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Reflection-Riven moved first.

Fast and aggressive, warden power flaring exactly like mine would because it was literally .

I summoned my spectral blade on pure instinct, the familiar weight manifesting just in ti to block the strike that would’ve taken my head off.

The impact rattled through my arms.

My reflection was strong, exactly as strong as I was, because why would a dinsional prison make this easy?

Around , the others engaged their own copies in fights that looked like watching yourself in a mirror that wanted you dead.

Azryth’s demon power clashed with Reflection-Azryth’s identical energy, dark waves eting in the center with enough force to crack the floor beneath them, both of them moving with centuries of combat experience perfectly matched.

Mara fought with hunter precision, knives flashing as she went for weak points, but Reflection-Mara countered every strike with the exact sa tactical efficiency, matching her speed and skill perfectly.

Henrik launched attacks with artifact-enhanced strikes while maintaining defensive barriers, but Reflection-Henrik did the sa, creating a stalemate of identical offense and defense.

Ryota’s weapon carved through the air with practiced expertise, each strike calculated for maximum effectiveness, but Reflection-Ryota matched him move for move, their blades eting with perfect symtry.

I blocked another strike from my reflection, spectral blade eting spectral blade with a sound like reality grinding against itself.

This was deeply annoying.

Fighting yourself was bad enough without the reflection being exactly as skilled, exactly as fast, exactly as capable of predicting what you’d do because it was literally you.

I tried a feint left, strike right.

Reflection-Riven saw it coming because I would’ve seen it coming, blocked easily, countered with a move I’d used against rift creatures.

I barely dodged, created a barrier to block the follow-up, but Reflection-Riven did the sa and we were back to a perfect stalemate.

"This is stupid!" I shouted, parrying another attack.

"Agreed!" Azryth called back, demon power flaring as he tried to overwhelm his reflection with raw force.

Reflection-Azryth matched the output exactly, neither gaining ground.

Mara switched tactics, going for speed over precision, rapid strikes that should’ve created openings.

Reflection-Mara did the sa thing, perfectly mirroring the strategy, and they ended up in a stalemate of identical attacks.

Henrik tried combining barrier angles with artifact strikes, creating openings through defense.

Reflection-Henrik adjusted identically, and they were back to the sa standoff.

Ryota attempted a tactical feint, weapon coming from an unexpected angle.

Reflection-Ryota saw it coming, countered with the sa move.

This wasn’t working.

I blocked another strike, getting pushed back toward one of the pristine mirrors lining the chamber, my reflection pressing the advantage with moves I recognized because they were mine.

We couldn’t win this.

Not by fighting.

You can’t overpower yourself when yourself has the exact sa power, can’t outskill yourself when yourself has the exact sa skills, can’t outlast yourself when yourself has the exact sa stamina.

I was trying to figure out what the hell we were supposed to do when I caught movent in my peripheral vision.

Void.

Floating near the ceiling like it was watching an entertaining show instead of five people fighting for their lives against themselves, which was honestly a very Void thing to do.

The small furball looked completely unbothered by the chaos, eyes bright with interest, probably thinking this was great entertainnt.

And more importantly, completely ignored by the reflections.

Like, aggressively ignored. The reflections were tracking every move we made with perfect accuracy, but Void might as well have been invisible for all the attention they paid it.

Which gave an idea.

"Void!" I shouted, blocking another strike from my reflection.

The small furball looked at . "Mama?"

"The mirror on the pedestal! Grab it!"

Void tilted, confused. "Huh?"

"The shiny thing in the middle of the room! Go get it!"

Understanding clicked, Void’s eyes brightened. "Yes!"

It took off toward the pedestal, flying in a straight line above the fights.

My reflection tried to intercept as I moved, probably thinking I was going for the fragnt myself.

But the reflections completely ignored Void.

They didn’t track its movent or react to its presence, they just kept fighting their originals like Void didn’t exist.

Because to them, it didn’t.

Void reached the pedestal easily, no resistance, no opposition, just a straight flight to the ornate mirror sitting on its crystal stand.

The small furball opened its mouth and grabbed the handle carefully.

I was too focused on blocking my reflection’s next strike to see exactly what happened, the fighting too chaotic to process details.

The mont Void lifted the mirror, the reflections froze.

Reflection-Riven stopped with its spectral blade inches from my face, perfectly still like soone had pressed pause.

Then they started dissolving.

Not violently, just fading, glass mist spreading from their edges as they lost cohesion.

Reflection-Riven looked at with my own face, expression blank, then scattered into particles of light that drifted upward and disappeared.

