Wall of Silence

The Sky Hearth Barracks had become less a sanctuary and more a frozen purgatory. The dust from the void entity’s unmaking had settled, but a heavier, more suffocating residue remained: the fallout of failure. Shiro and Kuro existed within its walls like ghosts haunting separate corners of the same ruin, the vibrant defiance of their blood oath buried beneath an avalanche of shame and paralyzing doubt.Gone was the desperate energy of their earlier, flawed training. Gone was the brittle arrogance that had propelled them into the void entity’s path. In its place was a profound stillness, thick with unspoken agony. They didn’t spar. They didn’t drill stances. They didn’t even look at each other. The shared bond that had once flared crimson now felt like a chain of shared disgrace.

Shiro sat hunched on the stone platform’s frigid edge, an island of desolation adrift in the vast, cold sea of Elara’s tomb. He wasn't just apart from the others; he felt severed, a limb left to wither. His ruined hands lay cradled in his lap, not as sources of the ever present grinding shriek echoing up his forearms, a sound that seemed less physical pain now and more the auditory manifestation of his shattered spirit, but as grotesque artifacts. Alien. Betraying. He stared, unblinking, at the scar etched into his palm. The crystal embedded within pulsed with a faint, rhythmic light, a mocking heartbeat in the gloom. The word echoed, hollow. Worse than useless. A tumour of potential that promised only self immolation.

The question wasn’t rhetorical; it was the crumbling edge of a precipice he teetered on. He plunged back into the moment before the void whip struck. Not just seeing it, but it anew. The terrifying surge of power had ignited in his palm, a supernova trapped under scar tissue, radiating heat that promised annihilation. But intertwined with that power came the visceral, cinematic flashes of agony: the fused bone fragments in his wrists vibrating like shards of glass dust, threatening to reduce his arms to useless pulp; the superheated scar searing his flesh from the inside, a molten brand threatening to detonate his very hand; the overwhelming, nerve flaying tsunami of the warren backlash that had stolen his sight and voice, leaving only raw, screaming nerves. He’d choked it down. Deliberately. Chosen the certainty of physical trauma, the whip’s impact, the broken ribs, the jarring agony, over the gamble of unleashing a cataclysm that might incinerate Kuro, Haruto, Juro, everyone within reach. The accusation hissed in his mind. Or the only sane choice left after the mutually destructive seizure proved the power’s true nature? Was it cold pragmatism forged in the white hot furnace of traumatic certainty? The image of Haruto’s sleeve torn, the thin line of crimson blood stark against his skin, flashed behind his eyelids. Juro’s temple, bruised and darkening. Ryota, a celestial titan, expending the focused wrath of stars . The thought was glacial water flooding his veins.

He closed his eyes, but the darkness offered no refuge. Instead, he saw Aki. Not the vibrant girl humming over the plank under the weak sun of their shack, but the spectral figure haunting the plague shadowed gloom. Her face was pale, drawn, sweat beading on her brow despite the chill, yet her eyes… her eyes held a fierce, fading ember. He felt the ghostly weight of her hand in his, smaller, frailer than he remembered, yet guiding the bone handled knife with desperate determination. The scent of sun warmed pine from the plank, the rasp of the blade biting into wood, the as Cassiopeia’s throne took shape, tilted defiantly west. she’d whispered, her voice thin but unwavering. The words were ash on his tongue now, bitter and choking. Instead, he’d let her last act of rebellion, her fragile map of hope, fall into Akuma’s fucking grasp. And here he sat. Amongst the ghosts of true protectors, hands trembling like an old man’s, flinching from his own fucking shadow, scared of the very power that was supposed to her. The image of Akuma lowering the flaying knife towards her neck wasn't a motivator; it was a grotesque, slow motion mockery of his utter impotence. The Polaris scar pulsed against his muscle tissue, a trapped heartbeat resonating with the sickening grind deep in his wrists. The question screamed silently within the frozen vault of his mind.

Kuro across the cavernous, ice rimed expanse, Kuro was a slumped monument to ruin beneath the faded grandeur of Corvus. He clutched his corrupted arm, not seeking comfort from the static buzz, a relentless, maddening drone scraping against the inside of his skull like rusty nails, or the invasive cold fire chewing like glacial termites towards the core of him, but in utter revulsion. The limb felt alien, a hostile entity grafted onto him. The grey translucence past his elbow pulsed with a slow, rhythmic throb, a sickly, alien heartbeat visible beneath skin stretched taut and brittle as ancient parchment. It wasn't his anymore. It was a parasite. A visible manifestation of the rot he carried within.

