Chapter 169 The Path of No Return
Chapter 169 The Path of No Return
Morning came slowly, the kind that stretched across the sky in muted shades of gray, the air thick with something unspoken. The estate was quiet, but not in the way of peace—more like the stillness before a storm, the weight of something inevitable pressing down on the horizon.
Liria sat at the edge of her bed, fingers curled loosely against the sheets. Sleep had been elusive. Her mind wouldn't settle. The whispers had grown louder, curling at the edges of her thoughts, coaxing, waiting.
You know what must be done.
She had spent hours trying to ignore it. Failing.
A part of her already understood. This wasn't something she could push away anymore.
A decision had been made somewhere in the depths of her soul, even if she hadn't spoken it aloud.
Her hands felt steady as she stood.
The sensation from the training grounds yesterday lingered. The ease with which she had tapped into something deeper, something raw. It hadn't been like channeling magic. It had been simpler. Natural.
Like breathing.
She left the room in silence, moving through the corridors with the kind of certainty that didn't require thought. Her feet knew where they were going before her mind caught up.
By the time she reached the courtyard, the sky had shifted. The early morning haze made the world feel weightless, untethered from reality. It suited her.
A familiar figure waited by the stone archway.
Daena.
The former Demon Queen stood tall, wings tucked neatly at her back, violet eyes unreadable beneath the weight of something old, something knowing. She had always been impossible to surprise, yet something in her expression suggested she had expected this moment.
Liria's steps slowed, but only slightly.
"You didn't sleep," Daena observed.
"Didn't need to."
A pause. Not tense, not hesitant. Just… quiet.
Daena tilted her head slightly. "You've felt it, haven't you?"
Liria met her gaze. "Yes."
There was no point in denying it.
Another pause. Longer this time.
Daena exhaled softly. "Then you understand why I can't let you leave."
Liria had expected that.
She had wanted to be wrong.
Something inside her had known she wouldn't be.
Daena took a slow step forward, the weight of centuries behind her movements. "This path, Liria… it doesn't lead back. If you take this step, there won't be a way to undo it."
Liria's grip on reality felt thinner than it should have. She knew what she was supposed to say, supposed to feel. There should be hesitation. Fear.
But there was only inevitability.
She didn't speak.
Daena's expression darkened. "You're stronger than this."
Liria's lips curled slightly. "Am I?"
"You are."
A flicker of something ancient passed between them, silent but undeniable.
Daena's wings shifted slightly, but she didn't raise them. "You don't belong to her."
Liria's fingers twitched.
Something sharp twisted inside her, a crack in the surface of something long buried.
The air between them changed.
It wasn't a conscious decision.
One moment, Daena was speaking. The next, Liria's body moved on instinct, like it had been waiting for this moment all along.
Power surged.
A force unseen lashed out, too fast for thought, too natural to be planned.
Daena barely had time to react.
The impact struck her hard, sending her staggering back, boots skidding against stone. Her wings flared in reflex, trying to stabilize, but the damage was already done. A sharp line of crimson bloomed against her side, the wound shallow but undeniable.
Liria had drawn blood.
The world stopped.
Daena didn't move at first. Her violet gaze flickered down to the wound, then back to Liria. Something unreadable passed through her expression.
Not anger.
Not surprise.
Something quieter. Heavier.
Liria stood frozen, heart pounding in a rhythm that didn't match her breathing. She hadn't—
You did.
It hadn't been rage. Not defense.
It had been instinct.
A truth settled in her chest, weightless and absolute.
She wasn't the same.
Daena exhaled, her gaze unreadable. "I see."
Liria swallowed. "I didn't—"
Daena shook her head. "Yes, you did."
The words should have felt like an accusation. They didn't.
Liria's fingers twitched at her sides. She felt unmoored, but not lost. Something inside her had already stepped past the line.
There was no point in pretending otherwise.
Daena straightened, shifting her stance slightly, but she didn't raise her hands to fight. "You can still walk away."
Liria stared at her.
The truth curled in her lungs like smoke.
No, I can't.
She turned before she could change her mind.
The whisper had been waiting.
She felt the weight of Daena's gaze on her back as she moved, the silence stretching between them like an unseen tether.
It didn't pull her back.
She didn't expect it to.
The moment she stepped past the archway, the world seemed to shift.
The air felt thinner, charged.
Reality bent, and the space between distances blurred.
The whisper curled at her ear.
Good.
The path before her wasn't stone, wasn't earth. It was something else.
