Extra's POV: My Obsessive Villainous Fiancee Is The Game's Final Boss

Chapter 297: A God's Avatar



Far beneath the churning waves of the Mare Dulce, where sunlight never reached and even monsters dared not roam, the sea floor rumbled as power older than the sea itself moved through it.

At the deepest point, encased in blackened stone and bound by living roots as thick as towers, lay the slumbering form of Shing, the Tidecaller Ancestor.

His body was still well preserved, draped in ceremonial armor created out of coral and bone, and etched with glyphs of the old Tidecaller language.

Around him, the roots moved faintly, glowing with green light, pulsing in time with the world tree, Yggdrasil.

Then, suddenly, Shing opened his eyes.

They were cloudy at first, old and tired. But recognition flashed through them, followed by fury.

He struggled, straining against the roots. The seabed shook. A pressure wave rippled through the ocean, disturbing the creatures that dove deep and snapping coral towers in half.

"No!" He growled, voice muffled by water and age. "Not yet."

He thrashed. The roots constricted. Shing raised his arms and summoned the force of the sea. Water hardened into spears, slicing at the vines. Lightning danced along his shoulders as he fought to rise.

The roots screamed.

One by one, they tore and unraveled. Shing roared, his power swelling with the fury of ten thousand tides.

He wrenched one arm free, then the other. Blue light bled from his tattoos, illuminating the abyss. His trident formed in his hand, forged from ice and fury.

He stabbed downward, the sea floor cracking.

"I will not be made a memory!" He shouted. "I am not done!"

But then, a presence stirred.

It was not hostile. It was not cruel. It was inevitable.

A golden light seeped from the roots. They grew stronger, thicker, shining with divine energy. They moved not with aggression, but with certainty.

"You are no longer needed." A scratchy and almost indecipherable voice echoed within Shing's mind. "You were a vessel. Now, you are a gate."

Shing stumbled.

"You presume to take me?" He bellowed, spinning his trident and unleashing a wave of compressed water pressure. The roots recoiled momentarily, flickering. He charged upward in a spiral of storm and rage.

But the light followed.

Yggdrasil did not fight like a creature. It fought like the world.

More roots emerged from above, below, and within. They pierced the ocean floor, curled into the shape of runes. Golden leaves bloomed in the depths of the sea, burning with flames made of light.

Shing shouted again, this time not in rage, but pain.

The roots pierced his chest, his skull, his spine. His armor cracked. His weapon fell.

"This is not defeat." The voice said. "This is succession."

He thrashed, refusing to kneel. But slowly, inevitably, the light consumed him.

His body spasmed once, then twice.

Then stilled.

The glow spread through him.

His eyes turned gold.

He was no longer Shing, but an avatar of Yggdrasil.

A smile bloomed on the face of the avatar as he gazed at his hands in wonder.

"Beautiful." It whispered. "But only the best avatar is befitting a god."

His gaze snapped upwards, towards the surface of the sea as a grin came upon his face.

"Lilith."

[][][][][]

Far above, in the Tidecaller Hall, in the middle of the great island Patino itself, the elders sat in their meeting chamber.

The room was a sanctum of water and stone, open to the sea itself. Blue currents flowed through glass lined channels along the walls, and luminous fish swam beneath the floor.

A single pool sat in the center. The Voice of the Sea.

Twelve elders gathered, robes trailing in the water. Their hands dipped into the sacred pool, eyes closed.

They felt it instantly.

"The Deep is gone," murmured Elder Rokka.

"The sea remembers," said Elder Meran. "A new echo has been etched."

Ripples shifted across the surface of the water, whispering names that had found its way into the fabric of the sea.

"Five names," said Elder Anya. "Written into the Mare Dulce."

"Let them be read aloud," said the High Elder.

The waters shimmered. A whisper, like the voice of the sea itself, passed through the room.

"Ren. Lilith. Elias. Thorn. Zuzu."

Silence followed.

Then outrage.

"Four of them are outsiders!" barked Elder Korrin, slamming his hand into the water. "How dare the sea mark them?"

"And only one Tidecaller." said Elder Shai, shaking her head. "What does this say of our strength?"

"It says our strength is fading," muttered Elder Jakar. "We let children and foreigners do what we were gathering an army of Tidecallers to do."

"We let this Zuzu wander off and return with legends at her side," said another elder. "We let her step into our sacred myth."

"Well, we heard the stories ourselves and scoffed at the outsiders and the missing child." Elder Jakar sighed. "This is on us."

Others rose to their defense.

"The Deep was a calamity. We were not even sure we could stop it. Yet they did."

"But Zuzu is not even an adult!"

"Then perhaps she should be! If she survived the Deep, she deserves the title! Who are we to deprive her of that when even the sea itself acknowledges her?!"

Korrin slammed his hand into the pool again, waves rippling outward. "She broke Tidecaller law! She traveled with outsiders! She defied our guidance!"

"She saved the sea," said Elder Meran, quietly. "She saved us."

The room boiled with rising voices. Water danced upward in angry spirals. Magic sparked in the currents. Robes whipped.

"What would you have us do, Korrin? Banish her? Punish the ones who ended the Deep? Should we erase their names from the sea itself?"

"Yes!"

The word silenced them.

Korrin stood tall, eyes fierce.

"Yes. Because if we let this stand, then every Tidecaller child will think they can rewrite law with heroism. Discipline will die. Order will fracture."

"And if we erase them, we become blind tyrants," countered Elder Rokka. "Clinging to control while the sea moves on without us."

Shai crossed her arms. "We cannot allow this precedent. But neither can we ignore what they did."

The High Elder, silent until now, raised her staff. The water calmed.

"The sea has spoken. These five are now part of Mare Dulce. We cannot deny what is written."

"But we can question how it was written," said Shai coldly.

Korrin nodded. "They will return. And when they do, we will hold a trial."

"For what purpose?" asked Rokka.

"To determine what price must be paid for writing themselves into our history."

The water in the pool swirled again. A golden flicker passed through it. A leaf, small and glowing, rose briefly before dissolving into the current.

And none of the elders noticed.


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