Chapter 80: Depths of Devotion
Chapter 80: Depths of Devotion
“Alright, ladies. No one’s going anywhere without this,” Diana announced, holding up a thick coil of rope like it was the hottest new toy in heaven.
Grace stared at it, then at Diana’s dead-serious face.
“Um, what?”
“Safety measures.” Diana started cutting the rope into sections. “Each of us ties one end around our waist. We stay connected.”
Petriel nodded, still looking like hell after yesterday’s almost-drowning. Her wings twitched nervously as she took her piece of rope from Diana.
Meridian raised an eyebrow.
“Is this truly necessary?”
“Look, Blue,” Diana said, “I don’t know about you, but I’m not in the mood to chase after any of you when you get water-zombie brain and decide to waltz into the ocean. Put the damn thing on.”
Meridian opened her mouth to argue, then closed it.
“Fine.”
They stood on the shoreline, getting ready to check out the coast. The sky above was heavy with gray clouds, and the water looked darker than normal—almost black in some spots. Grace’s medallion felt cold as hell against her skin, clearly having a reaction to The Tide’s presence.
Diana finished tying the rope around her own waist, then moved to check Grace’s knot. Her fingers brushed against Grace’s hip, lingering just long enough to make Grace’s brain short-circuit.
“Tight enough?” Diana asked with a smirk.
Grace swallowed.
“Y-yeah. Fine.”
“Good.”
The group began walking along the shore, following Meridian’s lead. The scholar angel kept checking a scroll, muttering to herself like a crazy person. After about half a mile, the shoreline curved into a small bay, and there it was—half-underwater, covered in seaweed and barnacles, but unmistakably:
“A temple,” Meridian breathed, sounding like she might orgasm from pure academic excitement. “Look at those archways. Early Eternian design.”
Grace glanced at Diana, who rolled her eyes so hard they almost fell out of her head.
“This is why she came,” Grace whispered.
“Duh,” Diana whispered back. “Celestia probably dangled some ancient artifact over her head like a carrot. These choir nerds are all the same.”
Meridian was already wading into the ankle-deep water surrounding the temple entrance, her brain apparently deciding safety was optional. The rope connecting her to Diana went taut.
“Hey! Slow down, Blue!” Diana called.
Meridian barely looked back, pointing at the doorway.
“These runes are from Eternia’s time. This structure predates the Angelic Dominion!”
That got everyone’s attention. Even Diana looked impressed.
“How old are we talking?” Grace asked.
“Old enough that most of the writing systems used have been lost,” Meridian said, running her fingers over the stone. “But I’ve studied them extensively.”
[Of course you have.]
They approached the temple entrance carefully, the water now reaching their calves. Grace felt a weird tugging sensation, like invisible currents trying to pull her deeper. Her medallion pulsed against her chest like it was trying to warn her about something.
“Stay close,” she warned.
The entrance was a doorway half-underwater, leading to a partially flooded chamber. Stone steps disappeared into dark water.
“I can translate some of this,” Meridian said, examining the etchings around the doorway. “It speaks of ’The Collector of Grief’ who offers ’eternal communion without pain.’”
“Yeah, that sounds pleasant and not at all murdery,” Diana said dryly.
Petriel shifted closer to Grace.
“I-I don’t like this place.”
“Me neither,” Grace agreed. But they had to investigate.
They entered the temple, Diana leading the way with her golden sword drawn, lighting up the darkness. The main chamber was huge, with a domed ceiling that was partially collapsed on one side. Water filled about half the room, slapping gently against stone columns.
Meridian moved from wall to wall, practically having a nerdgasm with each inscription she found.
“Fascinating. According to this, The Tide was created to absorb Eternia’s feelings of isolation and loneliness. It promises a ’collective consciousness’ where no one is ever alone.”
“By turning them into water monsters?” Diana asked.
“Transformation rather than corruption, like I said before,” Meridian corrected. “The text suggests willing surrender leads to ’unity of form and thought.’”
Grace felt the water swirling around her legs, almost like it was eavesdropping.
“So people walk into the sea voluntarily?”
“Those who feel most alone would be most susceptible,” Meridian said. “The Tide preys on isolation.”
Grace thought of the voice in her dream. That promise of connection. Never being alone again.
