Chapter 50 Beneath the Gaze of Hermaeus Mora
The moment Alex and Astrid secured the Blank Luxicinus, the faint mechanical hum that had lingered in the Dwemer ruin finally faded. Cold air rushed in as they stepped beyond the threshold, their boots scraping softly against ancient stone. For a heartbeat, there was only silence thick, heavy, expectant.
Then the world twisted.
The torchlight dimmed as if swallowed whole, shadows stretching unnaturally across the corridor walls. The air grew dense and clammy, pressing against their lungs with a suffocating weight. Alex froze mid-step, his fingers tightening around the artifact.
Astrid halted beside him just as something coalesced in front of them.
A mass of shifting blackness seeped out of nothingness, as though reality itself were bleeding. The shape had no true form an amorphous void crowned by vast, unblinking eyes that glowed faintly with sickly green light. Thick, glistening tentacles unfurled from its body, dragging along the stone with a wet, whispering sound, leaving faint trails of frost and darkness in their wake.
Astrid's breath hitched. Her hand moved instinctively to her weapon, knuckles whitening as she leaned closer to Alex.
"Alex… wait," she whispered sharply, her voice tight with alarm. "What is that thing?"
Alex didn't answer right away.
The instant the creature fully emerged, recognition struck him like a blade of ice driven straight through his spine. His blood seemed to run cold, and a faint tremor passed through his hands.
There was no mistaking that presence.
No mortal being could command such pressure such awareness.
It was Hermaeus Mora.
The Daedric Prince of Knowledge and Memory.
The stone beneath their feet vibrated faintly, runes along the walls flickering as if struggling to remain intact under his gaze. The smell of damp parchment, brine, and something ancient older than language filled the air, making Alex's stomach churn.
Then the creature spoke.
Its voice did not come from a single mouth. It echoed from everywhere at once layered, distorted, and crawling directly into their minds rather than their ears.
"Come closer…"
The words slithered through the air like living things.
"Bask… in my presence."
Astrid swallowed hard, her jaw tightening as her eyes locked onto the writhing mass before them. One of the creature's eyes slowly rotated toward her, pupils contracting with unsettling focus, while its tentacles writhed more eagerly as if tasting the fear in the air.
Alex could feel his heartbeat pounding in his ears, each pulse echoing against the unnatural silence that now surrounded them.
Something ancient was watching.
And it knew they were there.
Astrid did not retreat.
She planted her feet firmly against the cold stone, the faint scrape of her boots echoing in the unnatural stillness. Her shoulders squared, chin lifting just enough to meet the creature's many eyes without flinching. Though her fingers trembled, she tightened her grip until her knuckles blanched white.
"Who are you?" she demanded, her voice steady defiant even as the air itself seemed to recoil around her.
At her words, the creature responded.
Its countless eyes shifted in unison, rolling within the black mass like stars moving beneath a veil of ink. Some widened, others narrowed, focusing with unsettling precision. The tentacles twitched, then slowly coiled and uncoiled, slick and deliberate, as though each possessed its own will and intelligence.
"I am Hermaeus Mora."
The name itself pressed down upon the chamber, heavy with ancient authority.
"I am the guardian of the unseen… and knower of the unknown."
The words did not echo they lingered, clinging to the air like damp parchment.
"I have been watching you, mortal."
A sharp chill ran down Alex's spine, crawling beneath his armor and settling deep in his bones. His breath caught, and he felt cold sweat bead along his temples and trickle down his back. The artifact in his hand suddenly felt heavier, as though it, too, feared being observed.
Does he know I'm from another world?
Does he know about the System… about the power I possess?
His thoughts spiraled faster, darker.
And if he does… what happens when a Daedric Prince sets his sights on me?
Slowly deliberately Hermaeus Mora's attention shifted.
One massive eye rotated toward Alex, followed by another… then several more, until their weight pressed against him like a physical force. The tentacles shrieked softly as they writhed, the sound wet and grating, like metal dragged across stone submerged in water.
