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Chapter 538 - Reunion

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Chapter 538: Chapter 538 - Reunion

That night, Virel and Aniel woke.

Their consciousness returned in layers.

Then awareness sharpened.

This was not their private chamber. That realization came first.

Then memory returned.

Not all of it at once, but enough.

The East. The siege. The retreat. The final instructions. The fall into sleep.

And then—

the chamber doors opened.

Vivian stepped inside.

She had only meant to check on them again. She had not expected them to be awake already.

Vivian stopped breathing.

Her hand flew to her mouth, and tears welled at once, so quickly and so helplessly that they blurred them before she could even take a step.

"Mother... Father..." she whispered, and then her voice broke completely. "You’re finally awake."

The two Celestials on the bed froze.

For a moment, they only stared at her.

Not because they failed to recognize her.

Because recognition hit too hard.

Virel’s eyes widened first.

Then Aniel’s.

The years between then and now collapsed in a breath.

"Vivian," Virel said in a rough voice. "My daughter... is that really you?"

Aniel’s own tears were already gathering.

"You’ve grown so much, dear."

That was enough.

Whatever fragile control Vivian had kept shattered completely.

She ran to them.

She ran like a daughter who had waited too long and feared too often and finally could not bear the distance for even one more step.

Then she threw herself into them, arms around both of them, holding as tightly as though she feared they might disappear again if she loosened her grip.

"This isn’t a dream," she sobbed. "I can finally see both of you again. I can finally..."

Her words dissolved into tears.

Aniel wrapped her arms around her at once, one hand moving over Vivian’s hair with instinctive tenderness older than worlds.

"There, there," she murmured, though she herself was crying now. "It’s our fault. We left too early last time."

Virel’s hand came to Vivian’s back.

"You’ve become something wonderful, daughter," he said. "We can feel it."

Vivian only cried harder.

For a while, none of them tried to say anything more sensible than that. The chamber did not need sense. It needed the truth of touch after too many years without it.

Then another presence reached the doorway.

Lucien.

He had been meditating not far away, recovering what he could from the strain of the last days. The moment he heard Vivian’s voice change, he moved.

And now he stood at the open doors, looking in.

For one heartbeat, he did not move.

The sight in front of him stopped him completely.

Virel and Aniel were awake.

Vivian was in their arms.

Lucien had imagined this moment more than once.

In his imagination, perhaps he said something steady first. Something calm. Something worthy.

Instead, he just stood there and felt his eyes burn.

Tears came before dignity had the chance to object.

He never liked showing that sort of thing.

Never thought himself particularly graceful at grief.

But these were the two people who had raised him in that small world. The two who had given him a simple life, a real home, warmth, guidance, and a kind of love that had never once made him feel lesser for not having been born theirs by blood.

He had lost them once.

Now they were here.

Virel saw him.

And laughed.

The laugh cracked halfway through because his own throat was too tight, but the sound was still unmistakably him.

"My boy," he said, his eyes bright. "I knew you would do something about our condition."

Aniel turned too, smiling through tears.

"What are you doing standing there?" she asked softly. "Come here and join your family."

That finished him.

Lucien crossed the distance almost blindly.

Earlier, he had already undo the lingering edge of Oblivion’s influence around them so that nothing false, nothing blurred, nothing stolen would remain between recognition and reunion.

Then he went to them.

And joined the embrace.

No one tried to hold back after that.

The four of them remained wrapped together in one tight.

The reunion went on like that until time itself seemed too respectful to interrupt.

Outside the chamber, Seraphine arrived with several of the waiting Celestials, only to stop when she saw through the half-open doors what had happened.

Seraphine did not step forward.

She understood the shape of the moment immediately.

So did the Celestials.

None of them spoke.

None of them intruded.

The older guard bowed his head slightly and gestured for the others to step back. Seraphine followed without question. The chamber doors were not fully closed, but the space was given back to the four within it, and for a precious while the rest of the world was allowed to remain outside.

Eventually, the storm of feeling eased enough that they could breathe without breaking on every inhale.

They separated. Not because any of them wanted to, but because now there were faces to see properly, tears to wipe away, and years to measure through gaze alone.

Vivian looked between them again and again as if verifying they were still real each time.

Aniel touched her cheeks, then Lucien’s, with the same wonder a mother might use when checking whether fever had finally broken.

Virel leaned back against the bed and studied them both with a kind of helpless pride that made him look younger rather than older despite everything.