A sudden rumble shook the temple. Chunks of ceiling crashed into the water.
“What the—” Diana began.
Then the water exploded upward.
It surged from below, filling the chamber like someone had turned on a giant faucet. Within seconds, it was at their waists, then their chests.
“OUT!” Diana bellowed, yanking on the ropes. “NOW!”
They scrambled toward the exit, but the water kept rising, faster than they could move. Grace felt something cold wrap around her ankle, pulling her under. She kicked hard, breaking free, and surfaced with a gasp.
“Grace!” Diana was at the doorway, hauling on her rope. “Move your ass!”
Grace swam toward her, fighting against the current. Diana grabbed her arm and yanked her through the doorway just as another section of ceiling collapsed where she’d been.
“Petriel?” Grace gasped, looking around frantically.
Diana cursed, holding up a frayed rope end.
“It snapped!”
Horror washed over Grace.
“We have to go back!”
“Are you insane?” Diana grabbed her shoulders. “That place is coming down!”
“It’s not collapsing,” Meridian interjected, pointing. “Look.”
She was right. The rumbling had stopped. The water had stabilized just below the temple entrance. Almost like…
“It was trying to separate us,” Grace realized. “It got Petriel.”
Diana grabbed Grace’s arm as she tried to dive back in.
“Absolutely not.”
“She’s right,” Meridian said. “Going back in blindly is suicide.”
Grace pulled free from Diana’s grip.
“I’m not leaving her alone in there!”
“For fuck’s sake, Grace—”
“I can find her,” Grace insisted. “My Aura Sight. I can use it underwater.”
Diana’s jaw clenched.
“That only detects corruption.”
“But it alters my vision a little. Look, just trust me,” Grace was already untying the rope around her waist. “I’m going, Diana. Either help me or get out of my way.”
They stared at each other, having a silent who’s-more-stubborn contest. Finally, Diana cursed and retied the rope around Grace’s waist, securing the other end to her own.
“Three tugs means I’m pulling you out, no arguments,” Diana said. “Four tugs means you found her. Got it?”
Grace nodded.
“Got it.”
Before Diana could add more conditions, Grace took a deep breath and dove into the dark water.
The temple interior looked completely different underwater. Light filtered through cracks in the ceiling, creating eerie blue shafts in the murky darkness. Grace activated her Aura Sight, and the world shifted. The usual gold-tinted vision which, right now, was basically letting her see in the dark, even though it couldn’t find any corruption.
[Holy shit, it’s working!]
Grace swam deeper, following a corridor that led downward. Her lungs began to burn, but she pushed on. The rope trailing behind her was her lifeline, her connection to the surface.
The corridor opened into a larger chamber. Grace nearly gasped, almost losing precious air.
Petriel floated in the center, surrounded by what used to be villagers. They had webbed hands now, gills on their necks, and scales glittering on their skin. They weren’t restraining Petriel; they were… presenting her to something lurking in the shadows.
Grace drew her Blade of Dawn, the rapier’s light cutting through the water. The transformed villagers turned toward her, their eyes black and empty.
What hit Grace most was what she didn’t see: the blue-purple aura of corruption. Meridian was right—these weren’t corrupted beings. They were transformed. Changed into something completely new.
Which meant they couldn’t be saved.
Petriel’s eyes widened as she spotted Grace. The healer struggled against her captors, bubbles escaping her mouth.
[Oh crap, she’s drowning!]
Grace shot forward, slashing her blade through the nearest water-being. It dissolved into the surrounding water. She cut through two more, creating a path to Petriel.
The healer’s movements were getting weaker, her eyes starting to close. Grace grabbed her around the waist and tugged her rope four times in quick succession. Then, for good measure, she kicked hard off the floor and swam upward, dragging Petriel with her.
Something massive shifted in the shadows behind them. Something that made the water go deathly cold.
Grace’s lungs screamed for air. Black spots danced in her vision. The rope went taut as Diana began pulling from above, helping them ascend faster.
Just as Grace’s consciousness began to fade, they broke the surface. She gulped air desperately, still clutching Petriel to her chest.
“I’ve got you!” Diana shouted, hauling them both out of the water.
Petriel wasn’t breathing.
“No, no, no,” Grace rolled her onto her back on the shore. “Petriel!”
