Login via

Mated To My Mate's Worst Enemy (ARIA) novel Chapter 255

Chapter 255

Chapter 255

ARIA

I stared at my wrist, not understanding what I was seeing. 9:47:23. The exact same time it had shown before we’d left the second chamber. Like the past ten minutes—the fighting, the shields, the desperate run through masses of creatures-had never happened.

“That’s not right,” I said, my voice coming out more uncertain than I’d intended. “We spent at least ten minutes fighting those creatures. The timer should have-”

The numbers suddenly jumped.

8:47:23.

An entire hour gone. Vanished. Removed from our remaining time in a single brutal adjustment that made my stomach drop.

“What-” Ivory started.

A ghostly projection materialized in the center of the chamber. Not one of the elders we’d seen before this was different, more abstract, just a figure of light with no distinguishable features.

“Penalty assessed,” it announced, its voice mechanical and emotionless. “Attacking trial guardians after passage was earned. Trial completion grants safe passage, not permission to engage in combat with guardian creatures. One hour removed from remaining time as consequence for violation of trial protocols. Future violations will result in greater penalties or immediate disqualification.”

The projection dissolved before we could respond, before we could argue or protest or demand clarification about rules that had never been explained.

We stood in silence for several long moments, processing the horrible realization that we’d lost an hour we couldn’t afford to lose. An hour taken as punishment for fighting creatures that had attacked us, for defending ourselves against things that had explicitly stated they were hunting

us as prey.

“That’s not fair,” I finally said, my voice shaking with anger and exhaustion and the crushing certainty that fairness didn’t matter to the Ghost Council. “They attacked us. We were defending ourselves. How is that a violation?”

“The trial considers us responsible for engaging rather than escaping immediately,” Ivory said,

1/3

Chapter 255

+10 Free Coins

her tactical mind already working through the implications. “We should have run for the exit. the moment the creatures appeared instead of talking to them, instead of trying to understand their intentions. The delay was our choice. The combat was our choice. Therefore the penalty is justified by trial logic even if it’s completely unreasonable by any standard.”

She was right. I hated that she was right. But the Ghost Council didn’t care about fairness or reasonable expectations. They cared about testing us to our absolute limits, about creating impossible situations and seeing how we responded.

And we’d just lost an hour we desperately needed because we’d failed to understand that engaging with trial guardians—even in self-defense—was considered a violation.

I checked the timer again, hoping I’d misread it. 8:47:23. Forty-seven minutes and twenty- three seconds. Ticking down relentlessly while we stood here trying to process the penalty.

Three trials remaining. Less than nine hours to complete them. And we were both exhausted despite the healing compound, drained from the blessed shields, operating on willpower and desperation rather than actual capability.

“We keep moving,” Ivory said, her voice carrying the kind of grim determination that had kept us alive this long. “Can’t change what happened. Can only move forward and try to complete the remaining trials fast enough that the lost hour doesn’t doom us.”

“What about the blessing?” I asked, looking at her hands where the golden shields had manifested.

“Is it still active? Can we use it in the next trials if we need to?”

Ivory closed her eyes, clearly trying to sense the magic that had saved us. “It’s there,” she said after a moment. “Dormant again but present. I think it will activate if we face mortal danger again. But I can feel how much energy it drained from me. If we rely on it too heavily-if we trigger it multiple times-it might burn through my reserves completely. Leave me unable to function even if we survive the immediate threat.”

So the blessing was a resource we had to manage carefully. Use it when necessary but not wastefully. Save it for moments when nothing else would work rather than treating it as our primary defense.

I looked around the third trial chamber, searching for clues about what we’d face here. The space was circular, maybe fifty feet in diameter. The ceiling was higher than the previous sections-twenty feet, maybe more-creating a sense of space that was almost luxurious after the oppressive closeness we’d been navigating.

And in the center of the chamber, floating about ten feet off the ground with no visible support: the third crystal fragment.

2/3

Not on a pedestal this time. Just suspended in midair, rotating slowly, glowing with purple light that pulsed in rhythm with something I couldn’t identify. The crystal was shaped differently from the previous two-angular and geometric, like someone had taken a pyramid and split it into pieces before reassembling them with gaps between the sections.

“No guardians visible,” Ivory observed, scanning the chamber with professional thoroughness. “No obvious threats. Which probably means the threats are either invisible or haven’t activated yet.”

Verify captcha to read the content.VERIFYCAPTCHA_LABEL

Reading History

No history.

Comments

The readers' comments on the novel: Mated To My Mate's Worst Enemy (ARIA)