Veilbound Secrets: The Oath Bearer's Curse

Chapter 25 - Dance of Stone



The statue before Aric stood still, its raised arm frozen mid-swing, as if daring him to match its pose. He could feel the weight of the air, dense with the stifling tension of the room, pressing down on him. His breath was shallow, his muscles tight, and yet he knew—this wasn’t a battle of strength but one of precision.

Aric moved slowly, raising his arm to mirror the sentinel. His elbow bent at the same angle, his wrist matching the delicate curve of the stone figure’s. Every fiber of his being focused on control, on absolute stillness. The sentinel’s arm lowered as he did, slowly retracting into its neutral stance, and for a brief moment, the grinding of stone against stone ceased. He exhaled, feeling the air shift, a slight reprieve.

Another statue loomed ahead, this one poised on one knee, its outstretched arms as if in reverence. Aric hesitated. The pose was more complicated than the last. If he mimicked wrong, it could cost him dearly. He knelt, his limbs mimicking the stone figure’s posture precisely—head tilted just so, one arm extended while the other rested on his knee. The grinding noise stopped again. He could feel it, the delicate thread connecting him to these sentinels. This was a dance, a choreography of survival.

But the statues behind him weren’t idle.

'FUCK!'

From the corner of his eye, he saw a blur of movement—another statue, blade-like arms slicing through the air toward him. Instinct kicked in. He twisted his body, pivoting on his heel to face the attacker. As the blade swung down, he raised his arm and met it head-on, mirroring the strike perfectly. The stone arm halted in midair, vibrating from the impact, but the sentinel froze, deactivating at once. Its eyes dimmed, and it slumped into stillness.

That’s how they work.

Aric was learning. The statues attacked when he faltered, but if he mirrored their strikes, their movements, they ceased. Not just mimicry—it was synchronization. He needed to become the statue, not just copy it.

Another one came at him, faster this time, its stone fists slamming downward. Aric ducked, twisting into a roll, only to rise again in the exact same stance. His fists clenched in the same position, muscles tensing with the same intent. The statue’s attack froze mid-swing, its momentum arrested by the perfect mimicry of Aric’s counter. Another sentinel deactivated.

Keep moving, stay fluid.

He rushed forward, his body now an extension of the room’s eerie rhythm. Each statue posed its own challenge—some leaped, some slashed, others lunged with brutal force. But Aric adapted, mimicking their forms with exactitude. He was moving like them now—stone, flesh, and bone united in a deadly dance.

A particularly large sentinel thundered toward him, its arms raised like twin hammers, each wide arc threatening to crush him under its sheer mass. The air around it crackled with raw power, its heavy footfalls sending tremors through the ground. Aric’s eyes narrowed as he took in the behemoth’s size and the momentum behind its swing. He couldn’t afford to meet this brute force with just mimicry. He needed precision.

With a sharp inhale, he stepped forward, angling his body to align perfectly with the sentinel’s swing. His arms shot upward in a mirror of the statue’s attack, but he shifted his weight at the last second, his knees bending to absorb the force. The stone fist came down like a thunderclap, inches from his face, the impact rattling through his bones as his muscles strained under the pressure. Aric absorbed the mana from his surroundings and started circulating it throughout his body to strengthen it.

He held firm.

The sentinel’s arms froze mid-air, quivering as if it recognized his mastery, then slowly retracted as its eyes dimmed. Aric let out a breath he hadn’t realized he was holding, but before he could regroup, another statue was upon him.

This one moved with frightening speed, its stone form pulsing with arcane energy. Electric blue veins of mana coursed through its body, humming with violent potential. Aric saw it in an instant—the way its feet dug into the earth, anchoring itself to unleash a devastating blast of power. He had seconds to act.

Dropping low, Aric spread his legs wide, mimicking the sentinel’s stance, his own body sinking into the ground. The energy erupted from the statue in a blinding pulse, the air around it rippling like heat waves. Aric braced himself while circulating the mana in his body just like the statue, his muscles vibrating as the arcane energy swept over him—but he was ready. The pulse fizzled around him, neutralized by the perfect harmony of his stance. The sentinel staggered, its momentum broken, and with a final shudder, it collapsed into stillness.

