Anneliese watched the rise and fall of Argraveâs chest to remind herself that he still breathed. She could see a stunning lack of presence with her [Truesight]âand elsewhere in the obsidian chamber, saw Argraveâs golden soul brimming with vitality far removed from where it should be. She couldnât fully describe the implement that Raven had used, but she was near certain that he had once used the same thing to clash together Garmâs and Durranâs souls.
âWhat will he actually be experiencing?â Lorena questioned as she stared down at the motionless body of Argrave.
A new face appeared on the side of Ravenâs body, and it asked her, âYou donât know?â
âI didnât know if it would work, even if my theories were sound,â the dragon said honestly, and Anneliese looked up at her in surprise. âMy whole life, Iâve acted with confidence even when I havenât had it. I suppose the two are indistinguishable from one another.â
âIâve anchored his soul to his body, but displaced it.â Raven pointed elsewhere in the roomâparticularly, where Argraveâs soul lingered. âHis objective is merely to find his way home to repossess his body. After, weâll move onto more advanced doingsâheading to a separate location, and then returning to his body. As for âwhat,â wellâŠâ Raven paused, searching for wordsâsomething that was very infrequent for him. âThere is nothing in this world like experiencing life through soul alone. The possibilities feel limitless, yet are nonetheless tightly constrained by the world itself.â
Lorena raised a brow. âYou make it sound almost⊠fun.â
âAs fun as any drug. Itâs a thrill-seekerâs paradise.â Raven shook his head. âI cannot recommend it because of that.â
âIâll take your word for it. Still, how long do you think itâll take for Argrave?â Lorena pressed.
âGetting impatient?â He asked her.
âNo.â Lorena shook her head distantly. âGerechtigkeitâs not the only one whoâs used to waiting for a single chanceâa single opportunity, presenting itself after millennia of nothing.â Her bright eyes flared brilliantly, and Anneliese studied her face intensely. Lorena quickly added, âAfter all, my people mate very infrequently, and live very long lives.â
Lorena and Annelieseâs eyes met, only for the young queenâs gaze to break away and look back to Argrave uncertainly. She cast continued glances in the direction of the dragon, feeling some vague nugget of hope yet not daring to voice it lest it be a ruse. Her words about opportunity⊠could they mean Lorena need no convincing to betray? Or could she working for the Heralds even still, attempting to lure them out by implying her resolve was weak? Whatever the case, Anneliese could not confide the plan.
âOn the matter of your people, how do you watch us?â Raven inquired of Lorena as they all waited for Argrave.
âThe moon is our conduit,â Lorena explained. âWe tap into it to scry. The pact that Iâve formed with it allows as much. It becomes, metaphorically speaking, a gigantic eye that we use to peer upon this planet. It doesnât see as we understand, but it does âsee.â I know that doesnât make much sense. It takes a long while to learn how to use its sight, but once you doâŠâ She looked up at Raven. âWe can know everything, everywhere.â
Raven looked back at her. âI dislike that.â
Lorena laughed heartily. âWhy? You mislike having some secret research of yours out in the public?â
âIf youâve seen all, you know my personal failings.â Raven clenched his fist. âArgrave and his coterie being vaguely privy was already far too many for my liking. But now, a whole people know.â
âOf course we knowâand we sympathize, Raven. You were a child playing with something you donât understand,â she said, then shook her head. âYou canât be blamed for what damage you did.â
âHow could you even guess what I did and didnât understand?â Raven asked, a touch of anger in his icy voice.
âBecause my kind had been dealing with your problem for generations before I was even born. You call subsuming the flesh of another âpotentiation.â We have a similar word for it in our tongue. Much of our childhood is spent learning and adapting to it. You lost yourself to it because you had no one to teach you.â Lorena touched his arm. âDespite that, you did as best you could. You overcame it. With some help, granted, but you did.â
Annelieseâs gaze jumped between Raven and Lorena. She could see the disbelief etched in the typically-unreadable Raven as he asked, âYour people are like me?â freÄwÄbηovel.cà«Šm
âWeâre not even a tenth as moody.â She pinched his arm, and he pulled it away in surprise. âBut in the most important ways, sure.â
Before Raven could press further, Argrave sat up, inhaling deeply. He clutched his head and felt his body frantically, then laid back down.