All around the chamber, the other reflections did the sa, dissolving into mist, vanishing like they’d never existed.

Within seconds, we were alone.

Just us, the mirrors, and Void holding the ornate mirror in its mouth like it had just won a prize.

"Well," I said, dismissing my spectral blade. "That was easier than expected."

Azryth’s expression shifted, his focus sharpening in that way it did when he sensed sothing botherso. "The fragnt escaped."

"Again?" I said.

"The signature’s gone, just like before."

I looked at Void holding the mirror, at the artifact that should’ve contained a fragnt but apparently didn’t anymore.

"Where did it..."

The mirrors started cracking.

Not slowly, violently, fractures spreading across every surface like spider webs of destruction.

The chamber shuddered, crystal pedestal splitting down the middle, floor buckling beneath our feet.

No ti to figure out where the fragnt went.

Azryth grabbed my hand. "We need to move, now."

We moved.

Not running blindly, navigating carefully through the shattered palace as the dinsion began tearing itself apart around us.

Mirrors exploded outward as we passed, glass fragnting into deadly projectiles.

I threw up a barrier, Azryth’s power reinforcing it, deflecting the worst of the shards.

Void flew ahead with the mirror still in its mouth, laser beams occasionally shooting out to clear obstacles, leading us back through the wreckage with surprising efficiency for sothing carrying a fragile artifact.

The floor beneath us wasn’t just breaking, it was unraveling, reality itself coming undone in ways that hurt to look at.

Mara vaulted over a collapsing section, Henrik right behind her with barriers forming stepping stones across gaps.

Ryota moved with tactical precision, weapon ready despite the chaos, covering angles like enemies might appear even though the only threat was the dinsion itself.

A massive wall section fell directly in our path.

Azryth’s demon power blasted through it before I could react, creating an opening, and we pushed through without slowing.

The palace was fragnting faster now, entire sections simply ceasing to exist, leaving voids of nothing that we had to navigate around.

Through the destruction ahead, I could see the gate, those mirror fragnts we’d entered through, still sohow intact despite everything.

But the path to it was disintegrating.

"There!" Mara pointed to a route that looked slightly more stable than the alternatives.

We took it, moving fast but not recklessly, every step calculated because one wrong move ant falling into nonexistence.

The dinsion scread, reality tearing with sounds that resonated in my bones.

A chunk of ceiling collapsed between us and the gate, cutting off the direct path.

Void’s laser carved through the debris, not destroying it but creating openings we could slip through.

Azryth’s hand tightened on mine as we navigated through gaps that kept shifting, his power steadying us both when the floor tilted at impossible angles.

We were close now, so close, the gate maybe twenty yards away.

The palace gave one final shudder, and everything started falling at once.

We sprinted the last distance, no more careful navigation, just desperate montum.

Void shot through first, still carrying the mirror.

Mara dove after it, then Henrik, then Ryota.

Azryth and I hit the gate together, his arm around my waist, and reality twisted.

The collapsing palace vanished.

Solid Tokyo pavent appeared beneath our feet.

We stumbled through, the transition jarring after the chaos, and I heard the gate shatter behind us.

The mirror fragnts dissolved into nothing, leaving empty air where a dinsional prison had existed.

I stood there on Shibuya pavent, breathing hard, hand still clasped in Azryth’s.

Void floated down, setting the mirror on the ground carefully before creating triumphant sparkles.

Mara was checking her scanner, Henrik was making notes despite looking exhausted, Ryota was surveying the area with professional assessnt.

Coalition personnel approached, Assistant Director Tanaka in the lead, relief evident on his face.

"The gate collapsed," he said, looking at the empty space.

"Hmn," Azryth gave a quiet hum.

I looked at the mirror sitting on the pavent, ornate and beautiful, no longer pulsing with entity energy.

Just a mirror now, a powerful artifact but normal.

The fragnt was gone, escaped sowhere when Void grabbed it, just like Switzerland.

I picked up the artifact, turning it over in my hands, no wrongness, no dinsional pressure, just exquisite craftsmanship.

"Tokyo’s distortions are fading," Tanaka reported. "Reality stabilizing across all affected areas."

I looked around at Shibuya, at the air clearing, colors returning to normal, the wrongness dissipating.

One gate down.

Six more to go.

Void made a pleased sound, floating near my shoulder, eyes slightly brighter than they’d been before.

I glanced at it, frowning slightly.

Was it bigger again?

Hard to tell.

Probably just exhausted and seeing things.

"Let’s get out of here," Azryth said quietly, hand finding the small of my back.

"Yeah," I agreed.

We’d saved Tokyo.

Now we just had to do it six more tis.

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