Rebirth

Ishar's eyes fluttered open to the sound of low, eerie muttering. His body felt stiff, weighed down by cold iron shackles digging into his wrists. Each breath came shallow, the air thick with sulfur, iron, and something worse—something sickly-sweet, like decaying flowers.

The torches hissed and crackled, their unnatural flames flickering in an unseen wind. Somewhere in the darkness, a single droplet fell—soft, rhythmic. Blood.

His senses were sluggish, his head pounding with dull pain.

The cavern walls burned with an unnatural glow—a mix of blue and red flames casting twisted shadows across the stone. Around him, severed heads hung from rusted chains, their mouths moving soundlessly, weeping tears of blood.

A heavy presence loomed ahead. At the center of the chamber, a silk veil draped over a raised platform. A demon stood before it, motionless, golden eyes fixed on the altar. It muttered in a tongue Ishar didn't understand, its voice a low, rhythmic chant that made his skin crawl.

Ishar wrenched against the chains, muscles straining, wrists burning as cold iron bit deep. No movement. No give. The realization clawed at his chest—he wasn't just trapped. He was helpless.

The flickering torches made the shadows dance—but for a moment, just a moment, one shadow did not move.

A breath caught in his throat.

Then—finally—the demon turned.

Slow. Deliberate.

Its golden eyes locked onto Ishar's—piercing, empty of mercy. In its clawed hand, it held his sword.

Dread coiled in Ishar's gut. But beneath it—something worse. Something colder. A sinking, inescapable certainty.

He had never been meant to leave this chamber alive.

The demon took a step forward. Slow. Unhurried. Not out of caution, but certainty—like a butcher approaching an animal already bound for slaughter.

Then, without a word, it drove the blade into his chest.

The steel slid between his ribs, deep and unrelenting.

Then—it twisted.

Agony tore through him, raw and unforgiving, like molten iron searing his flesh. His breath hitched, choking on his own blood. The demon did not pull the blade free. It held it there, savoring, waiting for him to break.

His vision blurred. The world tilted.

Heat poured down his chest—no, not heat. Blood. His blood.

Pain faded. Sound dulled. His vision smeared like ink in water.

His limbs felt distant, fading to nothing.

The torches stretched into streaks of light. Each breath shallower than the last—struggling, failing.

Something cold crawled up his spine.

His heart slowed.

The demon's form wavered, multiplying. Two of them. No… three? His mind spun, reality breaking apart at the seams.

And then—he saw her.

Beyond the altar, past the blackened veil, stood a woman—veiled, still, watching.

The air around her shimmered, her form wavering as though she weren't fully part of this world. The silk draping her face moved with no wind, untouched by the heat distorting the chamber.

Even through the haze, he saw it—

A smile, just barely visible beneath the veil.

Not cruel. Not kind.

Knowing.

His final thought wasn't of rage. Or fear.

Only the question. It refused to fade, even as the void pulled him under.

Who are you?

.

.

.

Ishar drifted in nothingness.

No light. No darkness. Only emptiness stretching endlessly around him.

He had no body. Not in any way that mattered. He could feel his limbs—remember their weight, their presence—but when he tried to move them, there was nothing. No sensation. No response.

He should have panicked. Should have screamed.

But there was no air to carry a voice.

No breath to give it life.

He floated, unbound, without form. Not falling, not rising—simply existing in this endless, formless space.

Hadn't he died?

The last thing he remembered—the sword driving into his chest, the heat of blood spilling down his ribs, the veiled woman watching as he slipped away—

So why was he still here?

Where was 'here'?

Time had no meaning. No seconds, no minutes. Just endless drifting. Thinking. Unraveling.

The void stretched, vast and infinite, swallowing thought, memory, self.

And then, slowly—he began to forget.

Not all at once. No, it was slower than that. First, his body—the details of his limbs, the feeling of muscle and bone—fading, dissolving into the abyss. Then, his name. Ishar. He was Ishar, wasn't he? Or was that someone else?

The longer he drifted, the more pieces slipped away.

He could barely remember what fear was. Or rage. Or pain.

Was this death?

Or was he becoming something else?

Then, without warning—

A force seized him.

Not gently. Not gradually.

It struck like a vacuum, wrenching him downward with impossible force. The void, once silent and endless, roared with sudden movement.

Faster.

Faster.

The formless nothing around him warped, bending as if the universe itself had turned against him. Pressure crushed against his chest, his breath stolen away—except he had no lungs, no ribs, no body to suffocate.

Something was ripping him back.

Something was forcing him to return.

Pain lanced through him—not the sharp sting of a wound, but a deeper, older pain. Like being torn from something vast and eternal. A severance.

He fell.

Fell.

Fell—

Then—a touch.

Soft. Featherlight.

It brushed against his cheek, fleeting yet unmistakable.

Gentle. Kind.

The kind of touch a mother might offer—a final farewell before sending her child into the unknown.

The void fractured.

Cracks splintered through the abyss, jagged lines of golden light cutting through the nothingness. The weightless drift ended, and suddenly—

He felt his body again.

Not just remembered it. Felt it.

His chest rose and fell. His fingers twitched. Blood pulsed through his veins, slow and steady. Heat pooled under his skin, foreign, unfamiliar—like something new had been woven into his very being.

Something different.

His eyes snapped open.

A sharp inhale tore through his lungs, his body jerking upright as though yanked from drowning depths. His heart slammed against his ribs, erratic, breath ragged.

He gasped, his senses rushing back all at once—cold stone beneath his hands, damp air pressing against his skin, the weight of existence settling over him again.

But something was wrong.

His body felt too light. Too strong. Too… whole.

His mind reeled, struggling to bridge the gap between dying and being here.

The memory of the blade, the blood pooling beneath him—it had felt real. More real than this.

Then—

A screen flickered into existence before his eyes.

[Status]Name: Ishar ValtorRace: IncubusOrder: Cursed One [Order 1]Class: — Skills: Charm [E], Abilities: Dark VisionCorruption Level: — Titles: NoneTraits: Incubus Bloodline (Suppressed)

His breath hitched.

The status screen felt foreign to him, his stopped at the Race.

Incubus?

A strange warmth stirred beneath his skin—alien, unfamiliar.

His breath slowed, his pulse steady. The fatigue in his limbs was gone. No wounds. No blood. Not even pain.

He stared at the glowing words, his mind refusing to accept them.

Yet—they didn't change.

His fingers trembled as he reached for his chest, expecting torn flesh, broken ribs—

But he felt nothing.

His body was whole.

His body was new.