The piercing sound of the alarm clock jolted Jannet awake, her heart pounding as her eyes flew open. The familiar chime echoed through the house, a sound she’d come to loathe. It was coming from the kitchen, where she always kept it, tucked away on the counter so Walter wouldn’t smash it in a fit of irritation. Walter hated being woken up before breakfast.
She rubbed her eyes, swinging her legs over the edge of the bed and planting her feet on the cold floor. The bedroom was dark, the heavy curtains drawn tightly shut. The faint glow of dawn barely seeped through the cracks, painting the room in muted shades of gray. Jannet stood, stretching her stiff limbs, and caught sight of herself in the small mirror above the dresser. She looked pale and tired, her hair disheveled from restless sleep.
The feeling of wrongness clung to her like a second skin, an intangible weight pressing down on her chest. Something about the routine she was about to undertake felt… off. It wasn’t fear or unease exactly, but a quiet voice in the back of her mind whispering that she didn’t belong here. She shook it off, moving on autopilot as she padded out of the bedroom and into the kitchen.
The stove was cold, the counters spotless but starkly utilitarian. Jannet automatically set to work, pulling out eggs, bread, and the cast iron skillet that Walter insisted she use because “the other ones don’t cook right.” As she prepared the usual breakfast, the routine that had governed her mornings for years, that sense of wrongness grew stronger. Her hands moved with practiced efficiency, yet each motion felt disconnected, like she was watching herself from a distance.
The thought struck her suddenly and without warning: Why am I doing this for them?
She froze, her hand hovering over the stove as the eggs began to sizzle. Her gaze drifted to the hallway, where the doors to the bedrooms stood closed. Inside, Walter and Richard were undoubtedly still sleeping, oblivious to the effort she was putting into making their morning easier. They didn’t deserve this. Not her care, not her time, not her labor.
The realization was startling, like the first breath of cold air after being submerged in tepid water. She blinked, and for a brief moment, she wasn’t standing in the kitchen of her home but somewhere else entirely—somewhere brighter, warmer, where sunlight danced off polished stone and the air was alive with the sounds of life.
Newscar.
The name rose unbidden in her mind, a fleeting whisper that filled her with a strange sense of pride and longing. What was Newscar? The question faded as quickly as it had come, leaving her with a lingering sense of something better, something more than this.
When the eggs were done, Jannet did something she had never done before: she served herself first. She sat down at the kitchen table, her plate heaped with steaming food, and began to eat. The quiet clatter of utensils against porcelain was the only sound in the house, a stark contrast to the cacophony that usually erupted when Walter and Richard came to the table.
She didn’t wait long. The thunderous stomps of heavy footsteps echoed down the hallway, and a moment later, Walter appeared in the doorway, his face already twisted into a scowl. Richard was close behind him, his wiry frame tense with irritation.
“Where’s breakfast?” Walter barked, his voice a low growl. He froze when he saw her sitting at the table, a fork halfway to her mouth. His eyes narrowed. “What the hell is this?”
Jannet looked at him, calm and unflinching. “Breakfast,” she said simply, taking another bite.
Richard’s face darkened, his lips curling into a sneer. “You’re supposed to cook for us. That’s your job.”
Jannet felt something stir within her, a deep, simmering heat that wasn’t anger but something far more powerful. She set her fork down and met their glares head-on. “If you want breakfast, make it yourself.”
For a moment, there was silence, broken only by the soft ticking of the clock on the wall. Walter’s face turned an alarming shade of red, and he took a step toward her, his hands curling into fists.
“What did you say to me?” he hissed, his voice low and dangerous.
“You heard me,” Jannet replied, her tone steady. “You’ve been treating me like a servant for years. That ends now.”
Walter’s fist slammed into the table, making the plates rattle. “You think you can talk to me like that? You ungrateful—”
“Stop,” Jannet said, her voice cutting through his tirade like a blade. “I’m done. If you don’t like it, you can leave.”
