Font Size
15px

The wind howled like a wounded god.

Kael stood at the edge of the ravine, staring down into a chasm so deep that even sound seed afraid to fall. The world had changed again — subtly, unnervingly. The sky rippled faintly, colors bending like an oil slick. Ti wasn't just breaking anymore.

It was bleeding.

Jorah trudged up behind him, out of breath. "You sure this is where the next shard's supposed to be?"

Kael's eyes glowed faintly with that strange blue light — the mark of the Chrono Blade. "Not supposed to be," he said. "It already was. And it will be again."

Jorah groaned. "Right. Chrono logic. My favorite flavor of insanity."

Kael didn't respond. The voice inside the blade was whispering again.

You're wasting ti, Kael.

It was his voice — but deeper, smoother. A ghost of confidence.

You think you're in control? You're just walking a path I already carved.

Kael clenched his hand around the hilt. "You talk too much."

Jorah frowned. "Huh?"

"Not you," Kael muttered. "The sword."

Jorah blinked. "...Okay. Yeah. Totally normal sentence."

---

The ravine wasn't just rock. Up close, Kael could see fragnts of tal embedded in the stone — gears, runes, and fragnts of frozen lightning. It was as if ti itself had exploded here once, leaving shrapnel behind.

"Whatever happened here," Kael murmured, "it wasn't natural."

Jorah leaned over the edge and imdiately stepped back. "Yeah, no. Nope. That's a long way down. You planning on climbing that?"

Kael smiled faintly. "Falling's faster."

"Not comforting!"

Kael stepped forward — and jumped.

---

The fall wasn't just a fall.

The air warped around him as he descended. Scenes flickered in the ravine walls — visions from other tis, other versions of himself.

A battlefield. A burning city. A crown made of gears and fla.

Each vision whispered sothing different — accusations, laughter, screams.

You promised them salvation.

You beca the monster they feared.

You forgot why you started.

Kael grit his teeth. "Shut up—"

Make , the blade whispered.

He landed hard on ancient stone — knees bending, dust rising. The floor beneath him was circular, engraved with the sa shifting runes as the Chrono Blade's hilt.

The Chrono Seal.

---

Jorah landed beside him seconds later, grunting. "You couldn't just take the stairs?"

"There weren't any."

"There are now!" Jorah pointed behind him. Stone steps spiraled up the ravine wall — forming from nothing, piece by piece, as if ti was correcting itself.

Kael blinked. "Huh. Neat."

He turned back to the seal. At its center was a stone pedestal, holding a fragnt of the sa shimring tal as the Spire. A shard.

The fifth one.

He reached for it — and froze.

The whisper ca again. You shouldn't.

Kael's hand hovered above the shard. "Why not?"

Because it's not yours to take. It's mine.

---

The pedestal cracked.

A figure rose from the seal — its body half-tal, half-light, eyes glowing with burning symbols of ti. Its voice was distorted, a thousand echoes layered together.

"KAEL VORRION," it intoned. "YOU WERE NOT ANT TO RETURN HERE."

Kael tilted his head. "You'll have to be more specific. I break a lot of rules."

The figure raised its hand. "You stole from eternity. You fractured the loop."

Jorah stepped back. "Uh, Kael? That thing looks like it eats people for breakfast."

Kael smirked. "Good thing I'm not on the nu."

The guardian slamd its hand down. The seal erupted — bolts of pure ti energy spiraling toward Kael. He blocked with the Chrono Blade, the impact sending ripples through the air.

Each clash created flashes of other realities — Kael saw versions of himself fighting in parallel tilines, each in a different world, each holding the sa blade.

The guardian's voice bood. "RETURN WHAT YOU STOLE."

Kael grinned. "Can't. I need it for my dramatic character arc."

---

Jorah ducked behind a rock as Kael leapt forward, slashing. The Chrono Blade t the guardian's arm — and ti itself shattered.

They froze mid-motion, locked in a stasis field. The world around them fractured like glass — a thousand monts breaking and reforming at once. Kael's thoughts raced faster than ti itself.

He's stronger than you, the voice in the blade said. But I rember how to kill him.

Kael hesitated. "You'd help ?"

I'd help myself.

The blade pulsed. A flood of knowledge slamd into Kael's mind — mories that weren't his. He saw a temple of gears beneath a dying sun, saw the first forging of the Chrono Blades, and the mont he — or his other self — bound his own soul into one.

The reflection's voice laughed. We are the blade, Kael. Always have been.

---

Ti snapped back.

Kael twisted the sword, channeling the mory. "Let's see if this trick still works."

He cut forward — not through flesh, but through seconds. The guardian's attack froze midair, split apart, and dissolved into dust.

The figure staggered back, light flickering. "IMPOSSIBLE—"

Kael's eyes burned with blue fire. "You'll find I specialize in impossible."

He drove the Chrono Blade into the seal. The runes flared, swallowing the guardian in a burst of light. The shard lifted from the pedestal and rged into the sword's hilt.

The ravine fell silent.

Jorah peeked out. "...Did we win?"

Kael exhaled. "Define 'win.'"

"Still alive?"

Kael smirked. "Then yes."

---

The walls trembled. Ti began to move backward — the cracks sealing, dust rising into the air, the fallen stones reforming. The ravine was healing itself.

Kael wiped blood from his nose. "It's resetting the event."

Jorah frowned. "Is that good?"

Kael looked at the glowing blade. The reflection's faint grin shimred in its surface.

"No," Kael said quietly. "It ans sothing woke up."

---

They climbed out of the ravine as the world rewound below them. The air above shimred with auroras of broken ti.

Jorah panted. "So what now?"

Kael looked at the horizon — at the faint silhouette of the next ruin.

"We find the next shard."

Jorah sighed. "You sure about that? Every ti you grab one, sothing worse happens."

Kael sheathed the sword, his grin sharp and weary. "Exactly. Which ans I'm getting closer."

Jorah groaned. "Closer to what? Death?"

Kael didn't answer.

The blade whispered softly. Closer to .

You are reading CHRONO BLADE:The hero who laughed at Fate Chapter 16 - 16 – The Blade’s Whisper 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

On the Path to the Great Dao cover
Trending now

On the Path to the Great Dao

Pig Nerd ·Action

【Fromtheauthorof''!】Mygrandfatherisverypeculiar.Everyday,helightsincenseforhimselfandeatscandlesinfrontofhisownancestraltablet.Thevillagersareallte...

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