25. Naeris #2
For every Mmuhr’Rhong destroyed, more poured from the wound.
Yet Zapharos never faltered. I felt his determination through the shared vision like a mountain of iron.
If the darkness could not be closed, it would be contained.
If the worlds already lost could not be restored, new ones would be created.
If the Arkhevari had to fight until the end of time, then so be it.
He would hold the line. No matter the cost.
The vision shifted again.
The battlefield inside Nox Eternum remained, but for one Arkhevari, the focus turned from war to creation. A new figure stepped forward from the ranks of the surviving Arkhevari. I had never seen him before. Yet the instant he appeared, I recognized him, as natural and undeniable as breathing.
Valelion.
He was tall and austere, his features calm and impossibly beautiful.
Golden light flowed around him in luminous currents, and where his hands moved, space itself seemed to bend in obedient arcs.
He did not carry a sword. He carried purpose.
While Zapharos and the others held the first Mmuhr’Rhong at bay, Valelion floated to the edge of the cosmic wound and stretched his arms wide.
The stars answered. Streams of light poured toward him from every direction, golden filaments from living suns, silver threads of memory, blue-white currents of raw creation.
They gathered in his hands like molten crystal.
I felt his mind through the shared vision.
Not fear. Not rage. Absolute, unwavering determination.
If the universe had been torn apart, he would rebuild it.
If worlds had been lost, he would create them anew.
The light expanded around him, weaving into vast rings and crystalline lattices that spread across the abyss like the framework of a celestial cathedral.
The Celestial Portal.
I watched in breathless awe as impossible spheres formed within its structure. Inside each one, stars ignited. Nebulae condensed. Planets took shape, spinning in shimmering cocoons of starlight.
Worlds were reborn.
But they weren't newborn worlds; they were copies of what was devoured. The Arkhevari and their Aelyth refused to let destruction have the final word. They were going to rebuild the cosmos, as had been their purpose since the beginning of time.
Emotion swelled through me until my chest ached. But through the shared resonance, another current of memory surfaced.
Dravok.
I felt his consciousness sharpen like a blade. While Valelion created, Dravok disappeared. He slipped away from the newly forged Portal and into the uncharted depths of the universe, where scattered remnants of the Umbrians had fled. I became him for an instant.
Felt his silence, his relentlessness, his patience that rivaled the darkness itself.
He moved through shattered civilizations and hidden fortresses, tracking not the Umbrians, but the Arkhevari who had decided to bring vengeance to the Umbrians, the architects of the Externum Beam, across countless worlds.
Through his mind, I understood a truth as cold and clear as starlight. The Umbrians had committed the greatest atrocity in history. But the Arkhevari were guardians, not executioners. They were creators, not destroyers. It was not for the gods to decide which civilizations deserved to live or die.
The Arkhevari could guide.
Protect.
Contain.
But they could not become what they condemned. So Dravok hunted the Arkhevari who were hunting the Umbrians, stopping them from annihilating the species the Arkhevari had created.
He became the shadow that stalked the darkness. And through Nadine, I felt the fierce, breathless pride of a scientist discovering that the male she loved had devoted his immortal existence not to conquest, but to safeguarding the fragile possibility of life itself.
The Arkhevari could have retreated. That realization struck me with startling force.
They had built the Celestial Portal. They had mastered movement through the stars and the void between them.
They could have abandoned this wounded corner of the universe and begun again somewhere beyond the reach of the darkness.
But they stayed. They chose to remain at the edge of the abyss and fight for every world that still lived. My throat tightened. For all their power, for all their immortality, they had refused to save only themselves.
While outside the battle still raged around Nox Eternum, my mind fused with Ella's, and I watched through her eyes as, at first, there was only emptiness in the Celestial Portal. Slowly, a young world floated in darkness, newly formed and untouched: Earth.
Oceans churned beneath a dense atmosphere. Volcanoes split the crust. Primitive forests spread across vast continents. No cities. No crystal towers. No traces of the Elysian civilization that had once covered the planet in beauty and light. Only nature. Raw and ancient. Untamed.
I felt Ella’s confusion and wonder. Then understanding dawned. The Arkhevari had not recreated Earth as it had been at the moment of its destruction. They had restored its foundational blueprint. The world’s geology. Its oceans. Its atmosphere. Its genetic memory.
Selkaris, the Arbiter of Memory, had preserved the essential pattern of life encoded within the planet itself.
The evolutionary history of the first Earth, Earth Prime.
The first cells, the ancient forests, the creatures that had once thundered across its plains, all had been stored like seeds.
But the cities of the Elysians had not been rebuilt.
Nor had the Elysians themselves. Those had been choices.
Not templates. The Arkhevari could recreate a world.
They could not recreate the souls who had lived upon it.
Life had to grow again.
Civilizations had to rise of their own will.
Freedom had to be preserved. The universe could be given another chance, but it could not be forced to repeat itself.
Through Ella’s eyes, I watched immense creatures thunder beneath alien skies.
She called them dinosaurs. The beasts roamed across endless fern-covered plains. Millions of years passed in moments.
Continents drifted.
Species evolved.
Mammals emerged.
Humanity began again.
Not as copies.
Not as manufactured descendants.
But as a second flowering of the same planetary possibility.
Earth.
Reborn.
A perfect replica of the original world’s potential.
And suddenly, I understood the unsettling familiarity I had felt on Earth from the moment I arrived. It was not merely a sanctuary world. It was the world. The first world. The cradle of the Elysians.
The planet where the universe had broken. And the planet the Arkhevari had chosen to restore first. Because some losses were too profound to accept. Because some places were worth rebuilding, no matter how long it took.
Through Ella’s awe, I watched a blue-and-green world turn beneath the stars, innocent and beautiful and utterly unaware that it had already died once.
Tears blurred my vision. The Arkhevari had not tried to recreate what had been lost in all its complexity. They had done something far more profound. They had given life itself another opportunity to begin.