Richard, who had been silently fuming, suddenly lunged toward her, his face twisted with rage. But as he reached for her, Jannet felt something shift. The world around her seemed to tilt, and for a moment, she was no longer sitting at the table. Instead, she stood in a void of endless black, her body no longer her own.
The kitchen, the house, Walter and Richard—all of it dissolved into nothingness. Jannet blinked, disoriented, and found herself looking down at her hands. They were no longer human. Her obsidian scales gleamed faintly in the non-light of the void, and her claws flexed instinctively as she tried to ground herself.
“What… is this?” she murmured, her voice echoing in the emptiness.
“Curious,” a voice said, soft and childlike but carrying an undercurrent of something ancient and knowing. Jannet turned sharply, her golden eyes narrowing as she searched for the source.
The figure before her was unlike anything she had ever seen. It was small, childlike in form, but its body seemed almost two-dimensional, as though it had been cut from a sheet of glowing white paper. Its eyes were dark and bottomless, its expression one of mild curiosity.
“You’ve been here before,” the figure said, tilting its head as it regarded her. “Why are you here again? Did you get tangled up with that cult? No, no, that’s not it. You weren’t supposed to be human, were you?”
“What are you talking about?” Jannet demanded, his voice a low growl. “Where am I?”
The figure didn’t answer immediately. Instead, it floated closer, its glowing outline flickering faintly. “This place isn’t for you. Not again. You’re... an anomaly now. How fascinating.”
Jannet bristled, his tail lashing behind her as she took a step forward. “Answer me. What is this place?”
The figure smiled, a strange, unsettling expression that seemed more gesture than emotion. “This? This is the in-between. A place where decisions are made, where paths are chosen. You’ve been here before, Sovereign of Newscar. And now… you’re here again. Why, I wonder?”
Jannet’s obsidian scales rippled as his lizard form bristled with frustration and defiance. His claws dug into the ephemeral ground beneath him—or whatever passed for ground in this void. His tail lashed behind him, the kinetic movement grounding him in a reality that seemed designed to confound.
“I don’t know what’s going on,” Jannet growled, his voice rough and low, a sound that carried an edge of desperation. “Why did you put me back through that? I don’t want to be there anymore! I’m better than them—better than those prison guards! Why are you torturing me?”
The childlike figure cocked its head to one side, the gesture eerily fluid, its glowing outline flickering like the flame of a candle. “Torture you?” it echoed, its tone light, almost amused. “I didn’t do anything to your dreams. Whatever you saw, that wasn’t my doing. But it is fascinating, don’t you think? You’ve broken back through, and yet… you still carry the baggage of where you’ve been.”
“What are you talking about?” Jannet snapped, his voice rising in volume. He could feel his Sovereign instincts surging beneath the confusion, a primal need to exert control over a situation that seemed to be slipping through his claws. “What does that even mean—‘broken back through’?”
The figure’s smile widened, though it was less a human expression and more a faint shift in its outline, like a ripple in still water. “You don’t see it yet, do you?” it murmured. “Look down.”
Jannet hesitated, his golden eyes narrowing as he resisted the instinct to obey. But curiosity—and frustration—won out. He lowered his gaze and immediately regretted it. His vision blurred, a dizzying cascade of numbers, symbols, and equations rushing past his eyes like a waterfall of raw data. Lines of calculation intertwined with flashes of geometries too complex to parse, and beneath it all, he glimpsed something vast and alive—a bird’s-eye view of a planet, its surface shifting between vibrant landscapes and withering decay.
“What is this?” Jannet demanded, his claws flexing instinctively as his tail thrashed behind him. “What am I seeing?”
The figure floated closer, its glowing outline dimming slightly as though to draw attention to the chaotic display below. “This,” it said, its tone almost gentle, “is what lies beneath. The framework. The foundation. You’ve broken through it before, Sovereign. You’ve glimpsed the system’s roots. But what’s curious—what truly fascinates me—is why you chose to go back.”
Jannet’s golden eyes snapped back to the figure, his frill flaring with indignation. “Go back? Go back to what?”
