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Chapter 43 - It Has Already Begun

Astraea Noctyrr finally moved.

Not with the turning of her body, nor with any shift of posture, but with the slow, inexorable reorientation of her awareness. It was as though the gravity of her attention rotated, dragging the chamber's focus along with it. The infinite hall responded. Pillars that had stood silent for eternities seemed to recede as her consciousness reached deeper, farther, toward the thrones that lay beyond the immediate circle of debate.

Five of them answered.

They did not speak aloud. They did not need to. Their acknowledgment came as reality itself reacting to their presence, as existence asserting shape and intent.

The nearest throne was not forged, carved, or constructed.

It was alive.

Living coral rose from the void in vast, branching structures, curling inward to form a seat grown rather than made. Its surface pulsed softly with bioluminescent hues of abyssal blue, deep violet, and cold green light that evoked trenches no star had ever illuminated. Each slow glow followed the rhythm of tides older than continents, older than memory. There was no water here, yet the air thickened around it, heavy with pressure, salt, and the oppressive sensation of infinite depth.

A form occupied the coral, never fully defined. It shifted constantly, its outline fluid, collapsing and reforming like foam dragged between currents.

Its response arrived without sound.

The chamber felt as though an entire ocean settled upon it.

"Premature devastation fractures balance, too many convergent threads would be erased. The biospheres marked for cultivation would collapse before maturation. Assets essential to our continuance would be lost."

Another throne responded.

This one was woven entirely from lightning.

Jagged arcs of energy braided themselves into a seat that never held a fixed shape. It snapped, collapsed, and reassembled continuously, bound together by raw static and oscillating frequency. The space around it vibrated rather than warmed, a constant hum that rattled thought itself and made even divine perception feel strained. The figure seated there existed only as a distortion, a convergence of resonant waves forced into a roughly humanoid silhouette.

Its reply arrived as a calculation.

Pure. Cold. Absolute.

"Current projections indicate systemic collapse under indiscriminate escalation. Survival yield falls below acceptable thresholds. Optimization demands selective pressure, not annihilation."

The lightning dimmed, satisfied by its own logic, the conclusion final in its certainty.

Farther down the hall loomed a throne of metal and fire-born craft.

It was immense, forged from interlocking plates of adamantine and brass, etched with ancient runes that glowed faintly like banked embers. Pistons turned slowly within their structure, releasing steady hisses of steam scented with oil and molten Earth. Gears meshed with deliberate patience, and massive anvils formed its armrests, scarred by impacts that had shaped civilizations. Beneath the seat, a furnace-heart burned endlessly, feeding heat and purpose into the structure above.

The figure seated within remained swallowed by shadow.

No words came from it.

Only the certainty of creation through pressure. Of systems waiting to be hammered into form when the moment demanded it.

The next throne was grown rather than built.

A living tree rose from the floor of the chamber, its roots spreading outward and downward into nothingness while somehow drawing sustenance from everywhere at once. The trunk curved into a seat of bark and emerald-veined wood, rings of time visible along its surface. Branches arched overhead like a canopy, brushing the unseen ceiling, leaves shimmering faintly with internal light. Each leaf carried echoes of seasons that had never touched Earth, cycles that belonged to worlds long consumed or still unborn.

The presence within it was vast.

Patient.

Sap flowed. Rings formed. Time passed.

There was no objection. No approval.

Only growth, waiting for guidance.

At the far end of the hall stood the final throne.

It was a conquest made manifest.

Dragon skulls formed its armrests, jaws frozen mid-snarl, teeth still sharp with remembered flame. Massive wings were mounted along its sides, scales overlapping in hardened layers of crimson, obsidian, and gold. Claws formed the base, dug into the void itself as though anchoring the throne against reality's resistance. Every surface bore scars, not ornamental, not symbolic, but earned through annihilation and survival.

The shadow seated upon it did not move.

Yet the heat around it intensified, and deep within the hall, something ancient exhaled. The breath carried the weight of extinction events and the certainty of apex dominance.

The lightning throne's presence cut through the gathering tension.

"Sentiment is irrelevant, Mirthryn Jexel," conveyed the lightning throne, its logic sharp as a blade. "Your disappointment and lack of... fun does not factor into the equation. This world's potential is high, but it is not yet refined. Premature pressure, as stated by the others, will yield failure."

The child upon the candy throne kicked one leg, his heel striking the fused porcelain face of a doll with a dull thud.

"Boring!" he whined, his lollipop stick pointing accusingly toward the lightning throne. "Boring, boring, boring! That's what you always say! Calculate this! Optimize that! It's no fun!"

He giggled, the sound carrying far too much weight for something so small. The foundations of the hall felt brittle beneath it.

"Do you not remember what it meant to ascend?" he continued, voice lilting yet edged with something sharp. "Pain. Loss. Terror. Those are the crucibles that forged us. Let them drown in it. Let the worthy crawl out screaming."

His laughter rippled outward, sugar-sweet and catastrophic.

"The more they suffer, the clearer the survivors-"

"SILENCE, MIRTHRYN JEXEL!"

The roar erupted from the dragon throne, and for a terrifying instant, the chamber was no longer a hall of shadows but a battlefield of memory. Phantom roars layered atop one another, the scent of sulfur and scorched sky flooding the void. The crushing presence of an apocalyptic predator pressed down on everything that existed.

The child's lollipop shattered.

Candy cracked and fell into the void below.

Mirthryn Jexel did not flinch.

He stared back, mismatched eyes burning with cold clarity, the fractured red one swirling like a vortex of blood and madness. Slowly, deliberately, he raised a single pale finger.

The silence that followed was heavier than the roar.

A jagged shard of candy lifted from the void, drifting back into his palm. He placed it in his mouth and crunched it, the sound echoing obscenely loud in the stillness.

"Hehe… HUHUHU… Fine," he sighed, sugar dusting his lips. "Have it your way."

The dragon throne answered, its presence cooling from fury into absolute command.

"Begin the first steps. Enough time has passed for our systems to have rooted."

Golden slit-pupiled eyes burned within the shadow, fixing on the blindfolded figure.

"Astraea Noctyrr. Have the system begin the first event."

For the first time, Astraea Noctyrr turned her head.

The movement was infinitesimal, yet it drew the full attention of every throne. Beneath the blindfold, her unseen gaze aligned with a future already in motion.

The thought she released was simple.

Final.

"It has already begun."

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