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Magical Soul Parade-Chapter 260: The Hearthstone
While the 14th corridor had been relatively easy because of Syf, corridor 13 and 12 were not the same. But not in the way one might think.
Immediately Finn stepped into the 13th chamber, he knew he was in for something entirely different.
First, there was no creature waiting inside. There was no looming presence whatsoever, no environmental hostility, no soul mass radiating threat. In fact, no matter how Finn looked at it, this was simply a modest chamber. It looked like something one could find in the temples of any God. If it wasn’t for the pin-drop solemn silence and the caution Finn was observing, the chamber could pass off as any other room.
Finn took in the whole chamber and walked straight towards the only thing of note — an object sitting on a raised platform right at the center.
It was a hearthstone.
Dark grey, roughly the size of a man’s torso, perfectly smooth on its flat face and rough everywhere else. It looked plain on the outside, but Finn wasn’t fooled by its appearance. This was a stone used for forging weapons, and not just any weapons. This was used to forge weapons that were powerful enough to be wielded by Gods.
Even as someone without any background in smithing or forging weapons, Finn could tell this was a special and rare forging material. The literal equivalent of the wet dream of every great forger, smith, runemaster, and every single person that practiced the art of artifact-making.
This was an object so central to the creation of divine weaponry that the smiths who used them built entire traditions around their care. Generations of reverence directed at a piece of rock.
And apparently, that reverence had been enough.
The hearthstone was watching him. He had felt it the moment he stepped into the room. A consciousness sat inside the object with a density that had no business being in something that had never lived in any conventional sense.
This stone had accumulated awareness — human awareness, and eventually stepped into the realm of the divine over an incomprehensible span of time. It went from the base level of inert, sentient-less consciousness Finn had felt of every single non-living thing in his expanded consciousness state, to this.
It had used the faith and attention of every smith and God who had ever stood before it and believed it mattered.
It had come to believe it mattered too. More than that. It had come to believe that whether something was worthy of it was its decision to make.
Finn approached the platform and stopped in front of it. And immediately, he felt a question enter into his mind, not as words but as a pressure against his consciousness. A single directed inquiry that needed no language to be perfectly clear. It wanted to know what he was going to do with it. What kind of smith stood before it. What his craft was, what his tradition was, what his right to wield it — a prime material of divine weapon-making — actually consisted of.
Finn opened his mouth and thought about the answer... but all the answers he could think of were simply nonsense. Generic answers that held no weight. Answers that he knew were perfunctory and performative, simply trying to find the right things to make sure he didn’t say the wrong thing.
Finn was no smith. He had no tradition, no craft lineage, no years spent at a forge developing the kind of relationship with materials that the hearthstone was clearly expecting. But he tried to construct something anyway.
He tried to twist logic and pose his soul edict as a kind of forging, his soul density as a kind of material mastery, but the hearthstone called his bullshit. The consciousness communicating directly with his mind turned dismissive, and then the chamber simply expelled him.
Not violently. The door was just suddenly behind him and he found himself in the corridor.
Oh? I failed...?
Finn stood there for a moment.
Then walked back to the central hall and sat down under the curious gaze of Althea and Vara — though the latter tried to mask it. Neither of them said anything, though. Ailin was a no-brainer too. She simply stood where she was without even bothering to glance Finn’s way. Her eyes were closed the entire time.
Without needing to be told, they could all infer that Finn was in a contemplative state and should not be disturbed.
The hall was silent as Finn turned the failure over in his mind methodically, thinking about what exactly he had done wrong.
The hearthstone hadn’t rejected his power, it had no interest in his power at all. This wasn’t a battle of soul density or anything resembling a fight. No. It had rejected his reason. He’d stood in front of it and tried to present himself as something he wasn’t, and the stone, which had spent its entire existence as the final judge of what was and wasn’t worthy to use it, had noticed immediately.
The honest answer to its question was that he wasn’t a smith. He had no craft. He had no tradition or lineage or years at any forge.
What he had was something else entirely.
He was Error. The flaw in reality itself, the fragment that declared things invalid and made that declaration a fact that reality followed. He wasn’t going to use the hearthstone the way a divine smith used it. He wasn’t going to follow any "tradition" because the Errant didn’t follow "traditions."
He was the Errant, and the Errant found the place where expected logic broke down and walked through it. He would use the hearthstone the way the Errant used everything. On his own terms, attuned to his own nature, bent to his purposes regardless of what it had been designed for or what convention said it was for.
He didn’t need to justify that to the hearthstone.
He needed to state it.
Finn stood up and went back to Corridor 13.
He walked into the chamber, straight to the platform, and stopped in front of the hearthstone. The question came again. The same wordless question in his mind: What are you and what is your right to wield me?
This time Finn didn’t reach for an answer. He simply looked at the stone and made his position clear without framing it as a request.
He was the Errant. Error itself given flesh and soul. He had chosen to use the hearthstone and he would use it the way he saw fit, attuned to his nature, shaped to his purposes. He wasn’t asking whether that was the correct use. He wasn’t interested in what the correct use was. The hearthstone would bend to his use because he had decided it would, and the Errant’s decisions had a way of becoming fact.
The dismissive response didn’t come this time.
There was a long pause. Then something shifted in the stone’s consciousness. It wasn’t exactly a submission, but rather, more like the recognition of something it hadn’t encountered before. It had judged smiths and Gods for its entire existence and developed very clear criteria for worthiness based on that experience. Finn didn’t fit any of those criteria and wasn’t pretending to. He was presenting something the criteria hadn’t accounted for, and the stone was recalibrating.
What followed after was straightforward. The recalibration finished and stone accepted him.
Finn spoke the edict and assimilated it cleanly.
The assimilation settled fast, and the moment it did he understood immediately why this soul mass ranked above the Sea collective, above the Ferropteryx, and even above Syf.
The hearthstone’s nature became immediately obvious from the inside. It was an endless source of prime soul material. A practically infinite source that would keep producing raw material of the highest grade continuously, without limit.
The reason Gods had revered it wasn’t just because of the level it had reached from the traditions and superstitions that made it special. It was because having access to an unlimited source of divine-grade forging material was worth more than almost any other single resource a God could possess.
And it fit into his Error powers like it had been designed to.
Which meant the assimilation of the hearthstone was only half of what this corridor was asking of him.
The chamber wall on his left dissolved, revealing a passage directly into the adjacent chamber. Finn looked through it.
Chamber 12...
He stepped through without going back to the central hall, and his eyes immediately locked onto the soul mass within this chamber.