"Oooh…"
The sound vibrated through Alex's skull, intimate and invasive.
"Worldwalker."
The word was spoken with reverence and hunger.
"I know of you. Beings such as yourself appear once every thousand years."
The tentacles drew closer, stopping just short of touching him, swaying as if scenting prey.
"But most do not entangle themselves in the great currents of fate. You are… different."
Alex's pulse thundered in his ears, drowning out everything else.
"You walk beside the Dragonborn yet you have broken no rule. You did not strike down Alduin with your own hand. You allowed the flow of destiny to remain intact."
The creature's eyes narrowed, gleaming with something disturbingly close to approval.
"That restraint…"
A pause. Heavy. Deliberate.
"…is what keeps you safe."
Alex's heart slammed violently against his ribs, each beat sharp and panicked, as though his body understood what his mind was still struggling to accept.
He wasn't just being observed.
He was being measured.
Alex hesitated.
His throat tightened, and for a moment he had to force air back into his lungs. His gaze dropped to the stone floor, then lifted again toward the mass of eyes looming before him. One hand clenched at his side, fingernails biting into his palm as if to anchor himself to the present.
"Have… have there been others like me before?" he asked.
The question left his mouth barely louder than a breath, yet it felt as though it echoed through something far larger than the chamber itself.
Hermaeus Mora did not pause.
"Of course."
The answer came smoothly effortless. Almost dismissive.
The words struck Alex harder than any threat.
Of course.
In an instant, his thoughts exploded outward, colliding and overlapping.
What happened to them?
Did they survive?
Did any of them ever return home… or were they all lost to this world?
His mouth opened, words already forming, desperation creeping into his chest
But the air shifted.
The pressure intensified, crushing down as the tentacles recoiled sharply, then unfurled with slow, deliberate menace. Several of Hermaeus Mora's eyes narrowed at once, focusing with predatory intent.
"Mortal."
The single word halted Alex's thoughts like a blade against his throat.
"If you desire knowledge, then you must also be willing to pay its price."
The voice deepened, resonating with cold certainty.
"Is that not so?"
Alex stiffened.
He knew this trap. He had read the stories. Bargains cloaked as gifts. Truths exchanged for chains. Memories twisted into shackles.
Slowly, he straightened his posture. His hand relaxed then clenched again, this time with resolve rather than fear. When he raised his head, his eyes were steady.
"No."
The word landed like a stone dropped into still water.
"I know what you're trying to do," Alex said firmly. "And I won't fall for it."
For the briefest moment, the tentacles stilled.
Astrid turned sharply toward him, her brows knitting together. Confusion flickered across her face followed quickly by suspicion. Her grip tightened on her weapon, and she studied Alex from the corner of her eye, as if seeing him from a new, unfamiliar angle.
Whatever he was…
Whatever he knew…
It was far more than he had ever told her.
Before Astrid could voice the questions burning behind her eyes, the pressure in the chamber shifted.
Hermaeus Mora's vast attention peeled away from Alex and settled fully upon her.
The change was immediate and suffocating.
Several of the creature's enormous eyes rotated in unison, fixing on Astrid with unsettling precision. The tentacles drew inward, then unfurled toward her alone, their movements slow and deliberate, as though measuring her worth. The air around Astrid grew heavier, pressing against her chest until each breath required effort.
She straightened instinctively.
The Dragonborn's hand tightened around her weapon, the leather of her grip creaking softly. Though a chill ran through her, she refused to step back. Her jaw set, and she met the Daedric Prince's gaze head-on, defiance burning in her eyes.
"Your continued aid to Septimus renders him increasingly obsolete," Hermaeus Mora intoned.
The words crawled through the air, oily and precise.
"He has served me well. But his time nears its end."
One of the tentacles lashed faintly against the stone floor, leaving behind a smear of frost-dark residue.
