Chapter 145: Chapter 145
The chain dragged once as he moved to the doorway. It didn't snag. Didn't resist. Just reminded him, again, that it was there. Like a narrator under his heel.
The hallway was narrow. Smooth-walled. No ornamentation, no marks. But the smell shifted. Old copper. Dust. Something sharper underneath. Like burned fabric, just distant enough to pretend it was someone else's fault.
The girl ahead walked with a limp. Not dramatic. Just a fraction off. Left foot landed slightly louder, slightly longer.
'Why do I know that?'
Not just the limp. The cadence.
He was still inside it, and the body wasn't forgetting. The limp. The smells. The dryness of the air. All of it had meaning once. For someone. For whoever had walked this path and never told anyone what came next.
Merlin shifted his weight forward. The body moved fine now. Tired. Light. But functional.
They turned a corner.
Another hallway. Wider.
Doors lined the walls. Not cells, too clean. More like sealed rooms. No windows. No sound. Each one marked by a symbol, carved or etched or burned. None repeated.
The girl stopped at the fourth door.
Didn't knock. Didn't speak.
Merlin stopped beside her.
The silence pressed in again.
The door slid sideways.
Not magic. Not mechanical. Something in between. And behind it, a room that didn't want visitors.
The air inside was colder. Not from temperature. From purpose. No furniture. Just a circular floor, etched with markings so old the stone had worn smooth around them. Like too many feet had stood here before. Like the room itself didn't need an introduction anymore.
Two figures stood at the far end. Cloaks. Thin hoods. The kind of stance you didn't earn, you inherited.
Neither did the girl.
She just walked to the edge of the circle, stopped, and nodded once.
Because someone else had stood here before.
And that memory hadn't let go.
[Weight of Memory Detected.]
[Lineage: Forbidden.]
The system didn't flash. It whispered. Direct. Cool. Like someone giving you bad news from the other side of a locked door.
One of the hooded figures stepped forward.
Not far. Just enough.
Their face didn't show. Their voice did.
"You're the last one," they said.
"You walked through the test and lived. Not well. But alive."
'Don't talk until you know the rules. Don't give them anything you can't get back.'
"You've been given time," the figure said. "A day more than the others. That means one of two things."
They stepped further into the circle.
"Either your body is slow."
"Your mind is too busy."
The other figure finally moved. Not to speak. Just to remove something from inside their robe. A glass rod. No markings. But it gleamed with something internal, like a thread of frozen light ran its length.
Merlin's breath slowed.
That was the body remembering.
He'd seen that rod before.
A room, smaller. Screaming, sharp. Someone else's. A sound like light splitting. And the rod in hand, pressed to the floor, carving a circle that no one else was supposed to know.
The figure held it up.
Merlin blinked. "What do I do?"
They didn't hand it to him.
It hit the stone floor, bounced once, then rolled to a stop beside his boot.
The moment his fingers closed around it—
A pulse ran through the rod. Through his hand. Through his mind.
No, not vanished. Focused.
He was not alone in this body.
The figure spoke again.
"How much you'll remember."
The stone beneath him lit. One ring. Then two. Then twelve.
A sigil formed underfoot.
And the pain came next.
Like memory itself was pressing down through the soles of his feet, into his spine, into his thoughts.
He bit his tongue before the scream got out.
Not because it would hurt.
But because it might erase him.
The rod burned in his palm.
A shape rose in the center of the room.
A girl. Standing in a smaller room. Pale. Weak. Eyes wide. Mouth open like she was about to say something she didn't get the chance to finish.
Then the rod cracked.
Not broken. Not damaged.
'They're forcing the memory forward. Through me. I'm the vessel. I'm the proof.'
The stone sigils flared again.
The rod pulsed again in his hand.
Not like a heartbeat. Like a counter ticking upward. Too fast to count, but he felt it. Heat in his fingers, in his wrist, then blooming up his arm like liquid light tracing every nerve.
The floor circle responded in kind, twelve rings lit now. Thirteen. Fourteen.
A hum began. Not loud, but harmonic. Something in the room tuned to it. Or maybe he did.
The hooded figure stepped back.
[Calibration Detected.]
[System Observation: Resumed.]
[The First Lawkeeper resumes writing.]
[The Smiling Witness tilts their head.]
[The King Below does not comment.]
The second figure finally spoke.
"Excessive for the second batch."
Merlin clenched his teeth. The rod hadn't cooled. It wouldn't cool.
'This isn't a scan. It's a test of control. I'm being pushed to overflow.'
The inner pulse climbed. His breath shortened.
'Whoever lived this, they were never told. They just… survived it.'
The rod snapped in half.
Clean. No sound. No light.
The heat in his body remained.
[Peak Recorded: 11.4]
[Note: Subject exceeds standard thresholds.]
His knees gave a little. Not from exhaustion. From feedback. The residual hum behind his eyes hadn't faded.
The first figure turned.
"Escort him to the gate."
Neither looked surprised.
The door behind them opened.
Enclosed. Black-wood. Two wheels. Two guards standing outside, faceless behind smooth brass helms.
The girl was waiting already.
She gave Merlin a glance. Measured. Flat.
"So you are from the first line."
'First line. Second batch. What is this? A sorting system?'
One of the guards gestured.
Just pointed at the steps.
The girl climbed in first. Sat cross-legged like she owned the space.
The door shut behind them.
But the carriage moved.
Rattled. Not violently. Just steady, like rails beneath were guiding it somewhere long ago decided.
She leaned her chin on her palm. "You don't look like much."
He watched her from the corner of his eye. "Neither do you."
"Yeah, but I didn't melt the rods."
"They snapped. There's a difference."
She snorted. "Sure. Let's call it that."
They passed into darkness. Literal. The kind that had no lamps. No torches. Just memory.
The ride didn't last long.
The carriage stopped.
Real heat. Desert heat. Dry and bladed, like someone exhaled the sun through a sieve.
They stepped out onto marble.
Carved. Huge. Veins of gold threaded into each tile.
Wide corridors. High ceilings. Watchposts carved into shadowed corners. This place was built like a fortress pretending to be a temple.
The guards didn't follow.
The girl didn't need them.
She walked like she knew the path.
Merlin followed. Silently.
They passed through three gates. Each flanked by armed soldiers, each gate thicker than the last.
They entered a chamber.
Circular. Pillars around the edge. Everything angled inward to a raised platform in the center.
Polished. Shaped. Back high enough to cut the ceiling. And seated atop it—
Not old. But aged by presence. Dark hair. Sharp nose. Narrow eyes that glittered like the edge of broken obsidian. He wasn't armored. He didn't need to be.
He was the room's center of gravity.
The girl knelt, one knee down. She didn't bow. But she lowered her head.
Merlin stayed standing.
Because this wasn't reverence.
He had no respect to give.
"You cracked the measure."
"You stood longer than the others."
The man's mouth quirked. Just slightly. Not amused.
"You're early," he said.
Merlin tilted his head. "For what?"
Behind his words, the system blinked.
[Designation: Candidate Updated]
[New Title: Third Inheritance]
[The Messenger whispers: "He will remember this."]
[The Devourer marks a line.]
[The King Below waits.]
Merlin met the man's gaze.
'Whatever this place was… it didn't train leaders. It built disasters. It picked them before they knew what they were.'
The girl glanced sideways at him.
"You're not going to speak?" she asked.
"Because I already know how this ends."
The throne room didn't echo.
But something changed.
A low tremor beneath the floor.
The King leaned forward.
"Let's see if that's still true."