Water trickled from the healer’s blue lips. Grace pressed her hands to Petriel’s chest, channeling healing energy, but nothing happened.
[Wait, Intimate Healing!]
Grace didn’t hesitate. She pressed her mouth against Petriel’s, focusing all her energy into pulling the water out, just as she’d done the day before.
Saltwater rushed into her mouth, foul and heavy. Grace turned her head and spat it out, then returned to the kiss, drawing out more.
Finally, Petriel convulsed, coughing up water. Her eyes flew open, and she rolled onto her side, retching.
“Grace?” she gasped once she could speak.
“Right here,” Grace said, relief making her voice shake. “You’re okay.”
Diana helped them both to their feet.
“What the hell happened down there?”
Grace described the chamber, the transformed villagers, and the massive presence she’d sensed but hadn’t seen.
“The Tide itself, if I had to guess,” Meridian concluded. “You were fortunate to escape.”
“Okay, this didn’t work out. I suggest we get back to the village,” Diana said. “Regroup. Figure out our next move.”
“Agreed.” The others responded in unison.
As they walked away from the temple, Grace glanced back over her shoulder. The water around the structure was completely still now, unnaturally so.
But beneath the surface, something was watching.
Waiting.
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 173: Epilogue
- Chapter 172: Stubborn Angels
- Chapter 171: Into the Impossible
- Chapter 170: Century’s End
- Chapter 169: Wings and Wants
- Chapter 168: Three Years
- Chapter 167: Tea with a Goddess
- Chapter 166: Order’s Last Stand
- Chapter 165: The Final Pillar
- Chapter 164: Sins of the Creator
- Chapter 163: Blood in Paradise
- Chapter 162: When Heaven Breaks
- Chapter 161: The Weight of Creation
- Chapter 160: Corruption’s Edge
- Chapter 159: Creation’s Face
- Chapter 158: Midnight Provocations
- Chapter 157: When Angels Fall
- Chapter 156: Celestia’s Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Idea
- Chapter 155: Everything’s Fine
- Chapter 154: To Feel or Not to Feel
- Chapter 153: Planning a Party Is Harder Than Demon Slaying?
- Chapter 152: Operation: Make the Void Touch Grass
- Chapter 151: Emotional Support
- Chapter 150: The Void
- Chapter 149: Into the Abyss
- Chapter 148: Heavy is the Head That Reads the Horniest Scripture
- Chapter 147: Welcome Home to Chaos
- Chapter 146: Breaking Rocks
- Chapter 145: Stone Cold Reception
- Chapter 144: Gauntlet Run
- Chapter 143: Rock Hard Problems
- Chapter 142: Mountains and Munchings
- Chapter 141: When Heaven Gets Messy
- Chapter 140: Morning Existential Crisis
- Chapter 139: Contemplation
- Chapter 138: Reporting Back
- Chapter 137: Halfway Done*
- Chapter 136: Clarity
- Chapter 135: Two Options
- Chapter 134: Tag Team
- Chapter 133: Attempt Two
- Chapter 132: Helping Hand
- Chapter 131: The Storm Ahead
- Chapter 130: Take Two
- Chapter 129: An Attempt Was Made
- Chapter 128: Indecision
- Chapter 127: Kicking Off
- Chapter 126: Probing Questions
- Chapter 125: Emotional Damage
- Chapter 124: Storm Warning
- Chapter 123: Power-Up
- Chapter 122: Aftermath of an Ass-Kicking
- Chapter 121: Anger Management
- Chapter 120: Playing With Fire
- Chapter 119: Steam
- Chapter 118: Hero
- Chapter 117: Brave
- Chapter 116: More Training*
- Chapter 115: Fiery Training
- Chapter 114: A Change In Approach
- Chapter 113: Igniting Old Passion
- Chapter 112: Blood Boiling
- Chapter 111: Mt. Ignata
- Chapter 110: The Flame
