805 Blood And Redemption
The cavern pulsed with an unnatural rhythm, the very walls breathing with the weight of history long forgotten. Rowena and Narissara descended further into the abyss, the dim glow of the dark vegetation barely illuminating their surroundings.
And then, at last, they saw it.
Nestled in the heart of the cavern, a basin carved from the very bones of the earth cradled an almost barren fountain that still seemed to have few drops of eerie, luminescent fluid. The liquid pulsed in slow, rhythmic waves—a deep, shimmering sapphire blue, as if alive with power.
The Elixir of the Ancients.
Rowena halted, her gaze fixated on the mesmerizing glow, the fluid shifting like thickened blood, swirling as though it held the remnants of something divine... or something cursed.
Narissara exhaled sharply, her usually composed features betraying a flicker of urgency.
"There is still enough left," she breathed in relief, moving forward quickly.
She pulled out a small vial, one engraved with elegant sigils, and carefully began siphoning the precious liquid, drop by agonizing drop. The Elixir was thick, heavier than water, and every drop she collected felt like retrieving a relic of history itself.
Rowena, meanwhile, let her gaze wander. The cavern was ancient, its walls scarred with time. And yet, something about this place felt preserved.
Her crimson eyes scanned the towering rock faces, trailing over the inscriptions etched into the stone—stories told through symbols and pictographs. Some were faded, barely discernible through the erosion of time, while others remained bold and defiant, resisting oblivion.
And then she saw it.
A large drawing spanning across the cave's inner wall. It depicted two towering figures—two devils with shadowy bodies, their eyes hollow, their mouths open in silent, eternal screams. And in front of them, at the center of it all, stood a woman.
Rowena furrowed her brows, stepping closer. The woman's form was striking, almost familiar—like an Umbralfiend, yet distinctly different. Half of her body was that of a fish, much like Narissara's people, but there were no glowing scales. Instead, her form was dark, muted, blending with the surrounding shadows, as if she belonged to the abyss itself.
Her upper body was quite similar to Isola's, making Rowena wonder if the reason Isola looked a bit different from her people had something to do with this elixir.
"Narissara," Rowena called, her voice steady but laced with curiosity.
Narissara, still focused on extracting the last remnants of the Elixir, spared a glance.
"What?"
Rowena gestured toward the engraving, "Who is she?"
Narissara followed Rowena's gaze and the moment her eyes fell upon the ancient carving, a shadow crossed her face.
"So you noticed her," she muttered, standing up straight. She wiped her hands and turned fully toward the inscription.
"She is nothing but a myth," Narissara finally said.
Rowena narrowed her eyes. "A myth?"
Narissara gave a small nod, her expression unreadable.
"It is said that before my people settled in the deep, before we learned to survive the cursed waters, there was one who lived in this abyss. The inscriptions say she was a being unlike any other—a goddess, the mother of the Kraken and our people. And those two devils beside her?" Narissara gestured at the towering, hellish figures etched into the stone, "Some say they were her followers, her servants, bound to her will."
"A prophecy that turned out to be for nothing. That is why I want to believe she was a myth. My people tell stories of how she was abandoned by something greater, left in these depths to be forgotten. And the devils that followed her? They weren't our saviors—they were her captors, her wardens. And if those two fell here..." Narissara gestured to the cavern, her eyes darkening, "...then who knows if she truly perished with them?"
09:12
Rowena studied the ancient markings, the whispers of a past long buried, "So she was your progenitor? She was the one who talked about the prophecy of the Midnight Maiden which was none other than Isola?"
Narissara's jaw clenched slightly.
"A prophecy that turned out to be for nothing. That is why I want to believe she was a myth. My people tell stories of how she was abandoned by something greater, left in these depths to be forgotten. And the devils that followed her? They weren't our saviors—they were her captors, her wardens. And if those two fell here..." Narissara gestured to the cavern, her eyes darkening, "...then who knows if she truly perished with them?"
A cold sensation settled in Rowena's gut.
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