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Chapter 201: Sun-Core Awakening



Chapter 201: Chapter 201: Sun-Core Awakening

The side hall of the Heartwood, a chamber typically reserved for the internal debates of the Council, had suddenly transformed into a theater of the divine. The air was thick, not just with the scent of Zephyra’s silver spirit-smoke, but with the suffocating weight of a dozen high-tier phantoms pacing restlessly behind their masters.

The debate about the Zharun tribe had been momentarily shelved, but the tension remained, redirected entirely toward the “One” standing in the center of the obsidian-wood floor.

In the center of the tiered stone floor, Sol obviosuly felt the eyes of the Veynar leadership drilling into him. There was Thorne’s bone deep, vulture-like scrutiny, Korash’s simmering envy, and the Warchief’s stormy, unreadable gaze. Even the bubbly Lumi had retreated into the shadows of the pillars, her hands clasped tight in a silent prayer for the “Divine One.”

High Shaman Zephyra drifted toward him, her feet barely touching the obsidian-wood floor. She gestured toward a circular patch of smooth, unadorned stone.

“Sit, Sol,” she whispered, her voice melodic yet carrying an edge of ancient authority. Her silver hair seemed to ripple as if caught in a breeze that definitely didn’t exist in the hall. She gestured to the obsidian floor, where a circular rune had just been etched into the wood.

Sol sat, crossing his legs in a meditative pose. He felt the coldness of the petrified wood seep into his skin, but his internal focus was already turning inward. He was aware of the eyes on him… Kira’s desperate hope, Veylara’s stoic judgment, and Thorne’s predatory skepticism. They all expected something from him, a sign that the “Divine Cloth” wasn’t a mistake.

“Listen to my voice, and only my voice,” Zephyra said, her pipe exhaling a thick cloud of silver vapor that began to encircle Sol like a shimmering barrier. ” The Awakening of the Sun Core is not a matter of strength, but of alignment. It is the First Dawn of the soul. It is the convergence of three roots: Breath, Hunger, and Focus. When they meet at the solar plexus, the ’hidden sun’ within your body will ignite.”

She began to circle him, her robes of violet silk whispering against the floor.

“The first step is Emptying,” she continued. “Normally, an initiate must fast for a day and a night to clear the hollow within. The stomach must be empty so the awareness can sink deeper. You have eaten the Star-Fruit, which is essence in itself, so your hollow is already primed. Feel the void between your stomach and your lungs. That is the cradle.”

The hall became silent just like a tomb. Every elder, every warrior, and even the Warchief leaned forward. This was the moment of truth. It would show if he was gonna be a warrior or a burden.

Sol closed his eyes. In the darkness of his mind, he felt the Liquid Silver, sloshing in the central cavity. He followed the directions and slowly navigated to his solar plexus. His modern understanding of anatomy gave him a mental map, but the ritual demanded he see it through the lens of survival.

“Now, the Breath of Fire,” Zephyra’s voice drifted through the smoke. “Spine straight. Breathe into the belly… not the chest. Slow, heavy inhales. Sharp, forceful exhales. Let the friction of the air stoke the ember. The Sun Core is a fragment of the primordial sky-fire trapped inside you, and breath is the wind that feeds the flame.”

Sol began the rhythm.

Inhale.

He imagined pulling the heavy, essence-rich air of the Heartwood deep into his diaphragm. Exhale. A sharp, controlled burst through his nose.

Inhale. Exhale.

He repeated the cycle. Whirr. Hiss. Whirr. Hiss. The sound of his own breathing began to synchronize with the low-frequency hum of the Great Tree.

Initially he didn’t feel much, but soon, as he inhaled the cool, essence-rich air completely filled his lungs, he felt his internal temperature rising. It wasn’t just heat, he felt his whole-body vibrating. His Sovereign’s Gaze, even with his eyes closed, mapped the flow of energy. He saw the motes of Primal Essence in the hall reacting to his lungs, swirling faster and faster.

“Finally,” Zephyra whispered, her voice sounding like it was coming from miles away,”the Focus of Will. Within that heat, imagine a spark. A single, tiny ember glowing in that heat. Do not let it flicker out. Feed it with your thought, your desire to survive, your hunger to be more than a prey. As the sun is not born from the world, but from the thought and will of the host.”

Inside the darkness of his solar plexus, Sol saw it. It wasn’t a spark yet. It was a dull, red glow, like the tip of a cigarette in a dark room.

