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Chapter 85: Puppets

  
Chapter 85

  Puppets

  Fire crackles, embers spiraling upward like

  restless spirits seeking escape. Shadows stretch and recoil against the walls,

  wood and stone shifting in a flickering dance, their rhythm dictated by the low

  murmur of voices.

  Selene and Lyra sit close, undeterred by the

  weight of the place, their conversation hushed yet brimming with life. Laughter

  spills between them, a bright, defiant contrast to the oppressive stillness.

  The air is thick with the scent of sugar and cinnamon, twined with the musty

  perfume of old parchment and worn leather—sweetness wrapped in the weight of

  history.

  I do not share in their warmth. Their ease does

  not touch me. Questions coil within my mind, restless, ceaseless, whispering

  like ghosts in the corridors of thought. My gaze drifts across the firelit

  chamber to the figures seated opposite me—half flesh, half legend, bound by

  myth yet breathing still. I let the silence stretch, testing its strength,

  before slipping my words into the quiet.

  "Tell me," I murmur, my voice measured,

  deliberate, slicing through the hush like the edge of a blade. "How is it

  that you, the weapons of King Arthur, came to be?"

  Grayson d’Acier exhales, slow and steady, his

  breath catching the glow of the embers. His silvered gaze, cool as tempered

  steel, flickers with something distant—memory or warning, I cannot tell. When

  he speaks, his voice resonates, deep and measured, like the toll of a distant

  bell.

  "Arthur Pendragon," he intones,

  "was no mere king. No simple warrior. He bore a gift—dangerous, unnatural.

  Soul-Magic. A Puppeteer’s art." His eyes hold mine, unreadable, as he

  continues. "With but a thought, he could grasp the essence of another,

  weaving them into his will, their very souls caught in the strings of his

  command.

  Across from him, Isabella of Calloway sits with

  effortless grace, her spine unyielding, her presence carved from quiet

  authority. The firelight catches in her dark irises, revealing a glint of

  something ancient, something knowing. She does not simply see—she dissects,

  peering through layers of truth and pretense alike.

  "As you are no doubt aware," she

  begins, her voice smooth and cool, polished like river-worn obsidian,

  "Soul-Magic, when met with an equal force, often finds itself rendered

  powerless. A soul bound tightly to its own magic resists such intrusion."

  The words settle between us, heavy, undeniable. I

  nod, slow and deliberate, the truth of it not merely understood but felt—etched

  into the marrow of my being, written in the unspoken language of memory.

  "Indeed," I say at last, my voice

  carrying the weight of things lost, of battles fought not just in the world,

  but within myself.

  Grayson leans forward, the firelight carving deep

  shadows across his face, sharpening the hollows beneath his cheekbones. There’s

  something behind his gaze—not just knowledge, but an understanding so ancient,

  so volatile, it feels as though it might unmake the very air between us.

  "But what most fail to grasp," he

  murmurs, his voice low, deliberate, "is that Soul-Magic alone is merely a

  thread in the tapestry. When woven with darker forces—be it the abyssal pull of

  the Void, the whispering embrace of Shadow, or the insatiable hunger of

  Blood-Magic—it is no longer bound by the same laws." He pauses, letting

  the weight of his words settle. "From that unholy alchemy, something new

  is born. Chaos Magic."

  A chill tightens around my ribs. The words strike

  like a sudden gust of cold wind, slipping past my guard, burrowing deep. I go

  still, every instinct urging caution.

  "Chaos Magic?" I repeat, the syllables

  brittle, barely more than breath.

  Isabella’s lips curl—not into a smile, nor a

  frown, but something caught between. A flicker of sorrow lingers in the curve,

  veiled yet undeniable. When she speaks, her voice is barely more than a

  whisper—soft, but weighted, sinking like a stone into the depths of unseen

  waters.

  "Aye," she breathes. "Arthur, in

  his pride—his boundless hunger for dominion—reached where no mortal should. He

  shattered the limitations that once bound him, twisting the very weave of magic

  to his design. He slew us. And when our bodies fell, he did not let us

  rest." Her gaze darkens, the fire’s dying glow catching in her eyes like

  fading stars. "With Chaos-Magic in his grasp, he tore our souls from their

  rightful place, bound them in steel, and forged us anew—not as people, but as

  weapons. Eternal. Unyielding. Chained first to him… and now to the relics that

  remain."

  The fire burns low, its embers no longer drifting

  but smoldering—dark, heavy, as though mourning the weight of her words.

  This tale has been pilfered from Royal Road. If found on Amazon, kindly file a report.

  Selene gasps, sharp and sudden, as if the breath

  has been stolen straight from her lungs. Her hand flies to her mouth, and the

  delicate sugar cookie slips from her fingers. Time stretches, unbearably slow,

  as it tumbles—brushing against the plush carpet before landing with a soft,

  almost imperceptible . The sound should be insignificant. It isn’t.

  Silence blankets the room, thick and suffocating.

  I watch as Selene’s eyes widen, the color draining from her face, leaving her

  pale as moonlight. She stares at me—no, me—her gaze hollow with

  dawning horror, as if she has glimpsed something that should never be seen.

  A shiver coils at the base of my spine, crawling

  upward like icy fingers. An instinctual warning. The air has changed, pressing

  against my skin, thick with something unseen. Something wrong.