Aric’s breath came fast now, his lungs burning from the constant movement. Sweat trickled down his brow, but something was shifting inside him. This wasn’t just reaction anymore—his body was beginning to anticipate the attacks. It was as if the rhythm of the room was flowing through his veins, syncing with his every movement.

Another sentinel lunged toward him, its stone arm cocked back for a strike. But this time, Aric didn’t wait. He felt the motion before it happened, like a gust of wind before a storm. As the statue’s fist descended, Aric was already in motion. He spun, his arm cutting through the air, matching the exact angle of the statue’s blow. His strike connected first, stone meeting flesh in perfect symmetry. The sentinel froze mid-swing, its eyes flickering before dimming into darkness.

“Was I… faster?”

A flicker of confidence sparked in Aric’s chest. He wasn’t just surviving anymore. He was learning. The statues’ movements—once alien and overwhelming—now felt like second nature. He wasn’t just mimicking; he was mastering the flow of battle, reading their intent before they could act.

The ground trembled again as a row of statues stirred ahead of him, their stone bodies grinding to life in unison. Their movements were faster now, more coordinated, as if testing his newfound skill. Aric’s heart pounded in his chest, but his focus sharpened. This was the real test.

They came at him like a tidal wave of stone—four, no, five of them moving in concert. The first swung low, its legs sweeping out in a vicious arc meant to take him off his feet. Aric leapt, twisting his body mid-air in a perfect somersault. His leg shot out at the peak of his jump, his foot mirroring the statue’s sweep, connecting just before its strike could land. The sentinel’s eyes flickered, then dimmed as it crashed to the ground.

But there was no time to revel in the victory.

The second statue lunged, its arms a blur as it slashed at him with bladed hands. Aric ducked low, his eyes tracking the razor-sharp edges slicing through the air. He slid beneath its strike, his own arms flashing upward in a perfect counter-swing. His fists mirrored the arc of the statue’s attack, and before its blades could find purchase, the sentinel froze, its momentum shattered.

The third came at him from behind, a massive stone foot crashing down with the weight of a falling boulder. Aric rolled to the side, his body fluid, evading the crushing blow by inches. As he rose, he twisted into the statue’s stance, his own foot stomping down in sync with its motion sending the mana from his body into the ground. The ground trembled beneath him, but the sentinel’s attack was halted, its stone body slumping into stillness.

He was surrounded now—two statues closing in, their stone fists glowing with the same arcane energy as before. They attacked in tandem, fists hammering toward him from both sides. But Aric was ready. He took a step forward, angling his body so that the attacks converged in front of him. With a sharp exhale, he thrust his arms outward, his fists matching the stone fists inch for inch.

The impact was thunderous, a violent clash. But Aric’s strike landed first, and with a shudder, the two sentinels froze mid-attack, their arcane glow flickering before dying out.

One by one, they fell.

The grinding of stone ceased, leaving only the sound of Aric’s heavy breathing and the distant echo of his heartbeat in his ears. He stood alone now, surrounded by the still forms of the sentinels, their once imposing presence reduced to nothing more than lifeless stone. His body ached from the strain, his muscles burning from the exertion, but there was a sense of triumph coursing through him.

This wasn’t just survival. This was mastery.

The grinding of stone ceased, plunging the chamber into an eerie silence. Aric stood amidst the debris, his chest heaving, each breath labored, his body soaked with sweat. His muscles burned, but his mind was electric, buzzing with the rush of battle and the relentless pull of mana surging through him.

“Haa… finally, a breather,” he muttered, wiping his brow, his voice thick with exhaustion. “Controlling the flow of mana while fighting, recovering energy, and mending muscles at the same time—it’s like walking on the edge of a blade.”

The stone sentinels lay scattered around him, defeated. Yet, despite the stillness around him, something felt off. The air had changed, a barely perceptible tremor running through it. It was subtle, like the calm before a storm, but unmistakable to someone attuned to the mana as he was.