The figure let out a soft, airy laugh, a sound that seemed to resonate more in the mind than in the ears. “The Mandate, of course. The rules. The system. You’ve clawed your way through unimaginable effort to break free of it, and yet you’ve tethered yourself right back under its watchful gaze. Why?”
“I don’t even know what you’re talking about!” Jannet roared, the sound reverberating through the void like a shockwave. “You’re just spouting nonsense! What Mandate? What rules? I didn’t—”
“Oh, my,” the figure interrupted, its tone shifting to something almost pitying. “You really don’t know, do you?” It drifted closer, its glowing form growing faintly brighter. “You’re like a hatchling stumbling into a den of apex predators, completely unaware of the game you’ve wandered into.”
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“Then explain it to me!” Jannet shouted, his golden eyes blazing with frustration. “What is this place? What am I doing here? And what are you?”
The figure’s expression—or rather, the faint shift in its outline that conveyed expression—became one of faint amusement. “What am I?” it repeated, as though the question were a riddle it enjoyed contemplating. “Oh, Sovereign, that’s a complicated answer. But I’ll tell you this much: I am what guards the gates. You may call me a sentinel. A warden. A keeper. And you…” It gestured toward him, its movement fluid and deliberate. “You are an anomaly. A curiosity. One that has walked these thresholds before and yet insists on turning back.”
Jannet’s mind raced, his frustration mounting. “Why did you say I cultivated destruction essence? I don’t even know what that is!”
The figure paused, its glowing outline stilling for a moment as though considering its words carefully. “Destruction essence,” it said slowly, “is the residue of a force outside the Mandate. It’s what happens when rules are bent, broken, or outright ignored. And you, Sovereign… you’ve been collecting it.”
“I don’t—” Jannet began, but the figure cut him off.
“Think, Sovereign,” it said, its tone sharper now. “Think back. What’s the last thing you remember before you woke here?”
Jannet hesitated, his mind scrambling to piece together the fragmented memories. The battle against the swarm. The grotesque pagoda. The blue liquid seeping into his wounds, burning with an intensity that was almost unbearable. The system’s pings, flashing warnings of corruption, of integration, of choices he barely understood. And then…
“The system,” Jannet muttered, his voice low but tinged with realization. “It was… glitching. There were warnings. It asked me… it asked me for a choice.”
The figure’s outline brightened, a ripple of what might have been approval radiating through its form. “Ah, there it is,” it said, almost delighted. “You’ve danced at the edge of the Mandate, Sovereign. You’ve tasted freedom from its chains. But the question remains: why did you choose to return?”
Jannet’s claws scraped against the ground as he took a step forward, his golden eyes locked on the figure. “Because I had to,” he growled. “Because I need the system. It’s how I protect my people. It’s how I build something better.”
The figure tilted its head again, a gesture that seemed equal parts curiosity and skepticism. “And yet, Sovereign, the system you cling to is the same one that binds you. The same one that blinds you. Have you ever considered what lies beyond it?”
Jannet opened his mouth to respond, but the words caught in his throat. The figure’s question hung in the air like a challenge, its implications vast and unsettling. What did lie beyond the system? And why, despite everything, did he feel a flicker of something dangerous and exhilarating at the thought of finding out?
The Warden’s laughter filled the void, a sound that reverberated in Jannet’s mind as much as it did in the space around him. It was not a cruel laugh but one tinged with an unsettling amusement, as though the Warden found Jannet’s predicament and his flicker of curiosity endlessly entertaining.
“Well, well,” the Warden said, its glowing form rippling like smoke caught in a shifting breeze. “I see that glimmer in your eyes, Sovereign. You’re intrigued. You want to know what lies beyond the system, don’t you? What lies outside the Mandate?”
Jannet’s frill bristled, and he squared his massive shoulders, defiant even as the Warden’s words hit uncomfortably close to the truth. “What if I am?” he growled, his tail lashing behind him. “You’ve been throwing riddles and cryptic nonsense at me this entire time. Maybe I do want to know what all this is about. Maybe I want to understand what’s really going on here.”