âIâm back.â He nodded, staring at the obsidian ceiling. âIâm back. Not fake. Real.â
Lorena clapped quietly. âThe special one returns. How was it?â
Argrave took some time to gather himself, gently rubbing his chest. âThe clouds tried to strangle me as I crossed the moat of pointed trees aflame with accusatory fire.â He looked between them all and beheld their confused faces, then clarified, âItâs like lucid dreaming, but the dream itself is also alive and lucid, and it hates you.â
âAn apt description.â Raven concurred with a solemn nod. âIt could be compared to a battle between souls, yet without an active enemy besides from the forces of the world that seek to claim the soul. Argrave and I experience it exceptionally acutely, because our souls can entirely resist the brutal tides that seek to erase our very existence.â
âAlright⊠yeah. Yeah, I think Iâm starting to get the lay of the land.â Argrave looked at Lorena. âSoâhave you done the thing with Lindonâs âbody?ââ
âYeah, itâs prepared. You just have to practice.â She gave him a thumbs up.
Taken from Royal Road, this narrative should be reported if found on Amazon.
Anneliese gripped Argraveâs hand. âDo you think you were in danger?â
âNo, not really,â he said, squeezing her hand tight as his other hand scratched the side of his neck. âI had a diamond fishhook stuck in my neck. Raven was sitting on his big red boat, reeling me in at all times. Even when I had those cement shoes on, thereâs no way I couldâve hit rock bottom.â
Annelieseâs stomach stirred hearing the descriptors, but Raven clarified, âArgrave is tightly anchored. This is a tool that Iâve used myself extensively, and still I walk. Rest easy. True danger will come only when he ventures above, seeking the suns. There, Gerechtigkeit will come, sending souls that he owns to combat him. And Argrave should be preparedâmeaning, well-practiced.â
âItâs not dangerous, I promise. Not with Raven watching. What Iâm worried about is Elenore dealing with the Blackgard Union, and Sophia.â Argrave raised his hand to Annelieseâs shoulder, then gripped it. âLook after them, please. Make sure everything goes perfectly. I can go back in the belly of the white whale with peace in my mind knowing youâre out there, keeping an eye on things.â
Anneliese gave him a hug, then said into his ear, âAlright. You know⊠I think you might have the opportunity to clash souls with Raven.â
Her words contained nothing, but hinted at opportunityânamely, opportunity to loop Raven in on their plan, without the Heralds catching wind of it.
âIâm looking forward to it,â Argrave answered back, a hint of knowing on his tone.
âIâll amend that,â Raven added, ignorant of their plan.
âHe does work quite hard,â Lorena marveled as Argraveâs body again assumed the de-souled state.
âThey all do,â Raven agreed, ever the vigilant monitor. âItâs quite a thing to see competency assembled. It only comes in times of great changeâwhen the old is wiped away and replaced with something else. Itâs only something competent than can uproot deeply entrenched systems, after all.â He turned his head to look down at her.
âWhat?â Lorena stared back at him, unflinching.
Raven asked, âWas what you said true?â
âAbout your situation being not as unique as you think it is?â She shrugged. âYes. My kind can subsume others just as you can. Nobodyâs ever done as much damage as you, Iâll give you that, but you werenât acting alone. People tried to use you as a force of change. They fostered your rampage. You were caught between countless forces, shepherded and corralled every which way until you grew too big to be contained.â She pointed at him. âI saw it all. It was a painful tragedy for all involved. You alone canât be held responsible.â
Raven was the first to break from their staring contest, looking instead at Argrave to escape her soul-piercing eyes. âI was still the catalyst. I was responsible for the death of a continent.â
âAnd Iâm responsible for the near-extinction of my people, and their present miserable state.â She poked her head back into his vision, reptilian eyes gleaming like stars. âI suppose you were absent when I told those two about it. Well⊠forget it. Iâm not retelling the tale. Suffice to say, I speak from personal experience when I say that making a monster of yourself in the eyes of all who look doesnât help you repent. More importantly, it doesnât do anything for the people who you hope to impart a lesson upon.â
Ravenâs lip curled as he said, âAre you suggesting I become more like youâcarefree, relaxed, obnoxious?â
Lorena only laughed at what was his obvious deprecation of her character. âNo, never that. Itâs far more spiriting, though, to be a symbol of hope in the wake of failure, or to be a promise of redemption in the face of disgrace.â
Raven shook his head decisively. âI cannot be that which I am not.â
Lorena clicked her tongue. âFor someone whose form is so dynamic, you strangely believe that personalities are static. People can changeâeven you.â She waved her hand at him dismissively. âWhatever. Youâll understand when youâre older,â she teased.