His eyes narrowed, his instincts flaring. Something was coming.

“Oh, come on, what is it now?!”

Without warning, the ground beneath Aric cracked, a deep rumble reverberating through the chamber as the very walls seemed to shift in response. Dust fell from the ceiling as the ancient stone groaned, and a faint tremor crawled up his legs. His instincts screamed danger.

From the shadowed depths at the far end of the room, a figure emerged—larger, far more imposing than any sentinel before. Its hulking frame was adorned with intricate runes, each etched with precision and glowing faintly with a dark, unfamiliar energy. The air around it thrummed with power, thick and oppressive. Its eyes blazed with a furious crimson light, locking onto Aric with an unsettling focus.

In its massive hands, it carried a glaive—an enormous, wicked blade that seemed to shimmer in the dim light, reflecting a cold, murderous intent. This wasn’t just another sentinel. This was a guardian, a true test of strength.

Aric's breath caught for a moment as the creature advanced. The oppressive energy it carried felt different, unnatural, as though the Veil itself had been stirred by its presence. He could feel the weight of it pressing down on his mind and body, pushing him to the limits of his endurance.

This time, mimicry wouldn’t be enough. The tactics he had used against the other sentinels wouldn’t work here—this thing wouldn’t be fooled by gestures and reflection. It was coming for him with clear intent, and there was only one way to meet that challenge: defeat it head-on.

Aric tensed, his fingers flexing. He could feel the weight of the challenge ahead, but something deeper inside him stirred. He wasn’t the same as when he first entered this chamber. His body had learned, and adapted very quickly somehow. Now, he would need every ounce of that newfound skill.

The sentinel lunged, its glaive whistling through the air with lethal precision. Aric's eyes tracked the blade, his muscles reacting before his mind even processed the danger. He ducked low, the blade slicing inches above his head, the sheer force of the swing sending a gust of wind that knocked dust from the floor.

In a fluid motion, Aric rolled forward, coming up on one knee. His eyes darted to the sentinel’s feet—its stance was grounded, but there was an opening in its step. With a burst of speed, he shot forward, closing the distance between them. His fist shot out, aiming for the weak point in its stance, but the guardian was quicker than he expected. The sentinel twisted, the massive glaive coming around in a wide arc. Aric barely had time to react, throwing himself backward to avoid being cleaved in two.

Too slow. He gritted his teeth. This wasn't like the others. Its movements were faster, more unpredictable, and it was adapting to him just as he was adapting to it.

The sentinel spun, the glaive an extension of its body, slicing through the air. Aric ducked, twisted, his body weaving between the deadly arcs of the blade. But each swing was a heartbeat closer, each strike more precise. He needed to change the rhythm, break its pattern.

He darted in, feinting left before darting right, his hand catching the glaive mid-swing. For a moment, the sentinel hesitated, its crimson eyes flickering. That moment was all Aric needed. He twisted his body, leveraging the sentinel’s own momentum against it. The massive stone figure stumbled, its balance faltering.

Without hesitation, Aric lunged forward, driving his elbow into the sentinel’s side, aiming for the weak spot he’d noticed earlier. The stone cracked, a thin web of fractures spreading from the point of impact. But the sentinel wasn’t finished. It roared, the runes on its body flaring to life as it brought the glaive down in a vicious overhead strike.

Aric threw himself to the side, the blade crashing into the ground where he had just stood, sending a spray of debris into the air. His heart raced, but his mind was clear. He could feel the rhythm of the battle now, the way the sentinel moved, the flow of its strikes. But he needed something more—something to tip the scales.

His eyes flicked to the sentinel’s runes, glowing with the dark energy that powered its attacks. An idea sparked. He focused, his breathing steadying as he reached out with his senses, feeling the flow of mana through the air. The sentinels’ power was tied to this place, the ancient magic woven into the walls of the chamber. And if he could feel that power, perhaps he could disrupt it.

...


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