- Chapter 109: New Team
- Chapter 108: Embers
- Chapter 107: Recognition
- Chapter 106: Back to Lessons
- Chapter 105: Affectionate
- Chapter 104: Date With Watery Destiny, Part Seven
- Chapter 103: Date With Watery Destiny, Part Six
- Chapter 102: Date With Watery Destiny, Part Five*
- Chapter 101: Date With Watery Destiny, Part Four
- Chapter 100: Date With Watery Destiny, Part Three
- Chapter 99: Date With Watery Destiny, Part Two
- Chapter 98: Date With Watery Destiny, Part One
- Chapter 97: Advanced Lessons*
- Chapter 96: Expert Assistance
- Chapter 95: Divine Attraction
- Chapter 94: Golden Opportunity
- Chapter 93: Caught in the Currents
- Chapter 92: Bright Ideas*
- Chapter 91: Hands-On Training
- Chapter 90: Revelations and Celebrations
- Chapter 89: Wet and Wild
- Chapter 88: New Confidence
- Chapter 87: Technique Acquired
- Chapter 86: Practice Makes Perfect*
- Chapter 85: Hands-On Education
- Chapter 84: The Tide’s Desire
- Chapter 83: Midnight Visit
- Chapter 82: Wet Negotiations
- Chapter 81: High and Dry
- Chapter 80: Depths of Devotion
- Chapter 79: Ocean’s Embrace
- Chapter 78: Salt
- Chapter 77: Rising Waters
- Chapter 76: The Tide Turns
- Chapter 75: Routine
- Chapter 74: New Resident*
- Chapter 73: Mission Statement
- Chapter 72: Mission Report
- Chapter 71: Mistaken Identity
- Chapter 70: Forgotten
- Chapter 69: Created
- Chapter 68: The Bargain
- Chapter 67: Deep Waters
- Chapter 66: Corrupted Waters
- Chapter 65: Ancient Hunger
- Chapter 64: Ancient Entities
- Chapter 63: Whispers of the Root
- Chapter 62: The Garden’s Touch
- Chapter 61: Healing Rosewood
- Chapter 60: Spreading Sickness
- Chapter 59: The Core’s New Form
- Chapter 58: The Core
- Chapter 57: Kiss of Life
- Chapter 56: Beneath the Surface
- Chapter 55: The Herbalist’s Tale
- Chapter 54: Solo
- Chapter 53: The Green Barrier
- Chapter 52: Unorthodox Methods
- Chapter 51: Hostile Vegetation
- Chapter 50: The Shy Angel
- Chapter 49: Divine Assignment
- Chapter 48: Vol. 1 Epilogue
- Chapter 47: Return to the Dominion
- Chapter 46: Protection
- Chapter 45: Primal Fear
- Chapter 44: The Battle for Oakridge
- Chapter 43: The Nest
- Chapter 42: The Truth
- Chapter 41: First Contact*
- Chapter 40: Dividing Forces
- Chapter 39: Welcome to Oakridge
- Chapter 38: Journey to Oakridge
- Chapter 37: Mission Briefing
- Chapter 36: Scripture
- Chapter 35: Relics
- Chapter 34: The Celestial Banquet, Part Eight
- Chapter 33: The Celestial Banquet, Part Seven
- Chapter 32: The Celestial Banquet, Part Six
- Chapter 31: The Celestial Banquet, Part Five
- Chapter 30: The Celestial Banquet, Part Four
- Chapter 29: The Celestial Banquet, Part Three
- Chapter 28: The Celestial Banquet, Part Two
- Chapter 27: The Celestial Banquet, Part One
- Chapter 26: Little Warrior, Part Five
- Chapter 25: Little Warrior, Part Four
- Chapter 24: Little Warrior, Part Three
- Chapter 23: Little Warrior, Part Two
- Chapter 22: Little Warrior, Part One
- Chapter 21: Antsy
- Chapter 20: Progress
- Chapter 19: Mysterious Ways
- Chapter 18: Hope
- Chapter 17: Fallen Angels
- Chapter 16: Love Sisters
- Chapter 15: Curiosity
- Chapter 14: Choir
- Chapter 13: Prayers
- Chapter 12: Natural
- Chapter 11: The New Girl
- Chapter 10: Learning The Ropes
- Chapter 9: Eternia
- Chapter 8: Welcome Committee
- Chapter 7: Selection
- Chapter 6: Tests
- Chapter 5: Strange Words
- Chapter 4: Angels
- Chapter 3: Demons
- Chapter 2: Toward The Flames
- Chapter 1: Grace, The Hardened Farmer