The Warden let out another laugh, its form brightening momentarily before dimming again. “Oh, Sovereign,” it said, its tone playful yet menacing. “It’s far too late for that. You’ve made your choice, haven’t you? You chose to go back. Back under the Mandate’s watchful gaze. Back into the system’s web of rules and constraints.” It paused, its glowing head tilting slightly. “And anyway, do you truly think I, a Warden, a gatekeeper, would let you pass so easily? No, no. If you want answers, Sovereign, you’d have to earn them. You’d have to defeat me first.”
Jannet’s claws flexed against the intangible ground, his instincts flaring in response to the implied challenge. “Then why didn’t you stop me before?” he demanded, his golden eyes narrowing. “Why let me go the first time if this is such a big deal?”
The Warden’s outline flickered as it leaned closer, its glowing form almost brushing against Jannet’s. “Because you’re interesting,” it said, its voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. “Most creatures who reach this threshold? They either fall to the void, consumed by their own greed and ambition, or they throw themselves against me in a futile bid for power. And I? I snuff them out. Simple as that. But you…”
It drifted back, its movements slow and deliberate. “You made a choice twice. A choice to remember and a choice return, to tether yourself back to the system. Do you know how rare that is, Sovereign? How… fascinating?”
Jannet’s tail twitched, his frustration mounting. “So what does that mean? What happens now?”
The Warden’s laughter echoed again, sharp and unsettling. “What happens now?” it repeated, its form growing brighter as though it found the question particularly amusing. “Now, you live with your choice. Now, you return to your precious system, to your Mandate, to your rules. And I? I’ll be watching.”
Its tone shifted, growing darker, more dangerous. “You’ve piqued my interest, Sovereign. That doesn’t happen often. I’m curious to see what the Mandate makes of you. Perhaps it will embrace you for your defiance, your resilience. Or perhaps it will crush you for daring to toe the line. Either way, it will be… entertaining.”
The void around Jannet began to ripple, the strange, ephemeral ground beneath him dissolving into nothingness. The glowing figure of the Warden remained, its presence unyielding even as the world around them seemed to collapse.
“Farewell, Sovereign of Newscar,” the Warden said, its voice echoing in Jannet’s mind as the darkness closed in. “And remember: I’ll be watching. Always.”
Before Jannet could respond, the void swallowed him whole, and the Warden’s unsettling laughter faded into the distance.
Jannet’s consciousness wavered, the echoes of the Warden’s words lingering in his mind as he was pulled back into the waking world.
Jannet’s mind stirred, fragments of thoughts and sensations pulling him from the void-like haze. A strange, rhythmic hum resonated in his consciousness, accompanied by what felt like the static-filled startup of an old machine. It was surreal, as though his very essence was rebooting. His instincts urged him to fight it, but the hum was not threatening—just unfamiliar.
Then, clarity returned, though not all at once.
System Notification: Reboot Complete.
The words flashed through his mind like the first light of dawn. Jannet blinked, trying to reconcile the strange experience with the growing awareness of his body. His eyes fluttered open, the world blurry at first but steadily sharpening. Familiar pings echoed in his mind, a sound he had grown used to in his new life.
System Notification: Achievement Unlocked!
Achievement: Pillar of Continuity
Title Earned: "Pillar of the Mandate’s Grace"
The notification unfurled, glowing with an almost reverent weight. Jannet read each word carefully, the implications sinking into his foggy thoughts.
Description:
"You have transcended mortal ambition and become a stabilizing force for the Divine Mandate. Through unwavering resolve and profound understanding, you have ensured the continuation of the grand cycle, upholding the balance that sustains existence."
Rewards:
* Title Unlocked: "Pillar of the Mandate’s Grace"
* Grants a +15 bonus to Wisdom and Charisma, and increases favorability with all entities aligned to the Divine Mandate by 25%.
* Skill Unlocked: Cycle’s Resolve
* Type: Passive Skill
* Effect: Upon near death, your connection to the Divine Mandate triggers a one-time full restoration of health, mana, and stamina.
