FREE USE in Primitive World - Chapter 208: The Shadow of the Sun

Chapter 208: Chapter 208: The Shadow of the Sun
Thorne stood by the narrow, vertical slit of a window that served as his only connection to the world above. Outside, the silver leaves of the Great Heartwood were whispering in the wind…. a frantic, rhythmic rustling that sounded like a thousand voices pleading for a reprieve they wouldn’t receive.
“Let him enjoy his five minutes of glory,” Thorne whispered, his voice barely audible over the gale. “The people are fickle, Korash. They love a light that blinds them, but they always crawl back to the shade when their eyes begin to sting.”
But as he spoke, the memory of that blinding white pillar of light… the way it had effortlessly pulverized the Sun-Stone… made the hollow of his stomach ache. He was a man of logic, but even he knew that some miracles were too heavy to be ignored.
“But we can’t just pin all our hope on the venom,” Thorne said, turning away from the window. His eyes moved toward the northern horizon, visible through the gaps in the lower canopy. Far beyond the silver-green ocean of the Orrath, the sky was tinged with a harsh, flickering orange. “Hope is a poor substitute for a well-placed blade.”
“We need a contingency,” Thorne muttered, his gaze hardening. He walked back to the stone table and grabbed a small scrap of dried skin… a messenger’s parchment. “Send word to Malphas. Use the shadow-hawk. Tell him the ’Divine One’ has awakened. Tell him the stone was shattered. Tell him if he wants the Veynar intact, he must strike before the boy finds his wings. Once he binds a soul, his core will have a focus. And a focus like that… it will be a wall we cannot climb.”
Thorne picked up a quill made of a vulture’s primary feather and dipped it into an inkwell of dark, thick fluid. He wrote some rune like words with predatory hand, his movements efficient and cold.
“Malphas is a hunter of geniuses,” Thorne said, a wicked smile touching his lips. “He hates nothing more than a star that shines brighter than his own. When he hears of a ’five-minute awakening,’ maybe he won’t wait for the high moon. He will come to see the miracle for himself. And he will bring the Zharun vanguard with him.”
He finished the note and held it over the single flame. The firelight caught the sharp, skeletal curve of his hook-nose, casting a shadow against the wall that looked like a bird of prey descending on a nest.
“The Veynar think they have seen the dawn,” Thorne whispered, his voice a dry, papery rasp that seemed to harmonize with the rotting wood of his sanctum. “But they forget that the ’First Dawn’ is often followed by a very short day.”
He handed the parchment to a shadow that detached itself from the corner of the room…. a silent, cowl-clad messenger bird who vanished into the roots without a sound. Thorne looked back at the window, at the distant emerald spire, and blew out the fire.
…
The walk back to the Feline Spire felt like a funeral procession in reverse. Instead of the somber, heavy silence of the mourning rites, the tribe was celebrating a birth… the birth of a savior they had prayed for but never truly expected to see. It was a terrifyingly loud jubilation.
Thousands of Veynar tribespeople lined the bridges and spiral stairs, their faces illuminated by the flickering amber of thousands of torches. Some were weeping openly, their tears carving clean tracks through the soot on their cheeks; others were shouting names of fallen brothers, as if telling the dead that their blood had finally bought a miracle.
Kira’s grip on Sol’s arm never wavered. Her fingers, calloused and scarred from years of gripping a bone-sword, dug into his skin with a desperation that was more about anchoring herself than him. She was a shield, a wall of focused aggression that moved him through the corridors of the Great Heartwood with a speed that discouraged the bolder tribespeople from reaching out to touch his clothes.
Every time a hand strayed too close to his dark cloak, Kira’s feline phantom would flicker into existence, a warning hiss vibrating in her throat that sent the worshippers scrambling back.
Lumi trailed behind them like a lost spirit, her usual bubbly energy transformed into a frantic, wide-eyed devotion. She looked like she was walking through a dream, her hands clasped tightly to her chest as if her heart might actually leap out of her ribs and roll across the moss. Every few seconds, she would peek at Sol’s profile, her eyes wide as saucers, her lips moving in a silent prayer that matched the cadence of the crowd.