The question echoed Shiro’s despair but twisted by the unique poison of his birthright. The title wasn't just self deprecation; it was his father’s legacy, Ryo’s scorched earth policy made flesh. A reminder of the blood that birthed him, the ambition that shattered a kingdom and extinguished his mothers light. Titles that hung around his neck like millstones, mocking every faltering step. He tried to flex the fingers of his corrupted hand; they responded sluggishly, jerkily, tendons standing out like frozen cables under the skin. The movement sent fresh needles of alien cold burrowing deeper. A beacon pulsing with corrupt energy, screaming to the Blight and its servants. He relived the paralyzing micro second as the void claws descended: the instinctive pull towards the Twin Star power, the storm of cold fury and defiance gathering in his chest… and then the icy plunge of terror. Not just fear of death, but the visceral memory of the Blight feasting on their last desperate surge in the warren, digesting the volatile energy, mapping his nerves with predatory glee. The certainty that unleashing it now, uncontrolled, in this state of panic and corruption, wouldn't save Shiro, it would obliterate him faster than the void claws. He’d chosen death. Chosen the certainty of being shredded over the risk of becoming the instrument that tore his friend apart. The phantom voice of his father, cold and sober in rare, terrifying moments, slithered through his mind: He felt the truth of it like a physical blow. He looked at the crimson scar on his palm, the intricate mark of the Twin Star bond. It felt like a brand seared into failure. The question spiralled into a crushing vortex of futility.

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The thought crystallized with horrifying clarity. The reality crashed over him: the Frostguard tightening their icy grip on the Warrens, turning slums into frozen charnel houses; Akuma, meticulous and cruel, lowering his flaying knife to the last tangible piece of Aki’s soul, her defiance, while they sat here, . The realization was a wave of nausea so intense he dry heaved, the sound weak and pathetic in the vast silence. He pressed his good hand harder against the pulsing corruption, as if he could physically suppress the cold fire. The admission was ash. The corruption pulsed in response, a cold, hungry echo of his despair. He stared at the sickly grey translucence. The silence offered no answer, only the relentless drone of the static and the icy certainty of his own inadequacy.

Days dissolved into a grey, suffocating sludge within the Sky Hearth Barracks. Time lost meaning, measured only by the grinding shriek resonating deep within Shiro’s wrists and the maddening static drone that had taken permanent residence in Kuro’s skull. The air hung heavy, not just with cold, but with the palpable weight of their shared failure and the chilling efficiency of the others moving around them. It was a silent purgatory, a "Wall of Silence" built not of stone, but of unspoken reproach and their own crushing despair.

Haruto approached Shiro not with pity, but with the detached precision of a surgeon assessing a complex wound. He held out the waterskin and dried meat, his voice stripped of its usual layered intonations, flat and functional. "Sustenance accelerates cellular repair. You require it to heal, Shiro." It wasn't a request; it was a biological imperative stated to a malfunctioning component. Shiro didn’t look up. He kept his gaze locked on his scarred palm, the faint pulse of the scar a mocking counterpoint to Haruto’s logic. The memory of Haruto’s bleeding arm, his blood blood stark against pale skin, flashed with painful clarity. The thought was a fresh wave of humiliation. He remained motionless, a statue of desolation. Haruto’s sharp eyes lingered for a fraction longer, not angry, but deeply analytical, perhaps recalculating the viability of damaged material. He placed the offerings silently beside the stone platform and withdrew, his footsteps unnaturally quiet. The untouched food became a monument to Shiro’s refusal, a silent accusation heavier than any shouted insult. Each time Shiro’s peripheral vision caught the dried meat, the image of Akuma lowering the flaying knife superimposed itself, the desecration feeling like his own doing, amplified by his inaction.

Juro didn't offer sustenance; he offered confrontation. Days later, his prowling perimeter tightened. He stopped abruptly in front of Kuro, who sat slumped against the wall. Juro didn't speak. He simply drew his scavenged dagger with a soft, metallic . Not threateningly, but deliberately. He held it loosely, then suddenly snapped it through a complex disarming manoeuvre Haruto had drilled them on what felt like weeks ago, fast, precise, lethal. He stopped the blade a hair's breadth from Kuro's good arm, his expression unreadable stone. "Up," he grunted, the single word a challenge.

Kuro flinched violently, not from the blade, but from the sudden demand. The movement jolted his corrupted arm. The static buzz spiked into a physical jolt, a needle of alien cold lanced deep into his shoulder joint. The grey translucence pulsed visibly, angrily, as if disturbed. He gasped, clamping his good hand over the corruption, his single eye wide not with defiance, but with raw, panicked revulsion. this The memory of the Blight feasting on their power surge, digesting it within him, flooded back. Juro’s bruise, a sickly yellow green brand on his temple, seemed to glow in the dim light. The thought of engaging, of risking even a fraction of the volatile power near Juro, near , was paralyzing. He shook his head, a minute, jerky motion, his gaze dropping to the floor, unable to meet Juro’s eyes. Juro stared for a long, cold moment. He didn't sigh, didn't curse. He simply sheathed the dagger with a final, dismissive , turned, and resumed his patrol, his silence now vibrating with contempt. The phantom voice of his father hissed: The corruption throbbed in time with Kuro’s hammering heart.

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