"You two really came," he said softly.

Lucien finally managed a weak laugh.

"Well," he said, voice rough, "you did raise us to be troublesome."

That made Virel laugh again.

"That’s slander, my boy" He said with a laugh.

Aniel just shook her head fondly.

Vivian actually laughed through her tears at that, and hearing it in this room after so much grief was enough to make the air feel lighter.

For a while after that, no one rushed into questions.

They had time now.

Lucien knew there were many things he needed to understand.

How Virel and Aniel had appeared as mortals in their origin world. How they had lived as humans there and still remained alive here as Celestials. Whether the two versions of them had always been one. How much of the old mysteries connected back to the Liberators, the Primordial Slime, and the larger machinery behind reincarnation.

But he did not force those questions all at once.

Not into this first warmth.

Instead, the family simply caught up.

And slowly, as the first flood of reunion settled into something steadier, the knots in Lucien’s mind began to loosen one by one.

The explanation, when it came, was stranger and more beautiful than he expected.

The Virel and Aniel who had lived as humans in the small world had truly been them.

The reason was...

The Reincarnation Disc.

That name struck Lucien immediately.

It was the same ancient artifact once used by the Primordial Slime. The same artifact tied to the reincarnation of the Liberators.

And now, that artifact existed in another Liberator’s hands, woven into his cheat in a way still offensive enough that Lucien did not fully like thinking about it too often.

And through that artifact, Virel and Aniel had once done something extraordinary.

They had sent portions of their souls into reincarnation.

Only a part.

That was why things had unfolded the way they did.

Their souls had entered a small world at random.

The Reincarnation Disc’s strange mechanism took effect. It guided the fragments of their souls into vessels that bear resemblance to them, which might also explain why they were sent to their origin world.

But because only a small portion of their souls had gone, those incarnations could not grow beyond mortality.

Meanwhile, their true bodies in the Big World remained dormant.

Sleeping, waiting, holding the greater continuity of their being in reserve.

When their human lives ended, their consciousness returned here.

The transition had caused backlash, yes, but by then that injury had long healed.

Lucien listened in silence for a long while after that.

So had Vivian.

It explained enough that several old mysteries finally relaxed inside his mind instead of pressing against one another like locked gears.

They had never forgotten them and their lives there.

That mattered most.

Virel said it plainly.

"Especially you, son," he told Lucien.

Aniel nodded, her eyes gentle.

"We knew of the Liberators’ existence. We knew you were special, even before everything fully unfolded."

Lucien stared.

Virel smiled.

"It was still coincidence. Or maybe it was fate. The world is rarely polite enough to explain which."

Then his gaze deepened with quiet emotion.

"But meeting you there, in that small world, and raising you there..." He shook his head once. "That was one of the best things that ever happened to us."

Lucien looked away for a moment because his chest had become too tight again.

As the story went on, it became Lucien and Vivian’s turn.

Then the room shifted in a different way.

Virel and Aniel listened.

And more than once, their eyes widened in genuine shock.

Especially when they heard about Lootwell.

At one point, Virel simply stared at him and said, "You did all that?"

Lucien smiled.

"I’m not alone," he said as he gently held Vivian’s hand. 𝐟𝗿𝐞𝚎𝚠𝐞𝚋𝕟𝐨𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝕔𝕠𝚖

Aniel immediately answered, "as expected of my children."

Vivian laughed. Lucien laughed. Even Virel laughed after that.

And with every story traded back and forth, with every memory reclaimed and every surprise shared, the years between them became less like a wall and more like a road finally crossed.

They reminisced too.

About the old estate. About small foolish things. About meals. About training. About Vivian as a child. About Lucien causing exactly the sort of trouble Virel always pretended not to enjoy. About the simple life they had all once shared before the world grew too large.

Lucien watched Vivian while all this happened.

That mattered to him more than almost anything else.

Because the smile on her face now was not merely relief.

It was the smile from before.

From the old days. From childhood. From the years when life had been simple enough that joy did not have to fight so hard to remain visible.

That smile had returned.

And seeing it there, alive again beneath the soft light of the Celestial chamber while their parents sat beside them whole and awake and speaking—

that alone made everything worth it.

For the first time in too long, Lucien let himself sit in the moment without reaching immediately for the next burden.

They had time.

Their parents were here.

Vivian was smiling.

And for now—

that was more than enough.

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