The darkness swallowed Jax, leaving the group reeling in the aftermath. The sudden silence was unnerving. Only the faint, labored breathing of Calen and Nara broke the stillness. Lyria pushed herself to her feet, wincing from where she had hit the ground. Her hands were scraped, blood staining the stone floor beneath her, but that was the least of her worries.
"We need to move," Calen rasped, his voice tight with pain. He clutched his side, blood seeping between his fingers where one of the shadow tendrils had lashed him. "Jax isn't himself anymore. He's dangerous."
Lyria nodded but felt a cold knot of dread twist in her stomach. Jax had been part of their team for years. She had trusted him, fought beside him, and now he was lost to the shadows. Her eyes darted to Nara, whose face was pale, her light spell dimmer than before. Nara's breathing was shallow, her hands trembling as she struggled to maintain the spell that kept the suffocating darkness at bay.
"Can you keep going?" Lyria asked her, concern creeping into her voice.
Nara nodded weakly, though her eyes told a different story. "I'll manage," she whispered, but Lyria wasn't convinced. The strain on the healer was obvious, and Lyria knew they couldn't afford to lose her. Not here. Not now.
"We can't stay here," Calen insisted, forcing himself to stand straighter despite the pain. "Jax could come back, and the longer we wait, the stronger those shadows will get."
"He's right," Lyria said, her voice firmer now. "We need to keep moving."
They began their slow, cautious advance through the twisting halls of the catacombs, the walls seeming to close in tighter the deeper they went. Every sound—every creak, every shuffle—made their nerves twitch. The shadows moved constantly, never quite solid but always present, like hungry predators waiting for the right moment to strike. It felt like they were being herded, funneled toward some dark purpose.
Lyria couldn't shake the feeling that the catacombs were alive, that they were being watched by something far more ancient and malevolent than the shades they had encountered so far. The runes on the walls were becoming more intricate, their patterns twisting into shapes that were almost recognizable—figures cloaked in darkness, surrounded by tendrils of shadow. They seemed to tell a story, though what that story was remained a mystery.
Nara stumbled, catching herself on the wall, and Calen immediately moved to support her. His normally stern face softened with concern, though his wounds were clearly causing him agony.
"Rest for a moment," Lyria said, halting the group in a small alcove that seemed relatively free of shadows. "We can't push ourselves to the breaking point."
Nara collapsed against the stone, her light flickering but holding. "I just need a minute," she breathed, her face drained of color. "The shadows... they're getting harder to fight."
Lyria knelt beside her, pulling a water flask from her pack and handing it to Nara. "You've done more than enough. Don't push yourself."
Nara drank gratefully, her hands shaking slightly. "I didn't think it would be this bad," she admitted. "I knew there was dark magic here, but this... it's like the shadows are alive. They're feeding off us."
Lyria grimaced, not liking the sound of that. She had suspected something similar, but hearing Nara confirm it made the reality of their situation all the more dire. The catacombs were ancient, older than any of them had realized, and the power that lingered here was unlike anything they had faced before.
"Do you think Jax can be saved?" Calen asked quietly, his voice barely audible above the flicker of Nara's light. There was a heaviness in his tone, as if he didn't truly believe the answer would be yes.
Lyria hesitated. Could Jax be saved? She wanted to believe it. She wanted to hold onto the hope that the friend they had lost to the shadows could be brought back. But the way he had looked at them—cold, calculating, consumed by the darkness—made her doubt it.
"I don't know," she admitted, her heart heavy. "He's not himself. The shadows have twisted him, corrupted him."
Calen's jaw tightened. "Then we need to be ready. If he comes back..."
Lyria nodded, understanding the unspoken implication. If Jax returned, they couldn't hesitate. He wasn't the man they once knew, and if it came down to it, they might have to stop him by force—permanently.
Nara looked between them, her expression troubled. "There's still a chance," she said, though even she sounded uncertain. "Jax is strong. Maybe... maybe we can break the hold the shadows have on him."
But even as she said the words, the shadows around them seemed to close in tighter, as if mocking her hope. The darkness was alive, watching, waiting. Lyria could feel it in her bones.
After a few moments, Nara managed to gather herself, and they resumed their journey, though the weight of their conversation hung over them like a shroud. Each step felt heavier than the last, and the shadows seemed more agitated the further they went. Lyria kept her hand on the hilt of her dagger, her senses on high alert for any sign of movement.
After what felt like hours, they reached a large, vaulted chamber. At the center stood a tall pedestal, and atop it was an object that glowed faintly with a sickly, dark light.
"The relic," Nara whispered, her voice filled with awe and dread in equal measure.
Lyria's heart raced as she approached the pedestal, her eyes fixed on the relic. It was a strange, crystalline object, its surface swirling with dark energy. She could feel its power from where she stood, and it was unlike anything she had ever encountered. The air around it seemed to pulse, like the slow beat of a monstrous heart.
"This is what Jax was after," Calen said grimly. "The source of all this darkness."
As they drew closer, the shadows in the room seemed to stir, as if sensing their presence. The air grew colder, the light dimmer. Lyria's grip tightened on her dagger as a low, eerie whisper echoed through the chamber.
"Do you hear that?" Nara asked, her voice trembling.
Lyria nodded, her pulse quickening. The whispers were faint, barely discernible, but they were there—words spoken in a language she didn't understand, voices that seemed to come from the walls themselves.
Suddenly, the shadows surged, forming into the twisted, humanoid shapes they had seen before. The shades were back, and they were not happy to see intruders near their relic.
"Get ready!" Lyria shouted, drawing her blade.
Calen moved beside her, sword at the ready, while Nara summoned what little magic she had left, her light growing brighter in an attempt to hold the shadows at bay.
The shades hissed, their forms flickering like smoke, but there was no mistaking their intent. They were coming for the relic—and for them.