The Pulse Of The Void: Pulse One
Copyright© 2025 by The Void Watcher
Chapter 20: The Death Trap
Fantasy Sex Story: Chapter 20: The Death Trap - Before the first stars learned to burn, the Pulse was born, a living rhythm of creation that binds gods, universes, and mortal thought. In the world of Zena, a single clash reawakens that long-forgotten force. The impact fractures the laws of reality, its echo rippling through distant realms, stirring watchers, worlds, and ancient minds that have slept since the dawn of existence. Now, as the Pulse stirs once more, time bends, empires tremble, and the Void turns its gaze toward creation itself.
Caution: This Fantasy Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa mt/ft mt/Fa Fa/Fa Teenagers Consensual Romantic Lesbian BiSexual Heterosexual High Fantasy Military Mystery Science Fiction Aliens Extra Sensory Perception Space Were animal Incest Sister Polygamy/Polyamory Black Male Black Female First Oral Sex Petting Big Breasts Size Politics Royalty Slow Violence
Penza- Academy Forest
Ryra leaned forward, brows pinched. “What do you mean she knew?” Her voice carried confusion and a hint of accusation. The entire squad stared at Lyna, equally lost.
“It means I knew about all of you. And your powers,” Elira said quietly.
Seven heads snapped toward her.
Lyna swallowed, voice barely above a whisper. “She ... she comes from our Council of Veils. At least ... her family does. The Vaelis family. The keepers of our records. The most sacred and secret ones. The ones no one else knows.”
Elira nodded. “Yes. I am the eldest daughter of the Vaelis line. My responsibility was to keep your strengths, your powers ... and your identities hidden and protected while you’re at the academy.”
Uruses blinked. “Wait, ours? You mean ... all of us?”
“Yes,” Elira confirmed. “All of your parents are aware of this. Lyna’s mother explained everything to them. After the battle at the Great Expanse, they decided to hide the truth. They erased every general record and stored all information securely in our hidden sanctum and the Nexus.”
Everyone froze.
Cael pointed between himself, Leon, Uruses, and Zyrian. “Battle? You mean that old story about our fathers fighting? The one we heard bits of when we were kids?”
Elira folded her hands, choosing her words carefully. “Yes. That battle. And you will learn everything, but only when your parents permit it. It’s not my place to reveal their history.”
“Why not?” Uruses pressed.
Her expression hardened. “Because discussing what happened sixteen years ago is a capital offence, especially discussing it with all of you. Your parents are the rulers of this planet. That history belongs to them to explain, not me.”
The weight of her words sank in.
“But that’s not the most important thing right now,” Elira continued. “What matters is the danger you are in at this very moment.”
Nira, ever observant, tilted her head. “Danger? Is that why you’ve been protecting us? Deleting feeds, monitoring our training sessions ... even the private ones?”
Her eyes flickered toward Zyrian; everyone noticed.
“Yes and no,” Elira said, and suddenly slapped Zyrian’s chest again.
“Don’t you dare assume the wrong thing. I know you.” Her stare was sharp, daring him to deny it.
“I’m not!” Zyrian protested, flushing and looking away. The squad laughed softly at his reaction.
Uruses cleared his throat. “Right. Let’s get back to the danger.”
Elira sighed, shifting into a colder, professional tone. “The danger is that even though everything is hidden, certain groups know, or suspect, the truth about you all. They monitor you. Just like I do.”
A unified gasp rippled through the group.
Elira continued, voice low: “Some factions will attempt to seize the power to control all elements. Imagine the consequences if anyone possessed that. Even the rulers of this planet don’t have such power.”
Zyrian’s eyes narrowed as understanding dawned. “And you think Instructor Inis is connected to one of these groups?”
Elira’s expression darkened. “Yes. I suspected it even during our relationship. That’s one reason I ended things. His family isn’t part of our council, but they hold influence in Elmyra ... and they know some secrets about you all. More than they should.”
She exhaled slowly.
“That’s how he ended up at this academy, placed close to you. Watching. Studying. Testing. Nothing is confirmed yet, including who he’s working with.”
Her gaze swept across all of them.
“And that is why I’m telling you to be careful. Don’t use your full strength unless necessary. And especially not for some stupid cafeteria fight because someone commented.”
The boys shrank under her glare, Zyrian most of all, as she locked eyes with him longer than the rest.
“I shouldn’t be telling you all this without your parents’ permission, but since you were all stupid and reckless, I decided you should at least know the danger. From now on, behave accordingly and don’t keep secrets from me,” she looked firmly at everyone, and they all nodded.
“Okay, it’s time, we should go to the chambers, before it’s too late”, Ryra reminded. Everyone nodded and started to stand,
As Zyrian rose, he sensed a hint of danger and gasped. A sharp pain shot through his temples, causing him to stumble. Everyone immediately turned to look at him.
Elira asked, touching his arms, “What happened?”
Zyrian recovered and picked up a stone from under his feet. “Nothing, sharp stone,” he said, throwing it away. Others nodded at him, half-heartedly considering what they heard. Elira looked at him a moment longer, then slowly nodded.
Others gradually began to enter the forest, leaving Zyrian and Elira alone.
“Remember what I said, don’t make any wrong assumptions,” Elira said gently, gazing into his eyes.
“I am not,” Zyrian said softly, then kissed her gently. She responded. And he asked, “Tonight?”