As they stepped onto the open-air suspension bridges, the cool night wind of the Orrath Forest finally hit Sol’s face. It was a violent, refreshing contrast to the humid, incense-choked air of the Hall, but it helped only slightly.
The Sun Core in his solar plexus was no longer just a spark; it was a roaring furnace. He could feel the Primal Essence of the surrounding trees… the ancient, deep energy of the Heartwood itself… being drawn toward him in a frantic, invisible vortex. The silver leaves of the nearby branches were chiming with a persistent, melodic ring as they were drained of their excess vitality, their light flickering in rhythm with Sol’s pulse.
“Sol! Wait! You… you were amazing!” Lumi finally gasped out, her voice breaking the heavy silence as they crested the first suspension bridge. She was panting, her face flushed, struggling to keep pace with Sol’s unnaturally long, predatory strides. “The light! The boom! Everyone is saying you’re the savior! Are you going to lead us to the Zharun border? Are you going to summon a legendary phantom? I’ve only heard about those in the Shaman’s scrolls!”
Sol didn’t answer. He couldn’t find the words through the thick, metallic taste of ozone that filled his mouth. He took the winding bridges at a pace that left Lumi struggling to keep up, her shorter legs working double-time to maintain the distance.
“Kira,” Sol said. His voice didn’t sound like his own. It was a low-frequency rumble, a vibration that seemed to bypass the ears and resonate directly in the bones of anyone nearby. “I need to be alone. Now.”
Kira stopped abruptly at the entrance to the Feline Spire, the massive, vine-wrapped archway that marked the beginning of his private quarters. She turned him around, her stormy eyes searching his crimson ones. In the dim emerald light, she saw the silver afterglow still swirling in his pupils like a captured storm. She saw the way the air around his skin was distorting, warping into shimmering heat-waves that made him look like a mirage.
“You’re burning up,” she whispered, her hands hovering over his chest but not quite touching him, as if she were afraid the contact would cause an explosion. “Sol, your core… I can feel the heat from here. It’s not supposed to be this intense. Even an A-rank awakening only produces a mild fever. You… you’re radiating like a volcano.”
“I’m… fine,” Sol rasped. His throat felt like he had swallowed a handful of crushed glass. Every breath was a struggle against the sheer density of the air his body was trying to consume. “Just… hungry. And tired. So damn tired.”
Kira looked at him for a long heartbeat. The suspicion she had carried since she first found him at the ridge… the wariness of a “Divine One” with no totem… was entirely gone. It had been replaced by something much more complicated and heavy: a mixture of profound awe, a debt of life, and a budding, terrifying responsibility.
“I know,” she whispered. Her voice was soft, devoid of the warrior’s jagged edge for the first time. “The first dawn is… it’s a lot for any soul. And yours… yours wasn’t a dawn. It was a supernova. You’ve punched a hole in the sky, Sol. The forest is going to be screaming your name for a long time. Go. Rest. Do not try to move the essence tonight.”
She stepped back, gesturing toward the spiral stairs that led to the guest house at the peak of the spire. “Go. Rest. I’ll bring the Star-Fruits and the Essence-Meat myself. Lumi and I will stay here, at the base of the spire. No one gets up without my leave. Not the Elders, not the priestesses. Not even my mother.”
Sol nodded, a brief, genuine flash of gratitude crossing his face. He didn’t wait for Lumi to launch into another barrage of questions; he turned and began the climb. His footsteps echoed like drumbeats in the hollow silence of the spire, a sound that seemed to mock the frantic celebration happening in the plaza below.
The moment he entered his room and slammed the Void-Oak door, the stoic mask shattered.
Sol leaned his back against the petrified wood, his hands flying to his chest as if he could physically hold the energy inside. He slid down the door until his rear hit the floor, his knees drawn up to his chin. He was shaking… not with fear, but with a violent, neurological overload.
He tried to stand, to make it to the bed, but his knees buckled. He hit the mossy floor with a heavy thud, his breath coming in ragged, steaming gasps. The internal heat was no longer just a sensation; it was becoming unbearable. It felt as if his blood had been replaced with molten lead, a heavy, searing tide that was eroding the very walls of his veins. His marrow felt like it was being etched with the blueprints of a power he didn’t yet understand.
“Gah… hhh…”


