Parallel Memory

Chapter 626: The Shattered Mirror



Chapter 626: The Shattered Mirror



The chamber was no longer filled with the clang of steel alone—it was filled with disbelief.


Mia stood at the forefront, eyes narrowed, lips pressed into a tight line. She had seen countless battles, had stood across from enemies who bore strength beyond reason, but this? This didn’t add up. Loren Vance, the arrogant heir who had mocked others for their bloodline and rank, was still on his feet against Erebus—the devil’s wolf, a beast suffused with pure killing intent.


Every strike should have ended him. Every mistake should have spelled his death. Yet somehow, by sheer will or instinct, Loren was still alive.


"Impossible," Zion muttered, breaking the silence among them. His knuckles whitened around his spear, the wood creaking under his grip. "No one survives that thing’s true strength. Not unless..." He trailed off, unwilling to voice what the thought implied.


Lisa shook her head, her eyes wide. "But look at him. He’s still standing. Still fighting. That’s not just stubbornness. He’s... adapting."


Sylvia crossed her arms tightly over her chest, though her nails dug into her sleeves as if to ground herself. Her voice was flat, but her composure trembled beneath the surface. "This doesn’t make sense. He’s sloppy, reckless. And yet—he’s still alive. Still matching it enough to stand his ground."


Her gaze flickered toward Mia, searching for answers she didn’t have.


Mia didn’t answer. She couldn’t.


Her heart pounded as she replayed every moment of the duel. The Loren she knew was brash, foolish, infuriatingly arrogant. He had talent, yes, but it was buried beneath entitlement and carelessness. Yet the Loren before her now—the one fighting with blood on his lips and fire in his eyes—was not the boy she had written off.


Who are you becoming?


The devil leaned back, expression unreadable, yet there was the faintest glint of amusement in its gaze. To it, this was entertainment—a test to unravel their assumptions. And it succeeded. The squad stood divided between shock and confusion, questioning whether they had misjudged him all along.


"Was he always this strong?" Lisa whispered, her words hanging heavy in the stale air.


"Or has he changed?" Sylvia countered softly, her brows furrowed.


No one answered.


And still Loren fought.


**************************************************************


Inside the storm of steel and blood, Loren Vance’s world had narrowed to nothing but the wolf before him and the thunder of his own heart. His arms burned, muscles screaming, his sword trembling under the relentless force of each strike. His legs shook, half from exhaustion, half from the weight of the beast’s killing intent pressing down on him like a crushing boulder.


He wanted to scream. He wanted to collapse. He wanted to curse the heavens and demand why he, of all people, was forced to face this nightmare.


But he couldn’t.


Not because of pride alone—though pride still burned hot in his chest—but because something deeper held him upright.


Why am I still alive?


The thought circled endlessly as claws raked against his blade, sparks scattering like fireflies in the dark. He had been certain, in the first moments of Erebus’s unleashed strength, that he would die. Every instinct told him so. Yet blow after blow, he survived. Not unscathed, not without blood, but alive.


Was this strength always in me? His teeth ground together, his breath ragged. Or is it something else? Something I can’t name yet?


Each clash was a mirror, shattering and reforming, forcing him to see pieces of himself he had never dared confront.


He remembered the taunts he had thrown at Hiro and the others, mocking them for being "lesser." He remembered strutting into battles cushioned by the certainty of his rank, his lineage, his so-called superiority. He remembered scoffing at the idea of growth, of struggle, of clawing upward from nothing.


And now, here he was.


Bleeding, broken, terrified—yet growing in ways he never had before.


Erebus lunged, its fangs snapping inches from his throat. He ducked, barely, the air whistling as death passed him by. His blade lashed upward in response, striking the wolf’s shoulder. Not deep, but enough to leave a shallow mark. Enough to prove he hadn’t been swallowed whole.


His chest heaved, lungs burning like fire.


They’re watching me, he realized. For the first time, it wasn’t an arrogant boast—it was a weight. He could feel their eyes on him, the squad’s disbelief, their silent questions.


Do they think I’ve changed? Do they believe in me now? Do I believe in me?


His pride warred with his fear. His arrogance battled his desperation. For years he had convinced himself he was untouchable, that his bloodline and his sword style made him invincible. But in this moment, face-to-face with the abyss, he felt the hollow truth of it. Pride alone couldn’t save him.


And yet, pride kept him standing.


The contradiction tore at him, but within that tearing, something new sparked.


Not arrogance. Not entitlement. But a fragile, flickering determination.


I refuse to fall here. I refuse to be forgotten. If this strength was always mine, then I’ll claim it. If it’s new, born from this moment, then I’ll forge it into something greater. Either way... I won’t break.


His sword rose again, battered but unyielding. His knees trembled, but he stepped forward instead of back. Blood dripped from his brow into his eyes, blurring his vision, but he locked onto the wolf’s golden gaze without flinching.


For the first time in his life, Loren Vance fought not to boast, not to win glory, not to prove superiority—he fought because he had to. Because to fall meant the end of everything.


And somewhere deep inside, he realized that he wanted more than survival. He wanted to live in a way that mattered.


***********************************************************


The squad watched in silence as Loren met another strike head-on, his cracked sword screaming under the force, but refusing to shatter.


Mia’s eyes narrowed. For all her doubts, all her suspicions of the devil’s manipulation, one truth was undeniable.


This was no longer the Loren Vance they had known.


Whether it was the unveiling of hidden strength or the birth of something new, she couldn’t yet decide. But as she watched him roar, blood flying from his lips as he forced Erebus back a step, she felt the first stirrings of belief.


Not trust. Not acceptance. Not yet.


But belief—in the possibility that Loren Vance could become more.



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