Unconsciously,
Norvyk had begun humming somewhere deep in his chest. The tone matching the frequency of magic that thrummed with a fervor from atop the pillar. Pulling him, calling him,—demanding his action.
The dragon was not one to be ordered. But he
was made of the same magic that stitched the broken pieces of this world together. And like called to like, so in this, it felt as if he was listening to a lost part of himself that had finally guided him home.
Following a deep-seated instinct, the storm dragon stepped to the pillar. Starlight danced across his scales, and the crystal flared brightly as his nose made contact with it, pushing it gently upright. Then with careful teeth and the words of Leyik urging him onward, he took the Nexus into his mouth and he swallowed it.
Just as he and the raven creature had played with the magic of the castle earlier when the remnant projections of stars danced around them. Here, with this, this was real. This was the heaven's captured, its light like nothing they had or would ever see again. For it was like a living thing and in one brief moment, it flared with a radiance of kaleidoscopic proof that blinded them, the humming swelled into a vibrating crescendo in their blood, almost overwhelming them with its intensity, before disappearing into the maw of the dragon. A bright trail of light moved down Norvyk's emerald throat, where it settled somewhere behind the crest of his breastbone. The vessel of light thrummed quietly now in his chest. A mere fraction of the presence it projected only a moment before, but still a warmth, like a candle in the window of a cabin in the night. A beacon to those trying to find their way home in the dark.
Here he would carry it. Protected, waiting, and biding their time until they could use it to find the other fallen stars and return them back into the magical weave of the leylines. Already, he could feel the magic of the Nexus reaching out and pulling him towards the locations of those stars.
There was a settling silence around them. The gravity of their task sinking in, when Norvyk noticed that the throne room was darkening. As if the light was being sucked from the very walls. Looking to the Sky Lord, he felt a prickle of unease at the look of devastation that flickered across the Lord's face. So sudden, he almost missed it.
"This is the last of myself I can give." His cadence suddenly
so tired. The last of the room's light continued retreating towards the Lord's throne.
"Leyik..." Came the dragon's warning.
"I have outlived the hubris of many felled empires. But I believe this one to be my last." The skin around the Lord's eyes began to blacken and age once more. The sound of wind began to court the interior walls.
Norvyk swept his tail in front of Leyik protectively, the sudden instinct to run a primal thing.
The wind became a cyclone and began to howl around them, pushing them back towards the threshold of the throne room. Norvyk flared his wings and felt himself sliding back, his immense strength nothing against the dying power of this ancient being.
Through the deafening winds, the Lord's voice came through clear as a bell. His tone tragic and ripping at Norvyk's heart.
"Do not waste my divinity. Now,
GO!" The last sentence shouted so loudly that it overpowered every thought and feeling inside his head outside of that single word. The rising screams of the shadowed winds were so strong that he closed his eyes against their force. Riding out the rage, his talons seeking purchase in the floor to anchor himself.
But just as quickly as the whirlwind came, it disappeared.
And Norvyk found himself standing in the outside courtyard that Leyik and him had first landed in. His breath came in great bellows and he looked to the crystalline spires where they had met the Lord of the Sky. But it was dark and quiet now.
No sign left of divinity thrummed underfoot as before.
Leyik