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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: Bygone

I wake up on the cold, hard floor of a cavern, my head spinning as if I had been thrown into the depths of a nightmare. The world sways around me, and for a moment, I struggle to make sense of my surroundings. The scent of damp stone fills my nostrils, mingling with something metallic—blood.

My blood.

I lift my left hand and stare at the crimson streaks staining my fingers. Reaching up, I find more smeared across my forehead. But there is no pain. No wound. It's as if the injuries have already healed, leaving only the blood behind as proof they ever existed.

My clothes are in tatters—rough, dirt-streaked fabric clinging to my frame, torn in ways that suggest a struggle or an accident. They resemble the rugged garments of a miner, though I have no memory of wearing them before. No memory at all, in fact.

Panic claws at the edges of my thoughts, but something else keeps it at bay—something powerful and ancient. A presence. A hum in the air, vibrating through my bones.

Slowly, I push myself up, unsteady but determined. The cavern around me is vast, its walls glistening with minerals that reflect a dim, otherworldly light. And in the very center of the chamber, pulsing with an eerie glow, stands a massive crystal.

It towers above me, its facets catching the weak light and refracting it in unnatural hues. Deep within its translucent core, shadows shift and swirl like living things. The sight sends a chill through me, not of fear, but of recognition.

I know this crystal. I don't know how or why, but I do . I came closer to see the red crystal. As I placed my hand on it, I saw a beautiful girl trapped inside.

I am drawn back to the first day we met, a moment seared into my memory with unrelenting clarity. Silence defined that meeting, an unspoken tension binding us in its grip**

 I remember now Back then when I was in the cavernous maw of the old mine, where the walls pulse with a ghostly luminescence from embedded crystals. The air is thick with dust and the metallic tang of ore, and every footstep echoes off the stone like the beat of an ancient war drum. Around me, soldiers clad in full-body armor—gleaming black and gold plates interwoven with runic engravings—move with measured urgency, their heavy boots leaving imprints in the dirt and stone. The armor hums faintly, infused with alchemical sigils that augment their strength and endurance, turning them into relentless enforcers of the Empire's will.

Each soldier's breastplate bears the Seven Mountain Symbol, the insignia of the Empire, a testament to their absolute dominion. Yet among them, the armor varies. Some wear the Titan Guard exosuits, reinforced with enchanted alloys capable of withstanding immense force, their gauntlets crackling with energy-dampening fields. Others don the Dread Reaver armor, sleek and segmented, designed for swift strikes and assassinations. The elite among them wear the Ebon Vanguard plate, infused with voidstone, granting them resistance to magic and making them nightmarish foes to any who dare rebel.

Each soldier carries weapons forged from the Empire's fusion of arcane mastery and technological precision. Some wield brutal glaives with energy-forged edges that hum with restrained power. Others carry heavy rifles, their barrels lined with enchanted filaments that ignite bursts of raw, destructive force. The most feared among them bear the gravitic hammers, weapons capable of collapsing tunnels or pulverizing bone with a single swing.

Chains rattle in the darkness, a stark reminder of what we are. Slaves. Stripped from our worlds, forced into servitude beneath the oppressive rule of the Empire. The air carries the scent of sweat and exhaustion, the unrelenting labor shaping us into something less than human.

But it is not only humans who suffer. The Empire's hunger for conquest has enslaved many races—each treated with cruelty befitting their origins. Elves, once proud and radiant, are forced into magical servitude, their innate affinity for the arcane exploited to refine the Empire's weapons. Their once-ethereal beauty is marred by exhaustion, their eyes hollow, their hands trembling from being drained of magic beyond their limits. Dwarves, the master craftsmen of old, toil endlessly in the forges, their creations serving the very tyrants who shattered their mountain strongholds. Their backs are bent, their wrists bound in enchanted manacles that burn should they refuse to work. Even the Angels, celestial beings of light, have not been spared. Stripped of their wings, their luminous forms dimmed by enchanted restraints, they are paraded as broken trophies—symbols of the Empire's absolute might.

