Font Size
15px

The shard pulsed like a second heart in Kael's hand.

It didn't just glow — it breathed. Every rise and fall matched the rhythm of his pulse, as if syncing itself to his very soul.

Jorah walked beside him in uneasy silence. The golden sky above the plain shifted, fading back into dull gray as they crossed the threshold out of the Rift. The normal world felt... thinner now. Every sound echoed too loudly. Every color seed slightly off.

Kael flexed his fingers, staring at the shard. "It shouldn't have worked."

"Yeah," Jorah muttered. "That's becoming a pattern with you."

Kael shot him a smirk, but it didn't reach his eyes.

Sothing was wrong. The world rippled faintly whenever he blinked, like reality itself was uncertain whether he truly belonged here.

He wasn't sure either.

---

By nightfall, they'd reached the ruins of an old temple — stone pillars half-swallowed by ivy, a roof long gone. Jorah set up camp near what might once have been an altar, while Kael sat nearby, tracing his fingers across the symbols carved into the stone.

They were words in a language he didn't know.

Except he did know them — or had known them once.

The carvings whispered when he touched them. Faint voices murmuring in a dozen tones — all familiar, all wrong.

"Kael Vorrion," one of them said softly. "Or what's left of him."

Kael froze. "...What did you say?"

Jorah looked up from the fire. "What?"

"The carvings," Kael said, his voice low. "They spoke."

"Uh-huh," Jorah said, unimpressed. "You sure you didn't hit your head in there?"

Kael didn't answer. He leaned closer, pressing his palm to the stone again. This ti, the whispers were louder. Clearer.

"You gave your na away, and yet you still walk."

"You broke the rule."

"You are an echo, not a man."

Kael jerked his hand back, heart hamring.

The whispers cut off imdiately, leaving only silence.

---

That night, Kael dread — or thought he did.

He was standing in a hall of mirrors that stretched infinitely in every direction. Each reflection was him, but not quite. So younger, so older. One with black eyes, another with none.

They whispered in unison: "Who are you now?"

Kael gritted his teeth. "I'm—"

But when he tried to say it, the word caught in his throat. The sound wouldn't form. His na — his own na — was gone from his tongue.

The reflections laughed. "Forgotten already."

Kael swung the Chrono Blade, shattering a hundred mirrors at once — but each broken shard showed his face grinning back, mocking him.

He woke drenched in sweat, the echo of laughter still ringing in his ears.

---

"Bad dream?" Jorah asked groggily from across the fire.

Kael didn't respond. He reached for the shard instead. It was warm — warr than before — and pulsing faster. Almost feverish.

Jorah sat up. "You okay, man? You're pale."

Kael rubbed his temples. "The shard's talking."

Jorah blinked. "Talking?"

Kael nodded slowly. "In my head. I can hear it."

Jorah frowned. "And what's it saying?"

Kael hesitated, then looked up. "It's saying... it misses ."

Jorah stared at him. "That's—okay, that's not creepy at all."

Kael smiled faintly, though his voice was hollow. "It's not the shard that's wrong. It's ."

---

They traveled east for two more days, following the witch's map toward the Celestial Spire. Along the way, Kael's condition worsened. He would forget words mid-sentence, lose track of where they'd been, even call Jorah by the wrong na — sotis by nas that made no sense.

"Lorian— no, wait... Jorah. Sorry," Kael muttered for the third ti that morning.

Jorah gave him a worried glance. "You're scaring , man."

"Join the club," Kael said with a strained grin.

But behind his humor, he felt the fracture growing.

Sothing inside him — the part that tethered him to this tiline — was slipping.

---

On the third night, Kael stood watch while Jorah slept. The wind whispered through the dead trees. Every gust carried faint echoes — Kael Vorrion... Vorrion... Vorrion... — fading into nothing.

He drew the Chrono Blade, letting moonlight run along its edge. For the briefest mont, his reflection looked wrong again. Not older — just... empty.

"Who am I now?" he asked softly.

A voice answered — not from the blade, not from the shard, but from the air itself.

"You are the wound that ti refused to heal."

Kael spun around, blade raised. A figure stepped from the shadows — a woman draped in silver and starlight. Her eyes glead like twin moons.

"The Keeper," Kael breathed.

She inclined her head. "You are unraveling, Kael. The Rift took more than your na."

Kael clenched his fists. "I had to take the shard. Without it, the flow would've collapsed."

"And now it collapses within you," she said. "Each ti you rewrite the rules, you erase a piece of yourself. What will be left when nothing rembers your na?"

Kael's jaw tightened. "Then I'll make the world rember sothing else."

The Keeper tilted her head, studying him. "Defiance. Always your gift... and your curse."

Before he could reply, she was gone — the wind scattering her form like dust.

---

Kael sheathed his sword and sank to the ground, exhaustion catching up to him. His vision flickered. In the darkness, he heard voices again — not whispers this ti, but mories.

Laughter.

A promise under starlight.

A na — his mother's — that he could almost rember but not quite.

He gritted his teeth and forced the mories back. "Not now."

But the shard in his pack pulsed harder, as if mocking him.

---

By dawn, they reached the edge of a vast canyon. In the distance, the Celestial Spire rose — impossibly tall, piercing the clouds like a needle through fabric. Even from here, Kael could feel its pull, the sa way the Rift had called to him.

Jorah stared in awe. "That's it. The Spire. You think the witch's lead is solid?"

Kael didn't answer at first. He was staring down at his own hands — faint trails of light coiling under his skin, pulsing in ti with the shard's rhythm.

"Kael?" Jorah pressed.

Kael looked up, his eyes glowing faintly blue. "We're out of ti."

Jorah frowned. "aning?"

Kael turned toward the horizon. "The Spire's calling. And sothing's calling back."

He could hear it now — faint echoes in the wind. Dozens of voices, all his own.

"Kael Vorrion... Kael Vorrion... Kael Vorrion..."

But one voice, clearer than all the rest, whispered sothing new — sothing that made his blood run cold.

"You were never Kael."

You are reading CHRONO BLADE:The hero who laughed at Fate Chapter 13 - 13 – Echoes of the Forgotten Name on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Elven Invasion cover
Trending now

Elven Invasion

Respro ·Action

MagicvsScience HumanvsElves EarthvsForestia MortalvsGod ThisisataleinwhichGoddessLunainordertosaveherplanetandcivilizationstartsainvasiononEarth,Wi...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.