"Once that infernal lockbox is opened, his usefulness will be exhausted. When that moment comes…"
The eyes narrowed.
"…you shall take his place as my emissary. What say you?"
The weight of the offer fell squarely upon Astrid's shoulders deliberate, inescapable. Alex felt it too, like a tightening noose, but the creature's gaze never once returned to him.
Astrid did not falter.
She took a single step forward, boots scraping against the stone. Her shoulders squared, and her grip on her weapon relaxed not in fear, but in certainty.
"I will never join you," she declared, her voice ringing sharp and unyielding through the chamber.
Her eyes hardened.
"Vile demon."
For a heartbeat, nothing moved.
Then the darkness deepened.
The tentacles stiffened, their writhing growing harsher, more violent. The many eyes dimmed, their glow sharpening into something cold and merciless.
"Be warned."
Hermaeus Mora's voice sank lower, heavier, layered with ancient menace.
"Many have thought as you do."
The chamber trembled faintly.
"I have broken them all."
The eyes lingered on Astrid, unblinking.
"You shall not evade me forever."
And then
He was gone.
Not withdrawn. Not dispersed.
Erased.
The pressure vanished in an instant, as though reality exhaled after holding its breath for too long. The runes along the walls flickered, then went dark. The cold, damp air rushed back in, carrying with it the familiar scent of stone and dust.
Silence returned.
Deep. Absolute.
Only the sound of Astrid's steady breathing and Alex's pounding heart remained.
The instant Hermaeus Mora's presence vanished, the oppressive weight lifted but the silence it left behind felt heavier than before.
Astrid turned to Alex slowly, as if afraid that any sudden movement might shatter what little calm remained. Her eyes searched his face, lingering on the tension in his jaw, the stiffness in his shoulders. Her voice, when she spoke, was tight not with anger, but with worry barely held in check.
"Alex…"
She hesitated, then continued softly.
"What did that creature mean? What is a Worldwalker?"
Alex opened his mouth then closed it again.
The words were there. Pressing. Demanding to be spoken. But fear coiled tightly around his chest, stealing his breath. Not the fear of death, or monsters, or Daedric Princes but something far more fragile.
Losing her.
He looked away, eyes fixed on the dark stone wall as if it might offer him refuge. His hand trembled faintly before he curled it into a fist, grounding himself.
"Astrid…" His voice came out low and strained. "I have a past that if I told you everything you might go mad. Or worse… start questioning your own existence."
He finally turned back to her. His eyes were raw, unguarded.
"I'm afraid that if I explain it all, you won't see me as me anymore. You'll only see something strange. Something that doesn't belong here." He swallowed hard. "I don't know if I'm ready to tell you yet. I'm… sorry."
For a moment, Astrid said nothing.
Disappointment flickered across her face, subtle but unmistakable. Her shoulders sagged just slightly, and she looked down, lips pressed together as if steadying herself. Then she closed her eyes and took a long, deliberate breath filling her lungs, grounding herself in the memory of countless battles, shared dangers, and quiet moments side by side.
When she looked up again, her gaze was gentler.
"Alex…" she said quietly. "I ask only one thing."
She stepped closer, close enough that he could feel the warmth of her presence, could see the faint tremor in her hands.
"When you are ready… let me be the first person you tell."
The restraint Alex had been holding onto finally broke.
He reached for her and pulled her into his arms, holding her tightly almost desperately as if afraid she might vanish if he loosened his grip. His forehead rested briefly against hers, his breath uneven.
"Thank you, Astrid," he murmured. "I… I truly don't want to lose you. No matter what my past is, that's the truth I want you to know."
Astrid wrapped her arms around him in return, just as firmly. One hand slid up to his back, pressing him closer, anchoring him in the present.
"It's okay," she whispered, her voice warm against his ear. "I know you'll tell me… when you're ready."
And in the quiet that followed amid the cold stone and fading echoes of ancient horrors they held each other, drawing strength from the simple, undeniable truth that they were not alone.
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