Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG]

Chapter 123: The Chronicle’s First Tale


We stood in the hallowed silence of the hall, the four of us and our new, impossible fifth. Kasian the Chronicle was a being of profound, unnerving stillness. Where Rexxar was a volcano of contained physical might and Jeeves a silent storm of pure efficiency, Kasian was a mountain. He was a fact, a piece of the world given form and thought, and his presence was as absolute and quiet as gravity. Leoric orbited him at a safe distance, his huge leonine eyes wide, drinking in the sight of the living runes that pulsed with soft amber light across the Chronicle's stony hide.

I felt the new, open gap in my soul, the empty chair at the table of my own spirit, and I knew what had to be done. The Call had identified him, the Nexus had manifested him, but the final, binding soul tether needed to be forged.

"Kasian," I said, my voice resonating with the new link, "I am Eren Kai, do you accept my terms?"

The great, golden eye fixed on me, and I felt not a scan or a probe, but a deep, timeless seeing. It felt as though he was reading not my thoughts, but the entire, tangled history of my soul, from the terror of the Confluence to the fierce, burning hope that now drove me. Then, the thought bloomed in all our minds, calm and resonant.

<The bond is accepted. The purpose is aligned. The story continues.>

A line of amber light shot from Kasian's eye and touched my chest. It wasn't an attack, but a connection. A key seating itself in a lock. I felt the fifth chair fill, and the entire structure of my soul seemed to settle, stronger and more complete than before. With the formal binding, the Prime System granted me access, and his status sheet unfurled in my mind's eye. It almost made me stagger.

NAME: Kasian the Chronicle CORE ATTRIBUTES: SOUL STRENGTH: S (Fragment) SOUL GATE INTEGRITY: Grade A ESSENCE MANIFESTATION: BODY: 612 (Tier 6) MANA: 754 (Tier 7) SPIRIT: 739 (Tier 7)

KNOWN SKILLS: [Akashic Chronicle] (Mythic): As a fragment of a primordial knowledge entity, you have a slowly evolving passive access to the 'Akashic Record' — the esoteric imprint of all events that have ever occurred within a planetary system's history. By entering a deep meditative state, you can traverse this sea of memory to witness any past event. Accuracy and clarity are dependent on the event's conceptual weight and the user's SPIRIT.

[Whisper of the World-Soul] (Legendary): Weave ambient mana and light to create immersive, sensuous manifestations of the stories you tell, allowing others to witness events from the Akashic Chronicle as if they were present.

[Runic Language Omniscience] (Epic): Instinctively read, understand, and speak any written or conceptual language based on runic principles.

[Geological Symbiosis] (Epic): Your physical form is in a constant state of flux, slowly absorbing the geological properties and mineral knowledge of the Sanctum you inhabit. This grants you unparalleled knowledge of the world's deep places.

[Lorekeeper's Counsel] (Rare): Perform a rapid, intuitive analysis of any query, cross-referencing all known data to provide the most strategically sound and probable path to acquiring the desired knowledge.

Tier 7. His Mana and Spirit were on a level I couldn't even properly comprehend, a different order of reality entirely. And the Mythic skill… he wasn't a library; he was history itself, a living record of everything, but there had to be a limitation. He was a weapon beyond any I could have conceived.

<The first required query is a simple one,> his thought-voice echoed, calm as a placid lake. <It is the question that beats at the heart of your own soul. 'Who am I? Where do I come from?' A story is required.>

Before I could react, the great golden eye pulsed with a brilliant light.

"Wait," I started, but it was too late. The world around us dissolved.

The stone walls of the hall melted away, not into darkness, but into a swirling cosmos of breathtaking beauty. We weren't in the Sanctum anymore. We were standing on a platform of ethereal light, adrift in a sea of stars. Nebulae the color of crushed jewels drifted in the silent distance. The experience was total, a full sensory immersion. I could feel the faint, conceptual cold of the void on my skin.

<A story begins with an ending,> Kasian's voice narrated, no longer just a thought in my head but a resonant bass that seemed to come from the stars themselves.

The cosmos around us shifted, coalescing into an image of a world. Earth. But not the blue-green marble I remembered. This Earth was dying. A sky the color of a dying bruise was streaked with veins of sickly green light. The continents were scarred with blackened, weeping wounds. It was a world saturated with Essence, so much so that it was tearing itself apart, a feast for some unseen, ravenous cancer.

<A great civilization, at the apex of its power. A people who had woven mana into the fabric of their reality. They touched the stars, shaped the elements, and built monuments that sang with power. But their very strength became a beacon, drawing a hunger from the void. A war began, and a war was lost.>

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The image shifted. I saw cities of crystal and light crumbling into dust. I saw oceans boiling away. And in the midst of the apocalypse, I saw a desperate, final act. At the peak of a great mountain, a thousand figures stood in a circle, their hands raised to the poisoned sky. At their center, one man, wreathed in a corona of blinding, pure-white energy, detonated his own soul.

<A sacrifice of the highest order. Not a life, but the very essence of a soul, an anchor to reality, offered as payment to the Prime itself.> The raw grief and desperation in the image was a physical blow. <The cost was absolute. The reward, singular.>

A ship descended from the heavens. It was a vessel of impossible scale, not built but grown, a thing of graceful, swooping lines carved from a single, moon-sized pearl that shone with its own soft, internal light. It was less of a ship and more of a giant Ark.