In a narrow corridor chiseled by time, a squad gathers near a console where engineers and mages huddle over intricate gauges and levers. They're calibrating experimental weapons—a curious blend of alchemical energy and advanced metallurgy, promising to shatter both rock and foe. I watch as one soldier, his face set in a determined grimace, tightens the final bolt on what looks like a plasma-infused pickaxe, its edge sparking with untamed energy.

But more than the weapons, the true symbol of our bondage is the portalite collars. A twisted marvel of the Empire's ingenuity, these crystalline restraints glow with an eerie blue light, binding us in servitude. They are more than just shackles—they sap strength, cloud the mind, and punish defiance with bursts of searing agony. No one dares to tamper with them, for the stories of those who have tried are whispered like ghostly warnings in the depths of the mines.

A low murmur of final instructions drifts from the command post. Our commander, a stern figure cloaked in a dark, embroidered mantle, paces before us. His eyes sweep over the assembled troops, each soldier's expression a mix of trepidation and resolve. "Today, we test not only our might but our very faith in what we can become," he intones, his voice resonating through the cavern like the call of a battle horn.

But I am not one of them. Not truly. I am a prisoner beneath the weight of these tunnels, my shackles unseen but no less binding. I once dreamed of freedom, but the years have worn me down, grinding hope into dust beneath the Empire's heel. Escape is a child's fantasy, rebellion a whispered folly. I have seen too many crushed beneath the weight of their own defiance, their bodies discarded like shattered tools.

And yet, there is a voice—soft as silk, persistent as the tide—whispering in my mind.

"You are more than this. You are not broken."

I want to ignore it, to let the numbness take me, but the voice refuses to be silenced.

"They have stolen your hope, but not your will. Do not let them shape you into what they desire."

Something stirs within me, faint but undeniable—a flicker of something long buried. My fists tighten. My breath steadies. I had surrendered to despair, but she is pulling me back, weaving light into the darkness I had accepted.

Perhaps I am not beyond saving.

"Are you content with this? To be their tool? Their beast of burden?"

The voice is not my own, and yet it coils around my thoughts like an ember in the darkness.

"You can break free. You can fight."

My hands clenched into fists, dirt and sweat coating my skin. Freedom—the word lingers in my mind, tantalizing and treacherous.

I dream of fire. Not the comforting glow of a hearth, nor the guiding light of a beacon. My fire consumes. It devours. It is the inferno of hatred, kindled by profound suffering and sustained by an ever-deepening chasm of despair. Unlike the lofty abstractions of love or peace, my dream is carved from vengeance.

"You speak of dreams as if they are a curse." Her voice is soft, a gentle thread woven through the cacophony of my thoughts. "Why do you dismiss them so easily? Aren't they the one thing no one can strip from us?"

I scoff, my breath shallow against the cold stone of my prison. "Dreams can imprison as much as they liberate. Mine is not a vision of hope or salvation. It is vengeance—a consuming fire that leaves only ash in its path."

She does not flinch. Her presence in my mind is unwavering, even as I try to shut her out.

"And I'm still here. Isn't that enough?"

Her words stir something in me, something I refuse to name. What is a dream, truly? Is it a fleeting echo of the soul's aspirations, or a distorted reflection of its deepest fears? Perhaps it exists as both, a dialectic veiled in the illusions of purpose.

But my dream resists such introspection; it is singular and immutable, a declaration of my resolve. My suffering is mine alone, a festering wound that sustains even as it scars. Yet she—does she see it? Does she grasp the essence of my torment, or does she cling to an illusion of understanding?

that is why I need to see her talk to her and free her if possible 

then come to me I will show you the way 

I followed her voice to The tunnels of Black Hollow Mine are silent, the only sound is the faint scrape of boots on the rocky floor. I venture deeper than ever before, drawn by an inexplicable pull. My lamp casts flickering shadows, barely illuminating the tight walls as I press on.

Somewhere beyond this darkness, something waits. Perhaps it is death. Perhaps it is freedom.

Or perhaps, just perhaps, it is the spark that will set the world ablaze.

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