  “What is amiss, Selene?” My voice is gentle,

  meant to soothe, yet I cannot ignore the tightness in my chest. The weight in

  the air is almost tangible, as though it holds secrets not meant to be

  disturbed.

  Her lips part, but for a moment, no sound

  escapes. Then, barely louder than the crackle of the fire, she whispers, “The

  Automaton Knights... are they...”

  She falters. The question dangles, unfinished,

  trembling between us. Her wide, frantic eyes flick toward the ancient beings

  before us, searching—pleading for an answer neither of us can bear to speak.

  The shadows stretch, curling along the walls, twisting in the flickering

  firelight. The flames dance wildly, unnaturally, their movements feeding the

  silent dread sinking into my bones.

  Isabella’s regal composure shatters, fragile as

  glass. Her voice escapes in a hushed whisper, unsteady, raw. "How do

  you know…?"


  The words barely leave her lips before her hand

  flies up to cover them, fingers trembling. For a fleeting moment, I see it—the

  shimmer of unshed tears in her dark eyes, a quiet fracture in the mask she so

  carefully maintains. The sight unsettles me, a pang of something deep and

  unfamiliar tightening in my chest. Isabella is always composed, always

  unshaken. To see her like this——is like watching a star flicker

  before the night swallows it whole.

  The air in the room shifts, heavy with unspoken

  grief. The warmth of the fire feels distant now, unable to chase away the chill

  creeping in.

  Beside her, Grayson moves, his expression carved

  with sorrow. He doesn’t speak. He doesn’t need to. Instead, his hand reaches

  out, fingers grazing hers in a silent offering. The touch is careful,

  fleeting—less comfort, more acknowledgment. A shared ache. A tether to something

  lost.

  Yet, the weight in the air does not ease. If

  anything, it thickens, wrapping around us like a phantom of the past, unwilling

  to let go.

  I lock my gaze on them, the weight of the silence

  pressing in around us like thick fog, thick enough to swallow us whole. My

  voice is steady, controlled, yet there’s a quiet power beneath it—like a calm

  breeze that whispers before the storm. “My soul-magic, Clairvoyance, as you

  know, lets me see beyond the ordinary.”
I pause, letting the words settle,

  feeling their weight in the air. “It lets me peer into the tapestry of

  time—threads from the past, frayed and tangled, moments from the present

  slipping by like wisps of smoke, and the future... an uncertain weave, still

  unraveling, shifting with every choice. But it’s not just that.”


  I let the silence stretch between us, thick and

  waiting. My next words come slower, more deliberate. “I also sense the

  echoes of what could have been—the faint shadows of paths never taken, of

  things that were never meant to be. I can feel them, lingering, just out of

  reach.”


  As I speak, the air grows heavier, almost

  suffocating, like the room is holding its breath. The words I’ve spoken hang in

  the space between us, a quiet reminder of the strange, haunting power that

  stirs deep inside me, restless and alive.

  I watch as Isabella’s gaze softens, her usually

  composed features faltering for just a moment. Her fingers tremble ever so

  slightly, a subtle crack in her armor, before she reaches out, her hand

  settling gently on Grayson d'Acier’s palm. The touch is warm, grounding them both,

  a silent plea for solace that lingers unspoken between them—offering a shared

  grief that floats in the air, delicate yet undeniable. Grayson looks down at

  their clasped hands, his eyes flicking to hers. The understanding there is

  clear—quiet, but profound. His lips twitch into a brief, tender smile. It’s

  fleeting, but it holds the weight of a thousand unspoken words—a small comfort

  in the face of the growing darkness that presses in on us. In this moment,

  there’s a connection between them, fragile yet strong, a flicker of light in

  the storm.

  "The Automaton Knights, as you have named

  them..." Grayson’s voice breaks the silence, deep and steady. But there’s

  something darker there, an ancient sorrow buried beneath the words, a heaviness

  that seems to press into the room with each syllable. He speaks slowly, each

  word deliberate, carrying the weight of a grief far older than the troubles of

  the day. His voice rings out, cutting through the quiet like the mournful toll

  of a distant bell, its echo hanging in the air, stretching through the shadows

  between us.

  "They are the Paladins of Grantdale. A

  kingdom that once stood proud, now twisted, broken beyond recognition."

  His gaze flicks downward, the sorrow in his eyes a reflection of the tragedy he

  speaks of. "The entire kingdom... its people—women, children, the elderly,

  the warriors who once defended its borders—were all turned into puppets.

  Porcelain marionettes, bound not by strings, but by Arthur’s cruel, unyielding

  will."

  A chill creeps over me as his words hang in the

  air, thick and suffocating. The horror of them settles over us like a heavy

  fog, weighing down on my chest. This kingdom—once full of life—now lies in

  ruins, nothing more than a hollow shell. I can almost feel the lifelessness of

  those souls, drained and replaced with an unfeeling void. Their eyes, once full

  of hope and warmth, are now empty—windows into a world gone dark. The thought

  twists my stomach, and I shudder involuntarily, though it’s not the cold air

  that does it. No—it’s the nightmare image of those lost souls, trapped in

  bodies that no longer belong to them, bound to the whims of a madman who treats

  them like toys. I can see it now, vivid in my mind—hear the silence of their

  voices, crushed beneath Arthur’s iron grip, their wills shattered, their hope

  extinguished.

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