Chereads / The Arcanum System / Chapter 38 - Chapter 38: Trial of the Mind

Chapter 38 - Chapter 38: Trial of the Mind

The chamber was bathed in blinding light as the glowing crystal's pulse intensified. Kael's vision blurred, and he felt his body being pulled in every direction at once. For a moment, it felt as though the world was unraveling, twisting in on itself like a whirlwind. His heart raced, his mind reeling from the disorienting sensation.

And then, just as suddenly as it had begun, the light faded.

Kael found himself standing in a vast, empty void, the world around him completely still. The silence was deafening, and he quickly realized that his companions were no longer at his side. He stood alone in the void.

"Where am I?" he whispered, his voice barely more than a breath.

A soft, echoing voice answered, "You are in the first trial: The Trial of the Mind."

Kael's eyes darted around, trying to locate the source of the voice, but there was nothing—no form, no shape, only the echo of his own thoughts and the voice that seemed to emanate from everywhere and nowhere at once.

"To master the Arcanum," the voice continued, "you must first master yourself."

Before Kael could respond, the void around him began to shift. Shadows stretched and twisted, taking form and substance. Slowly, they coalesced into something familiar—a memory from his past, one he had tried to forget.

He was no longer in the void. He stood in the middle of his childhood village, the scent of pine and fresh rain heavy in the air. But something was wrong. The village was in ruins, its homes burned to the ground, smoke curling into the sky. The ground was littered with rubble, and in the distance, flames licked at the remains of the once peaceful settlement.

Kael's chest tightened. He knew this place. He had lived through this nightmare before.

"No," he whispered, backing away. "Not again."

The voice echoed in his mind. "To move forward, you must confront your past."

Kael's heart pounded as he heard the familiar screams, saw the terrified faces of the villagers as they ran for their lives. And then he saw them—the marauders, cloaked in shadow and flame, their eyes gleaming with cruelty. They cut down everything in their path, leaving only destruction in their wake.

His pulse quickened as he spotted a figure in the midst of the chaos. A young boy, no older than ten, stood frozen in fear. His clothes were tattered, his face smudged with dirt and ash. He was staring at something—a body lying in the middle of the street.

Kael's breath caught in his throat. It was his mother.

"No!" Kael shouted, his voice trembling as he ran toward the boy. "Don't look, don't—!"

But it was too late. The boy—his younger self—dropped to his knees beside the body, tears streaming down his face. The scene played out just as Kael remembered. The loss, the pain, the helplessness. It was a memory that had haunted him his entire life.

Kael clenched his fists, rage burning in his chest. "Why are you showing me this?" he demanded. "I've already lived it!"

"To master the Arcanum," the voice said, "you must master the pain that binds you. The Arcanum feeds on your emotions, Kael. If you cannot confront your past, the Arcanum will consume you."

Kael's breath came in ragged gasps as he watched the marauders approach his younger self. They loomed over the boy, weapons drawn, their faces twisted into grotesque masks of hatred.

"No!" Kael shouted, his voice breaking. He ran toward them, sword in hand, but his feet felt like they were moving through water. The closer he got, the more the scene seemed to slip away from him, as if the memory itself was resisting his intervention.

His heart raced, desperation clawing at him. He could still save them—he could still stop it from happening.

But the voice echoed again, cold and calm. "You cannot change the past."

Kael's sword dropped to his side, his chest heaving. His younger self stood frozen in terror, watching as the marauders lifted their weapons.

"Please…" Kael whispered, his voice breaking. "I couldn't stop them. I was too weak."

The voice didn't respond, but the scene began to shift again. The village, the flames, the marauders—all of it faded away, replaced by a new image.

Kael now stood in the throne room of Eldoria, surrounded by the grand pillars and tapestries of the royal palace. But this wasn't the throne room as he remembered it. It was cold, lifeless, and the colors had drained from the walls. At the far end of the room sat a figure on the throne—a figure that made Kael's blood run cold.

It was him. But not the Kael he knew. This version of him was draped in dark armor, his face twisted into a cruel sneer, and his eyes glowed with the malevolent light of the void.

"You see it now, don't you?" the voice said, but this time it came from the dark version of Kael seated on the throne.

Kael took a step back, his heart pounding in his chest. "No… that's not me."

The dark Kael rose from the throne, his form towering, his presence oppressive. "Isn't it? Look at what you've done. You've used the Arcanum to destroy everything you've ever cared about. You think you're fighting the void, but you're just feeding it. You are the void."

Kael shook his head violently. "No. I'm fighting to protect the realms. To stop the void!"

The dark Kael stepped closer, his voice dripping with disdain. "And what happens when you can't stop it? When the Arcanum finally consumes you, like it's consumed every other who dared wield its power? You think you can control it, but the truth is, it controls you."

Kael felt the weight of those words pressing down on him, doubt clawing at his mind. He had felt it—the toll the Arcanum had taken on him, the way it seemed to change him with each use. But could it really be true? Was he becoming the very thing he sought to destroy?

"You've already seen it," the dark Kael said, his voice softening into something almost soothing. "The power… it's intoxicating, isn't it? You could do anything, be anything. You don't need to fight the void. Embrace it. Let it be your ally."

Kael's hand tightened around the hilt of his sword. He could feel the Arcanum stirring inside him, resonating with the dark version of himself. The temptation was there—the promise of limitless power. He could end the void's threat with a single command, reshape the world, control it all.

But then he remembered Elara's words. "Magic requires balance."

He took a deep breath, steadying himself. "You're not me."

The dark Kael laughed, a hollow sound that echoed through the chamber. "I am you. I'm the part of you that craves power, that wants to control. You think you can hide from it, but you can't. I am what you will become."

Kael raised his sword, his gaze steady. "No. You're what I could become. But I won't let that happen."

The dark Kael's smile faltered, and for the first time, doubt flickered in his eyes. "You can't deny it forever."

"I don't have to," Kael said, his voice strong. "I just have to keep fighting."

With a roar, the dark Kael lunged at him, but Kael stood his ground. As the figure came closer, Kael plunged his sword into the ground, channeling the Arcanum through the blade. Light erupted from the sword, and the dark figure was engulfed in a brilliant blaze of magic.

The chamber shook, and the vision of the dark throne room began to crumble around him. Kael stood firm, his resolve unshaken as the darkness faded away.

When the light finally dimmed, Kael found himself back in the void, alone once more. The voice returned, softer this time.

"You have passed the first trial. But your journey is far from over."

Kael exhaled, his heart still racing. "I'm ready."

And with that, the world shifted once again, and Kael was thrust into the next trial.