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I Received System to Become Dragonborn-Chapter 1309: Communication
The temperature in the chamber dropped further without warning.
Arven felt it immediately.
The cold no longer lingered at the surface of his skin. It pushed inward and seeping through his robes, pressing into his muscles, crawling along his spine with a slow, suffocating grip.
His breath turned faintly visible, each exhale thinner than the last as the air itself seemed to resist him.
"This is getting worse," he muttered under his breath.
His fingers twitched and instinct took over. He raised his hand and channeled his Magic again, though far more cautiously this time.
Two small fire spirits flickered into existence beside him. Their forms were compact and controlled. Nothing like the massive constructs from before. They hovered close to his body, circling slowly as waves of heat pulsed outward from them.
The warmth pushed back against the invasive cold, stabilizing his body just enough.
Even then, the chill did not fully disappear.
Arven's eyes shifted back to Aesa and then to the fragment.
Aesa's expression had changed.
Her brows furrowed sharply now, her gaze locked tighter onto the Sky Anchor fragment. There was a tension in her stance that hadn't been there before.
From where she stood, the fragment no longer felt like a passive object. It felt like something was looking back. Not with eyes. But with awareness.
Aesa narrowed her gaze slightly. The sensation pressing into her mind intensified, it was no longer just intrusive, but deliberate. It carried intention and direction.
"This thing is aware." Aesa thought.
The realization settled on her but she didn't step back.
Her posture remained steady. Her presence remained unmoving despite the growing pressure pressing against her mind. If anything, her focus sharpened further. The cold around her deepened again to react to her will as if reinforcing her stance against whatever force tried to push into her.
"If you're trying something…" she thought, her eyes narrowing further, "then I'll need to see it through."
Instead of resisting, Aesa leaned into it. She pushed her perception deeper into the fragment.
The moment she did, the entire chamber reacted.
Magic surged violently.
The chains of light trembled. Their glow flickering as if strained by something far beyond their intended limits. The air distorted as waves of energy burst everywhere, crashing into the walls and floor with invisible force.
Arven's eyes widened.
"This!"
He reacted instantly.
His body moved back in a sharp motion. His feet scraped against the ground as he created distance. The fire spirits flared brighter around him as he raised a barrier of Magic, reinforcing it layer by layer to withstand the sudden surge.
Even then, the pressure pushed against him.
"I have to stay back…" he muttered to himself, gritting his teeth. His focus shifted entirely into defense and also observation.
Because what he saw next was something he had never seen before.
The Sky Anchor fragment reacted.
It pulsed erratically. Its internal light was no longer stable. Blue energy surged outward in spiraling currents, clashing against streaks of reddish-dark energy that coiled around it like something alive.
The two forces twisted together, colliding and separating in chaotic motion.
"This… this isn't normal Magic…" Arven thought with dreadful feeling.
This exchange of Magic energy didn't follow any structure he knew. It didn't resemble any elemental or arcane system he had studied in his entire life.
It was overwhelming and ancient. Yet… fascinating.
His eyes locked onto it, unable to look away despite the danger.
"This is the first time it's reacting like this."
For the first time since it had been sealed here, the fragment was doing something. And it was responding to her.
At the center of it all, Aesa stood unmoving.
Her perception pushed deeper beyond the surface, beyond the energy, into its core.
What she found there was not emptiness. It was an incomplete awareness.
Something that resembled life, but not fully formed. A presence without a body. A consciousness without structure. It existed, but only barely, as if something had been torn away from it long ago.
And then it responded. Not with words but with a feeling.
Aesa's mind received it clearly.
"You don't have to do this." the Sky Anchor spoke to her.
Her eyes narrowed slightly. She didn't pull back. Instead, she answered.
Not with words but through her intent.
"What do you mean?" she pressed.
The response came again, faint but certain.
"You don't have to do this again."
Aesa's expression hardened slightly. That phrasing… wasn't random. It implied something it recognized.
But she didn't dwell on it.
"I might have to destroy you." Her answer came cold and direct.
Silence followed.
The presence paused.
For a moment, the swirling energy slowed, as if the fragment itself hesitated.
Then the response came again.
"It's better."
Aesa's eyes narrowed further as that final response settled into her mind. 𝒻𝘳ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝒷𝘯ℴ𝓋ℯ𝘭.𝑐ℴ𝑚
"It's better?"
The words—no, the feeling—did not carry fear. There was no resistance in it. No desperation. It was calm.
That alone made it more unsettling.
"What does that mean…?" she thought. Was it asking to be destroyed? Or was it something else entirely?
Her gaze remained fixed on the fragment as thoughts moved quickly through her mind. The presence she felt within it was incomplete and broken. Like a consciousness that had been split apart and forced to exist in fragments that could no longer properly align.
Maybe that was the reason.
Maybe it wasn't whole enough to think clearly.
Or worse, maybe it was thinking clearly, but only from a fractured perspective. A piece trying to define existence without the rest of itself.
If the other parts existed elsewhere then this one wasn't truly "one." It was only a portion trying to function as something complete.
That alone could distort everything.
Aesa exhaled slowly, her expression hardening just slightly.
"This is pointless…"
Digging deeper now would only complicate things further. The reaction she had already triggered was unstable enough. The fragment responded, but that response had already begun to affect the entire chamber.
If she continued pushing there was no telling what would happen next.
And she wasn't here to destroy it. Not yet. At least, not without understanding the full situation.
That thought settled firmly.
Aesa pulled her perception back with controlled precision.
The moment she did, the change was immediate.
The bluish aura around her body dimmed. The cold that had saturated the chamber began to recede enough to release the pressure that had built up in the air.
The fragment reacted as well. The chaotic swirl of blue and reddish-dark energy slowed. Then stabilized.
The violent currents that had clashed moments ago gradually unraveled, fading into faint traces before disappearing entirely.
The chains of light stopped trembling. Their glow returned to a steady, controlled brightness as they tightened once more around the fragment.
Silence returned.
Arven felt the pressure against his barrier lessened. The fire spirits hovering beside him flickered more gently, no longer struggling against the overwhelming cold.
He sighed sharply, not realizing until now how tense his body had been.
His eyes remained locked on the fragment, then shifted slowly back to Aesa.
What he had just witnessed wasn't just a reaction. It was like… a communication.
Aesa stood still, her gaze lingering on the fragment. Her expression had returned to its usual calm, but there was a faint sharpness behind her eyes now.
She had confirmed what she needed. This was the missing Creation. There was no doubt anymore.
But the fragment's response…
That lingered.
"You don't have to do this again."
"It's better."
Those words echoed faintly in her mind.
Aesa turned away from the fragment without another word.
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