“We’ll see,” she said, blushing and tucking her hair behind her ear. Zyrian nodded, stepped back from her, and followed his friends, already lost in deep thought about what he felt a moment before.
Elira stood there, watching them with a subtle smile, a mix of pride and fear. Then, she turned toward her wing and was already absorbed in her thoughts.
Elira arrived at her room and initiated a highly encrypted communication link outside the academy, then typed.
“Lights Brightened”
And hit send. In Zena, four sounds came from four separate rooms, each at a different pole.
Zyrian caught up with his friends, who were talking about what they had learned just before, but his mind was elsewhere. What is that feeling? Was he in danger, or was it something else? What is that pain, and the feeling, he felt it when... fuck, the mystery girl he thought.
Hello, mystery girl. Are you there? Are you okay? He tried again, but received no response.
“Zyrian!” he felt a pain on the back of his head. He turned toward Nira.
“Hmm, yeah?” he asked, confused.
“Did you hear what we said?” Ryra asked.
“Of course, I heard,” he said, sounding offended. Then, “What did you say again?” Zyrian asked with a grin. Everyone rolled their eyes.
By now, they have reached the river, and the waterfall begins to shimmer. The mountain stone becomes transparent again, revealing the path.
“Damn, how does this happen?” Leon muttered. “Can they actually sense what’s happening here, from over there?”
Lyna whispered in awe, “And the control, how powerful they must be to manipulate the water and make the stone vanish?”
“Yes, that too from down there,” Ryra added.
“Well, hopefully that’s what they meant when they said they would teach us,” Uruses said, gesturing towards the tunnel.
They all nodded, then jumped into the water and swam past the falls to the other side. Behind them, the mountain returned to its normal state. This time, they faced no strong current and swam toward the mountain’s entrance, climbed onto the riverbank, and made their way to the entrance, which slowly slid open.
The Guardian’s Chamber
“Hi,” the twins greeted them in unison, smiling. The boys grinned, but it faded quickly at a glare from the girls.
“Come on, let’s start”, Draven grunted and nodded toward the glowing chamber. others followed.
Zyrian entered the chamber and once again sensed a presence in his mind. It was more precise and more powerful now; he thought he detected a mix of excitement and fear, but he knew these feelings didn’t come from him.
He looked around, and his eyes fell on the glowing sphere, floating at the centre of the chamber and spinning slowly,
“What is this place? And what is that sphere?” he asked. His friends looked at where he was looking.
“You will know but not now,” Draven said, not explaining. They now stood in a section of the massive chamber.
“Before starting your training, understand that if you get injured, it means you’re actually hurt; there’s no dampening field like in your academy training or missions to lessen pain or injuries. If you die, you die,” Draven said coldly.
He continued, “So, you saw the way on this side of the river, because we revealed it to you and made the stone vanish so you could cross. But what would you have done if you only got a glimpse of the way, but the stone behind the waterfall hadn’t disappeared?”
They stood there dumbfounded, unsure of the answer.
He asked, “Why did you use all your powers to get through the waterfall when you could have simply done what you saw today?”
“Hmm, we don’t know how?” Uruses said.
Draven nodded, saying, “Show me what you know then.”
Suddenly, the seven of them scattered in different directions and landed separately.
Cael stood still, breath shallow, as the familiar forest pulsed around him, glowing softly, unnaturally, as if every leaf held a trapped ember of light. Yet despite the brilliance, he felt startlingly alone at the edge of a wide clearing.
A low, rumbling growl vibrated through the air. He stiffened and turned.
A beast, massive, fur bristling, eyes gleaming like, stood across from him. But its gaze wasn’t on him.
It was fixed on someone else, a slim figure at the opposite side of the clearing.
Cael blinked, squinted, then whispered:
“ ... Nira.”
His heart thudded. If Nira were here, the others had to be close. So why wasn’t she with them?
Then he remembered the plan to split up, each heading in a different direction to search for signs of that strange disturbance in the forest.
Nira knelt over the forest floor, completely absorbed, her attention locked onto something hidden beneath moss. She didn’t notice the beast. Not the crouching. Not the predatory glide of its body as it lowered into a hunting stance.
Cael’s throat tightened. He opened his mouth to yell, but stopped. If the beast saw him, it might sprint faster. Nira would never see it coming.
He swallowed hard, pulse hammering in his ears. Think. Think. There had to be something, anything to use.
He searched desperately. Nothing. Just glowing trees. Soft roots.
The beast crept forward, step by lethal step.
Cael moved too, barely a whisper of motion, muscles coiled with fear. He scanned the clearing again, mind racing. There had to be a way to reach her without alerting it,
Then, Fire exploded in front of him.
A towering wall of flames roared upward, ripping through the air with violent heat. Cael stumbled back, too slow to dodge completely. A blast of searing pain tore across his abdomen.
He choked, glancing down, the fire had scorched him. Before he could recover, the flames raced outward, circling him, forming a blazing ring that cut him off entirely from the clearing.
He spun around, eyes wide. Across the fire, on the far side of the ring, stood another beast, silent, watching him with unnerving intelligence. For a heartbeat, it held his gaze...
Then it turned and vanished into the forest. Panic surged.
And Nira, “Nira! NIRA, LOOK OUT!”
He screamed with everything inside him, but the roar of the fire swallowed his voice whole.
He couldn’t see past the blazing curtain. Couldn’t glimpse her. Couldn’t help her.