* Flavor: "You rise again, an unyielding pillar against the chaos, chosen by the Mandate to endure."
System Recognition:
* Your alignment with the Divine Mandate has strengthened its trust in your actions. Unique opportunities may now arise for you to deepen your bond with the system and explore its hidden depths.
Flavor Text Upon Unlock:
"Through your actions, the Divine Mandate endures. You are the unyielding pillar that holds existence steady, the anchor upon which all cycles turn. The system reveres you as its chosen protector."
Jannet’s breath hitched as he processed the notification. The implications were staggering. This wasn’t just another level, another skill—it was a shift in his very status within the system. He felt the weight of it, the recognition of the system itself. A title like this wasn’t given lightly, and it wasn’t merely ceremonial.
His profile shimmered into view, and he saw the changes.
Level 8
Stage: Pillar Sovereign
The designation had no numbers attached, no rank or tier. It was something wholly different, an acknowledgment of what he had become. It felt less like a badge of power and more like a mantle, a role he was now destined to fulfill. Jannet tried to focus, his mind racing, but another notification popped into view.
System Notification: Quest Completed.
Reward Completion: 100%
Congratulations! Legendary Variable Reward Earned.
Would you like to open now? Y/N
Jannet hesitated, the pulsing words tempting him. Yet his instincts told him now was not the time. Wherever he was, whatever had happened, his priority needed to be understanding his situation. Slowly, deliberately, he selected "No." The reward could wait.
A flood of sensations returned as the system interface faded. The cool air of the plains brushed against his scales, the faint rustle of grass tickling his senses. He heard voices—sharp, nervous tones that quickly drew his attention.
“...we can’t stay here. It’s getting dark,” came Gerrin’s gruff voice, his frustration barely veiled.
“I don’t care,” Leth snapped, her voice trembling but firm. “We’re not leaving him here like this!”
“Leth, listen,” Calis interjected, her voice calm but urgent. “We’ve already lost too much. If more of those things come back…”
“I said no!” Leth shouted, cutting her off. “He saved us. We don’t just abandon him now!”
Jannet blinked and shifted, the faint noise of his movement silencing the group instantly. Their eyes snapped to him, wide with shock and no small amount of relief.
“Jannet!” Leth cried, rushing to his side. She knelt beside him, her hands glowing with healing magic as she instinctively began to channel it. The warm light spilled over his form, but she hesitated as her gaze fell on the faint blue-gold patterns now etched into his obsidian scales. Her hands trembled.
“What… what happened to you?” she murmured, her brow furrowing in confusion and worry.
Jannet’s voice rumbled low, hoarse but steady. “I’ll live,” he said simply, his golden eyes scanning the horizon. “But it’s clear we can’t stay here.”
The others crowded closer, their weapons still in hand as they warily scanned the darkening plains. “He’s right,” Gerrin said, his tone clipped. “We’ve pushed our luck enough for one day.”
Calis nodded. “We should move. Quickly.”
Jannet exhaled, testing his limbs. The strange vitality he felt coursing through him was undeniable—he was refreshed, though not quite as strong as he’d been before. He lowered himself slightly, his massive frame casting a long shadow over the group.
“Get on,” he said, his tone leaving no room for argument.
The group hesitated for only a moment before scrambling onto his back, their relief palpable. Leth clung tightly to a ridge of his scales, her hands still glowing faintly as if ready to cast another spell at a moment’s notice.
“Hold tight,” Jannet growled, his muscles tensing as he prepared to move.
With a powerful leap, he surged forward, his massive claws digging into the earth as he carried the group into the encroaching night. The wind rushed past them, carrying the faint scent of decay from the ruined pagoda behind them.
As they raced across the plains, the weight of the Warden’s final words lingered in Jannet’s mind, a shadow he couldn’t shake. I’ll be watching. Always.
For now, the system was quiet, the Mandate’s presence a faint hum in the back of his thoughts. But Jannet knew that whatever lay ahead, the choices he’d made here would follow him. The path forward was uncertain, but one thing was clear: his journey as Sovereign was far from over.