Something dark.
Something waiting.
She didn't stop.
She felt the system stir sharply, its presence flaring with an urgency it rarely displayed.
[Don't do this.]
Liria didn't slow.
[This isn't just power. You know what she is.]
A flicker of hesitation. Small. Almost imperceptible.
Then it was gone.
She kept walking.
The system's voice sharpened. [Liria. Listen to me. You're making a mistake.]
Liria exhaled slowly.
"No."
The whisper curled deeper, more familiar now, threading into her thoughts like it had always belonged there.
The world at the edges of her vision darkened, the shapes shifting into something new.
The path forward wasn't a path at all.
It was a throne room.
A place she had never been.
A place that had been waiting.
And at the center, seated upon a throne carved from the bones of something ancient, the Dark Sovereign smiled.
Liria stepped forward.
The doors closed behind her.
The last trace of light disappeared.
Darkness swallowed the last remnants of the world Liria had left behind. The stone archway, the courtyard, Daena—everything vanished as if it had never existed.
She should have felt disoriented. Untethered. But she didn't.
The moment the doors sealed shut behind her, the path ahead became clear.
The throne room was vast, stretching far beyond what her eyes could measure. Jagged obsidian pillars reached skyward, their surfaces slick with shifting shadows. The air was thick, not with dust or age, but with something alive—a pulse of raw, waiting power that coiled beneath the surface of reality.
At the center of it all sat her.
The Dark Sovereign.
Liria had imagined this meeting a hundred times before, in fleeting thoughts and whispered nightmares. None of those visions compared to the reality before her.
The woman on the throne radiated power in a way that defied mortal understanding. Her skin shimmered with a faint, molten sheen, her crimson hue deep and unyielding. Black horns spiraled upward from her crown, curving like jagged blades, their edges sharp enough to sever fate itself.
But it was her eyes that held Liria captive.
Golden. Piercing.
Ancient.
They burned with the weight of a thousand forgotten empires, gazing at her not as an enemy, nor a pawn, but as something… inevitable.
The Dark Sovereign tilted her head slightly, amusement dancing at the corner of her lips. "So. You finally stopped running."
Liria exhaled, her pulse steady. "I was never running."
A deep, throaty chuckle. "No. You weren't."
She rose from the throne with slow, deliberate grace, each movement carrying the weight of something far greater than the space she occupied. As she stepped forward, the shadows shifted around her, bending to her will, drawn to her like worshipers to their deity.
Liria stood her ground.
The whisper inside her had gone silent. Not in fear, not in retreat, but in recognition.
This was the moment it had been waiting for.
The Dark Sovereign stopped a few feet away, studying her with something like curiosity. "You felt it, didn't you?"
Liria didn't answer immediately. She knew what the question meant.
That pull. That hunger. That power lurking just beneath the surface of her skin, waiting to be acknowledged.
The answer sat heavy on her tongue.
"Yes."
A slow smile spread across the Dark Sovereign's lips. "Good."
She lifted a hand, palm facing upward. Shadows coiled in her grasp, shifting, alive. "Do you know why you feel it?"
Liria's fingers twitched.
A dozen answers surged through her mind, none of them certain, but all of them dangerously close to something true.
Power recognizes power.
The strong are drawn to the strong.
Or maybe…
Maybe it had always been there, waiting for her to remember.
"I don't know," Liria admitted.
The Dark Sovereign's smile didn't falter. If anything, it deepened, as if she had been expecting that answer.
"You will."
She stepped closer.
Liria didn't move.
Didn't flinch.
Didn't fear.
The Dark Sovereign lifted her hand again, this time not as a display of power, but as an invitation.
"Come," she murmured. "And I will show you."
Liria's breath was steady. Her body was light.
The system's voice crackled to life, sharp and frantic.
[Don't.]
A pause.
[Liria, please. Don't do this.]
The whisper curled around her thoughts, softer than before, a gentle brush against the edges of her mind.
You already know your choice.
She did.
The hesitation that should have been there, the doubt that should have clawed at her ribs—it was absent.
This was not a decision made in desperation.
It was not a descent.
It was an answer.
Liria lifted her hand.
The moment her fingers touched the Dark Sovereign's, a shock of energy surged through her—hot, electric, right.
She didn't pull away.
Enjoy more content from My Virtual Library Empire
She didn't want to.
The Dark Sovereign's golden eyes burned with satisfaction. "Welcome home."
The last trace of her former world faded into nothingness.
And Liria didn't look back.