Raven looked disgruntled, unable to deny for the first time in a long time that someone was far older than he was. It was hard to accept, frankly, because he found her somewhat immature, constantly flicking and pinching people as she did. He detested being pinched. It was hard to stay dignified, doubly so when her fingers had the strength of a vice.
âSoâwhen do you think heâll be ready for more than practice?â She focused back on Argrave.
âHeâs too valuable to risk without full preparation.â Raven leaned over Argrave, glad to speak of business again. âBefore I consent to allowing him to journey to the stars, he has to beat me.â
âBeat you how?â Lorena asked curiously.
âIn a clash of souls.â Raven straightened his back. âGerechtigkeit will throw souls of all stripes up against Argrave. I have little doubt he will personally commandeer them. I consider my soul among the strongest in the world. If he can overcome me, he can overcome any pathetic lichâs soul.â
âThat could seriously hurt either of you,â Lorena noted.
âI wonât fightâonly defend. The risk will be to me alone.â He looked at her. âItâs rather like a grown adult teaching a child how to fight. Even if they do land a punch, it wonât truly injure me.â
âThis child seems like to hide a knife and stab you when you least suspect,â she mused as she looked upon Argrave. âOh, but youâll be fine, Iâm sure. Surely.â
The days of practice were incredibly intense for Argrave. Whenever Raven lowered his soul-rending implement to Argraveâs chest, there was a terrifying boundary that greeted him that could easily be likened to the feeling of death. Argrave had never died so far as he knew, but he was so certain that it was death that he could make no other comparisons. It was like teetering on the edge of the event horizon, where that all-consuming black hole threatened to swallow his universe. Every time, it felt he barely dodged it.
But after bypassing death, Argrave entered life of another kindâexistence as a soul. He hadnât known it, but he had already gained some experience in the field in the pastâspecifically, heâd gained it in the Shadowlands, when heâd fought back the hounds of hunger that the Hopeful sent forth to devour his memories. He had been fighting, then, with his very soul.
To exist in the soul was to dream. Argrave didnât know what implications that had for dreams themselves, but to exist as a soul could be compared to a never-ending struggle against the perception of the fact that one was dreaming. Lucidity, clarity, self-awarenessâthese were the weapons that Argrave had to brandish against the pull of ignorance, oddity, and comfort. So long as he knew what he was doing, he was winningâbut if the distractions the dream threw at him proved too much, that black hole of death might suck him away.
No psychedelics could compare to the pure oddity of being a soul. His own imagination conspired to lull him into the long sleep, while fighting against it was his ego. At first, focusing on objectives had been incredibly difficult. As was his nature, though, he found a solutionâgamifying everything. It gave him tangible things to work with, but was a double-edged sword. If he found himself too immersed in the game, he might lose it all.
Argrave couldnât quite say that he was able to float about in the mortal world as a little quaint golden sprite, but so long as he knew what needed to be done before he left his body, he could get it done. It felt like he lived eighty lifetimes in eight hours. It was intoxicating, almost addicting, but intensely terrifying at the same time. The fear was part of the appealâthe genuine risk to the fantastic oddities made them all the more tantalizing to experience.
He wouldnât say so aloud lest he sound insane, but he immensely enjoyed every practice session. Until, that is, they came to the last exercise.
The fight against Raven.