Vault Of The Void (Full Version)
When she walked out of the Vault, the door crumbled to dust behind her. She was unchanged to the eye, but inside, she had been emptied of pretense. For the first time, she knew exactly what she wanted—not because the Void told her, but because it had stripped away everything she was not.
Kael looked into the mirror and saw not her face, but her life: the choices she’d made out of fear, the moments she’d lied to seem strong, the love she’d withheld because loss had once scarred her.
In the heart of the Obsidian Peaks, where the wind smelled of cold iron and forgotten oaths, there existed a door. No castle, no fortress surrounded it—just a seamless arch of black stone carved into the base of a mountain. Behind it lay the Vault of the Void. Vault of the Void
She sat before the door for three days, not picking its lock—because there was no lock—but listening. On the third night, she pressed her palm to the cold stone and spoke not a command, but a confession.
“The hardest door to open is the one you hide behind. And the greatest treasure is not what you put into emptiness, but what you are brave enough to let emptiness show you.” When she walked out of the Vault, the
The door dissolved into silence.
She could have turned away. Instead, she reached out and touched the glass. Kael looked into the mirror and saw not
Kael stepped forward. Her reflection smiled—not with her mouth, but a heartbeat before hers. The reflection spoke.
“I have nothing to gain,” she whispered. “And I am not afraid to lose.”