He didn’t just visualize it; he obsessed over it. He funneled his memory of the slaughter at the ridge, the tragic smile of Korg, and his own desperate need to return to Lyra and the girls into that single point. He used his “Memory Palace” to lock out the distractions of the hall, the skeptical glares of the elders, and the jealousy of Korash. He focused the entire weight of his existence onto that red glow.

Ignite, he commanded.

Through his Sovereign’s Gaze, the motes of essence in the hall began to vibrate. They weren’t just floating anymore, they were being pulled toward him.

Inhale. Exhale.

In the tiered hall, the silence was absolute.

“How long has it been?” one of the elders whispered, leaning toward Harkan.

“Barely three minutes,” Harkan replied, his voice low. “He’s just sitting there. He hasn’t even begun to sweat.”

Korash sneered, whispering to a warrior beside him. “Look at him. He’s just sitting there. He doesn’t even have a tremor. Most people start sweating blood by now. He’s a dud. This boy will be lucky if he smells smoke by midnight. He’s probably just falling asleep in that fancy way.”

Elder Thorne watched with a cold, analytical eye. “Patience, Korash. Even the most gifted took hours. Our legendary ancestor, the one who carved Veynar from the bark, took five hours to see the first flicker. Even the Warchief’s daughter took eight. This boy is—”

VROOM.

A low, subsonic vibration suddenly rattled the stone seats of the hall. The silver smoke from Zephyra’s pipe, which had been drifting lazily, was suddenly sucked toward Sol’s chest as if he had become a gravitational well.

Zephyra’s eyes snapped open wide, the milky radiance within them pulsing. She took a half-step back, her hand trembling on her pipe.

Sol’s skin began to shimmer. It wasn’t a faint glow, it was a localized distortion of the air. A ripple of heat distorted his silhouette. Beneath the woven silver-bark vest, a brilliant point of light erupted in his solar plexus. Even the heat in the room rose by ten degrees in an instant.

“What…” Kira gasped, her hand flying to her mouth.

Sol’s breath was no longer a heavy struggle. It was a rhythmic, mechanical hum. Inside his body, a literal star was being born.

Zephyra’s pipe slipped from her fingers, clattering onto the stone. The smoke around her vanished as she stared at Sol in absolute, terrified awe.

“Impossible,” Thorne hissed, standing up so abruptly his chair tumbled backward. “Four minutes? No… the ancestors took hours! He hasn’t even finished the first breath cycle!”

Veylara’s Tigress phantom stood up on her shoulders, its translucent fur bristling as it let out a low, vibrating growl. Even the Warchief’s stoic mask had cracked, her stormy eyes wide with a mixture of shock and wariness.

Sol opened his eyes. They weren’t just crimson anymore. They were radiant, glowing with an internal fire that seemed to pierce through the very souls of those watching.. He felt… heavy. As if he were no longer a man, but a mountain made of flesh. He let out a long, steaming breath, and the temperature in the hall jumped ten degrees.

THUMP.

It was a sound everyone felt in their own Sun Cores. The sound of a heartbeat that wasn’t human.

“I think it’s awake,” Sol said, his voice carrying a resonance that rattled the bone arches of the hall.

Kira stared at the sand filled hourglass near the Warchief’s throne. Her jaw was slack. “Five minutes,” she whispered. “Mother… it’s only been five minutes.”

The hall erupted in a stunned, suffocating silence. In the thousands-year history of the Veynar, the fastest awakening ever recorded was five hours. Sol had just shattered that record by a factor of sixty.

Korash was trembling, his face a mottled purple of jealousy and fear. “It’s a trick! It’s a divine trick! No one awakens that fast! He must have had a core hidden already! He’s a spy from other tribes! Not even a god… can ignite a Sun Core in five minutes! It’s impossible!”

“Silence, boy!” Harkan barked, his Great Ape phantom pounding its fists against the floor in agitation. “The air is empty! Look! He has drained the Primal Essence from the entire hall! Feel your own cores… they’re starving!”

It was true. The elders gasped as they realized their own internal flames were flickering, the ambient essence they normally relied on having been violently vacuumed into Sol’s chest.

Thorne was white-faced, his eyes darting between Sol and his son. The political leverage he had been building… the idea that the Veynar were a dying breed who needed the Zharun… was evaporating in the heat of Sol’s aura. If a genius of this magnitude had appeared, the tribe’s morale wouldn’t just recover, it would skyrocket.


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