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Chapter 11 - The Forgotten Temple of Oath[3]

The wind died the moment I stepped over the edge.

No dramatic gust. No push. Just an eerie, suffocating stillness that seemed to swallow everything

Like the world had hit mute. 

Like the canyon had inhaled its last breath centuries ago and was still holding it in.

My eyes went on a series of natural staircases carved by the canyon itself. Smooth red stone shaped by centuries of wind and rain, like the ribs of a fallen giant calling for me.

A small smile formed on my lips.

I didn't hesitate. 

Hesitation was a luxury. 

A lie the weak told themselves before they fell.

I started stepping down. 

Skrrrk!

A shard of loose rock hit my leg as I walked forward and skated down the edge. I expected a clatter, a crash. But the sound never came.

It never hit the bottom. 

Just vanished into the red mist below.

"Too deep." The words slid through my mouth, cold and quiet.

I swallowed the cold lump in my throat and pressed onward.

Each step was a test.

The descent wasn't vertical, not entirely. The path was spiralled, cracked, and uneven. 

Tap. Tap. Tap.

Each footfall echoed sharply and lonely, like I was walking through some nightmare.

The air tasted of rust and old wounds.

The stone bled.

Literally.

Once, I pressed my palm to the wall to steady myself. 

It came away slick. 

Not water. 

Not sap. 

Blood, thick and rust-coloured, like the canyon remembered every wound ever carved into it and refused to forget.

I didn't wipe it off and continued to march forward.

By the time I reached the halfway point, the forest above was a thin green rim. 

The light was dimmer now, warped by the red mist, as if I were sinking into the hell of this world. 

Shapes moved behind me. Silent and Watching.

I summoned Nyx briefly, just long enough to make sure I wasn't hallucinating the path. 

He hissed at the air, fur bristling, then vanished back into the card form without a word.

'Poor cat still scared.'

Eventually, the path ended.

A broken stone bridge supported by hundreds of chains stretched across the gap in between the canyon, barely wide enough for a single person. 

Some as thick as my torso, while others as thin as hair. They twisted in the air, clinking softly like wind chimes made of regrets.

I stepped onto the bridge.

Creeaaak…

It shifted beneath my weight as if it would fall at any given moment.

Crack!

One of the chains supporting the bridge snapped and fell. It didn't land. 

Just vanished. 

Like it had never existed.

Step.

Step.

I walked slower after that, and soon, in front of me, stood the entrance of the forgotten temple.

A black door wrapped in chains, calling for me yet screaming in my mind to run away.

'Decide one dude.'

I told myself and gently pushed the door. It opened without sound, without hesitation, like it had been expecting me.

No sound. 

No rumble. 

I walked in, and the darkness swallowed me whole.

***

Inside, the Temple was colder than the canyon. Colder than it had any right to be.

And the air... wasn't air.

It felt old. 

Heavy. 

Breathing it made me slower. 

Ba… Thump! 

Ba… Thump!

My heartbeat echoed loudly in my ears, each beat a hammer driving doubt and fear deeper in my mind.

The corridor stretched ahead, framed by walls etched with symbols I didn't recognize. Some were still glowing faintly. Others pulsed as I passed.

Then I heard the whisper.

"Swear."

A voice.

I froze.

I felt it not in my ears, not in my head, but in my bones.

It wasn't a command. It was... an invitation. 

"Swear."

A lure.

"Swear."

I kept walking.

Eventually, I reached a circular chamber. The walls inside were smooth and seamless. 

There wasn't even a speck of dust or web in the whole room. 

Just an altar at the center and a figure beside it.

'Spooky.'

My eyes finally landed on the figure at the center of the chamber with a smirk.

The figure looked like a statue but gave off the feeling of a devil.

It sat cross-legged on the stone throne, completely grey. 

It had no face. Just a mask of weathered obsidian, cracked down the middle. It wore a robe that shifted colour from black to grey to white, in endless motion.

It didn't speak.

But I knew.

This was the Guardian.

The keeper of the Vow.

And this... was my trial.

"You seek the Card of Heavenly Vow," it spoke.

The voice was neither male nor female. It echoed throughout the chamber.

I didn't answer.

"To claim it, you must offer truth. Five truths. Five answers. Five vows."

It spoke once again with its hand lifted, fingers bone-thin, pointing towards me.

"Answer, and leave whole. Lie, and be shattered like the rest."

And just like that, the descent had only begun.

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