Asher stood frozen, bewildered eyes locked on the delicate, flaming figure floating gracefully before him.
The little girl, formed entirely of flowing liquid, orange-reddish flames, hovered serenely above the scorched earth. Four crimson eyes sparkled playfully yet hinted at deep, hidden wisdom beneath her innocent facade.
"You...are you Hell Maiden...?" Asher breathed quietly, caution mingling with disbelief. He vividly remembered the towering, fearsome creature he once faced in the Chamber of Hell, her power terrifying and overwhelming.
But this little girl looked like nothing more than a smaller, youthful imitation—strangely delicate and mesmerizing.
The flaming slime girl's scarlet eyes curved gently into crescents as she laughed, her voice a sweet melody, full of gentle amusement.
"My prince, I am pleased that you haven't forgotten your favourite maiden," she answered with a wide grin.
"But you seem...different to what I remember..." Asher mumbled with furrowed brows.
She floated a little closer, "Indeed, my prince. But for now, I prefer this form. It's far more cute—wouldn't you agree?"
Asher blinked, caught off guard by her casual manner, the ease with which she called him 'prince,' making him wonder if she was addressing him like that because of the 'Hell Prince' title he had received from her. Her playful demeanor felt deeply unsettling yet strangely comforting.
"So you are the last fallen spirit I have to prove my worth?" he asked and added, "What exactly are you?" he demanded, stepping closer carefully, his eyes narrowed with wary fascination. "You seem different from the others I've faced."
She spun lightly in mid-air, flames swirling like silk around her slender form, her voice teasing yet sincere. "I cannot give you my true name because it's too powerful and dangerous for you to handle hehe. But you can call me Azi!" she whispered, the syllables resonating softly, laced with undeniable power, "A devil who fell into a very bad place for being very rebellious hehe."
Asher felt his heart pound sharply, eyes widening, "You're a devil...? Like the ones from the legends? The ones who granted powers to us mortals and a system to help us increase our strength?"
Azi's scarlet eyes twinkled with playful amusement, "Mmm, tempting thought. You would find the truths far less exciting. You are not even looking at the real me. I am just a useless fragment of my true self. Otherwise I could have had some fun with you. Nevertheless, you are here because you are greedy for my powers, aren't you?" She asked with a wide grin.
Despite himself, Asher relaxed slightly, captivated by her charm and innocence. Yet he still sensed profound depth beneath her playful exterior, wisdom far beyond what her youthful appearance implied.
He also realized she was right. He was here to gain strength, and he didn't have time to mess around.
"Yes," Asher finally spoke cautiously, his voice firm yet curious, "So what is your test going to be?"
Azi floated closer still, flames gently brushing against his fingers without burning, "Oh, my poor prince. Were you that traumatized by those five little bullies who tested your soul and body?"
They were "little" baddies to her? Asher wondered how terrifyingly powerful she must be to casually term them like that.
"I don't feel like making you suffer after going through all that. If those little baddies approve of you then you must be worthy of my powers."
Asher's eyes widened, and his chest relaxed, "Are you serious? There is no trial?"
Her eyes suddenly brightened mischievously, "Of course there is! As the Hell Maiden, I shouldn't lose face by giving things to you for free. So before I lend you my strength, I must still offer you an easy trial. A simple riddle—a little something to prove yourself worthy."
Asher raised an eyebrow, wary yet intrigued, "A riddle?"
She nodded gently, her fiery form shimmering with playful excitement, "Listen carefully, my prince, and answer wisely."
Her voice shifted subtly, growing deeper, mystical, echoing like ancient whispers across dimensions:
"In shadow's coil, he wakes anew,
Threads of fate bound tight, askew.
Worlds entwined, in crimson death,
An endless nightmare, a broken dream.
Each breath he takes, worlds and souls tremble and break,
Bound in circles he cannot escape.
But tell me this, O mortal bound,
How might such chains become unbound?"
Asher stood silently, heart racing as the cryptic words echoed hauntingly within his mind. A strange, lingering ache tugged at the fringes of his consciousness—painfully familiar yet impossible to grasp fully.
He exhaled slowly, struggling with the riddle's meaning. It seemed somewhat abstract, layered with hidden meaning beyond his current understanding. Yet instinctively, he felt the importance of his answer.
"This riddle," he murmured softly, "it speaks of someone bound in a never-ending cycle, doesn't it? Cursed to repeat mistakes without realizing it and seeing those around him suffer?" Asher remembered the trial he went through in the Tower of Torment.
It was a trial that carried so much misery and suffering that his soul was still weighed by them.
Azi smiled faintly, neither confirming nor denying, watching him expectantly.
He hesitated, gaze distant, contemplative. Finally, after careful consideration, he spoke quietly with a hint of sorrow in his eyes, "I still do not know the answer. But if it were me, I would keep fighting to break that cycle no matter how tormenting it would be. I will never accept that there won't be a way to escape it."
Azi's flames flickered brighter, her four scarlet eyes glistening mysteriously. Her voice was gentle, approving yet carefully guarded.
"It's foolish at first glance but still very brave and interesting... Many would choose surrender as the path to freedom. But would your answer change if the said person isn't aware of this cycle? Forced to repeat each cycle as if it's the first? Having to remember everything at the end of a cycle, only to forget it at the next?" Azi asked as her glowing eyes narrowed.
Asher's heart briefly clenched as if her question stirred something deep he couldn't put his finger on. Just imagining such a scenario made him realize that it was far worse than the trial Drakaris made him go through.
Not knowing yet realizing everything when it's too late...only to forget it all and have everything repeat again and again...That was not just unfair but would be a harrowing fate that was too frightening to even imagine.
"I...I..." Asher didn't know what kind of answer he should give and it deeply unsettled him the more he thought about it.
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