<A fraction of a fraction of their people boarded,> Kasian narrated, as we saw families clinging to each other, their faces streaked with tears as they took one last look at their dying world. <They fled, not to a known sanctuary, but into the deepest, unexplored frontier, a place they hoped the Hunger would never flood.>

Our viewpoint changed. We were inside the Ark, moving through its silent, cavernous halls. The people we saw were not the simple humans I knew from my past life. I could see the light of their cores burning within them, could feel the latent power thrumming in their veins. They were powerful beings of Essence and Mana, adrift in the cosmos.

The stars blurred into long streaks of light. Time passed. And then, we arrived.

We were floating above a new world. A lush, green, beautiful planet, teeming with a primitive, vibrant life, an exact replica of their Earth-like planet. But to my Gaze, something was different. It was… quiet. The Essence saturation was practically non-existent. It was a world that had not yet awakened to the greater cosmic reality — it was our Earth, before the Confluence.

The Ark descended, and its people emerged. They stepped out into a world that did not know them, a world where they were gods. The native humans of our planet, ancient, simple, tribal folk, fell to their knees in worship at the sight of these beings of light and power.

The story accelerated, centuries blurring into moments. Kasian's narration became a song of creation and sorrow. We saw the refugees, our ancestors, become the legends of this new world. We saw a powerful woman, her hands wreathed in crackling lightning, teach the natives agriculture. The locals called her Demeter. We saw a stern, bearded man, whose control over water was absolute, raise a city from the shores of a great sea. They called him Poseidon.

The vision took us inside one of their new settlements. It was a city of impossible grandeur, but its architecture was jarringly, heartbreakingly familiar. I saw a great step-pyramid of dark stone rising from a jungle, nearly identical to Chichen Itza, but its apex pulsed with a network of arcane energy, channeling the planet's faint ley lines into a focused beam. In a vast, sandy desert, three colossal pyramids stood in a perfect line, their capstones glowing with a golden light, not as tombs, but as massive power accumulators. These weren't just monuments; they were technologies from a lost, magi-centric Earth. They were life-support systems, desperate attempts by the refugees to gather enough ambient Essence to survive.

<But the world was too thin,> Kasian's voice echoed with a profound sadness. <Their bodies, adapted to a reality of deep and abundant power, were starving. Their lives, once measured in centuries, became fleeting. They withered like brilliant flowers planted in barren soil.>

The vision showed one of the lightning-wielding women falling in love with a native chieftain. We saw them have a child, a beautiful boy whose core burned with a tiny, faint flicker of his mother's divine light. But as he grew, she faded, her own light dimming until she passed away from what the natives called old age, a concept that had once been alien to her. The legends of demigods, of heroes born from the union of gods and mortals, were not stories. They were a people's memory of a dying, divine race.

The story was coming to its end, the final lights of my ancestors winking out across this new world, leaving behind only their children and their legends to carry on. The images were flickering now, a gallery of forgotten kings and dying gods. I saw a figure in a headdress of brilliant green quetzal feathers, whose command of the wind was absolute. I saw a horned man of immense strength wrestling a lion-like beast. I saw a figure in Mesopotamia carving laws into a stone tablet that hummed with a conceptual weight of order itself. All of it real. All of it our lost history.

And then I saw it.

The vision flickered to one last throne room, a chamber of black basalt and burning braziers. On the throne sat a figure cloaked in shadow, their face obscured. But they were not cloaked in darkness. They were wreathed in a silent, hungry, mesmerizing flame the exact color of my Ashen Phoenix fire, tinged with that same nebular blackness of the void. It wasn't just similar. It was the same. The same fundamental truth of ending and beginning. I felt an instantaneous, soul-deep connection to the being on that throne, an echo across millennia. Who were they? An ancestor of mine? The first?

The figure looked up, as if it could see me through the veil of time, and the vision instantly shattered.

We were back in the hall of the Ashen Phoenix Tree. The cosmos had vanished, leaving only the soft glow of the ember-leaves. My heart was pounding, my mind reeling from the sheer, world-shattering weight of what I had just seen. Rexxar was on one knee, his head bowed. Leoric was mesmerized, tears freely flowing, the simulated linked emotions overwhelming him. Jeeves was utterly still, his eyes flickering as he processed a history he had never known. We weren't just survivors of a global apocalypse. We were the last remnants of a fallen, galactic civilization of Essence integrated beings. Our home wasn't just a world; it was a grave, and an ark.

Before I could even speak, a mote of amber light coalesced in my hand. It was warm and solid, and as the light faded, it became a small, intricately carved stone tablet. Etched on its surface was not writing, but a map. A star chart of a small cluster of unexplored worlds, with a single, glowing line tracing a path from our current location to a destination marked with a simple, stark rune of a flaming bird.

<That story is but one fragment of the Chronicle,> Kasian's thought echoed in the quiet hall. <That which you seek… the truth of the Ashen Flame, the fate of those who wielded it before you… the next part of the story is not here. It is there.> The glowing rune on the map pulsed in time with my own heartbeat.

I looked at the map, then back at my Anima. "How far?" I asked, my voice barely a whisper.

<A cycle of an Old Earth moon.>

One month of travel at my speed. An impossible distance for current circumstances, but the path was there. The path to the truth of my own soul, and perhaps the truth of many others. My mission wasn't just to find my family or to survive the Empire. It was to reclaim a legacy that had been lost to the dust of thousands of forgotten years. And our journey, I now knew, was just beginning.

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