The world was too perfect.
Kael noticed it first when the birdsong didn't stop. The sa lody, the sa rhythm, repeating every two minutes. The sky too — that sa soft, cloudless blue that never changed hue, no matter how long they walked.
He and Jorah had been traveling east for hours, and the sun hadn't moved an inch.
Jorah kicked at a pebble that refused to roll. It bounced once, twice — and then reversed direction, landing neatly back where it started.
He froze. "Kael."
"I see it."
Kael crouched, running his fingers through the grass. It bent perfectly beneath his touch, then snapped back upright, green as glass.
"This world's stable," Kael murmured. "Too stable."
Jorah frowned. "Isn't that what we wanted? You know — no collapsing tilines, no angry gods, no existential screaming clocks in the sky?"
Kael smiled faintly. "It's what I wanted. Which makes it suspicious."
They reached a small village by dusk — or what passed for dusk here. The sun dimd slightly, like soone had lowered a cosmic lantern. Children played in the square. rchants laughed. A woman humd while hanging laundry.
It all looked real. It felt real.
Until Kael blinked and realized the woman had been hanging the sa white sheet for the past five minutes.
He turned to Jorah. "How long have we been standing here?"
Jorah opened his mouth — then paused. "Uh… I don't know."
Kael's pulse quickened. "Exactly."
He drew the Chrono Blade. The tal was dull, its glow gone, but it still humd faintly when it left the sheath — like an old friend half-awake.
The villagers froze mid-motion.
Every. Single. One.
Jorah took a step back. "Oh no. Not this again."
Kael's eyes scanned the motionless scene. "We're not in the world, Jorah. We're inside it."
A voice answered — soft, familiar. "Clever boy."
The woman with the sheet turned to face him. Her smile widened too far. Her eyes were pits of swirling light.
Kael exhaled slowly. "You're not real."
"Neither are you," she said gently. "You're a mory of the god who tried to be human."
Jorah muttered, "Please stop talking like that."
Kael stepped forward, blade raised. "Who sent you?"
"Who else?" the not-woman said, voice echoing with a thousand others. "You did."
The ground trembled. The village began to fracture like glass, pieces peeling upward to reveal a churning darkness beneath. The sky flickered — morning, noon, midnight, dawn — all blending in rapid chaos.
Jorah shouted, "Kael! What's happening?!"
Kael's voice was grim. "The rewrite's collapsing."
He turned toward the void widening in the earth. "And sothing's trying to crawl through."
From the chasm below, hands erged — made of clockwork and bone, dripping molten gold. Then a face. Or many faces. All Kael's.
One of them spoke, the sound like tal grinding through screams.
"YOU CAN'T ERASE AN IDEA."
Jorah stumbled back. "Kael, tell that's not—"
"It's ," Kael said flatly. "The versions that didn't die."
The creature — the echo of Kael — climbed higher, its body a shifting amalgam of every him that ever existed. Warriors, kings, beggars, monsters — all fused into one.
"YOU STOLE THE LOOP. YOU THINK YOU'RE FREE."
Kael raised the Chrono Blade, which sparked weakly. "Freedom's a matter of perspective."
The echo smiled with a thousand mouths. "THEN PERSPECTIVE DIES WITH YOU."
It lunged.
Kael t it head-on.
The blade clashed with itself — a scream of tal and mory. The shockwave tore through the false village, sending frozen villagers shattering like glass statues.
Kael gritted his teeth, pushing back against the storm of himself. "You're just leftovers. Fragnts!"
"WE ARE LEGACY!" the echo roared. "WE ARE WHAT YOU DENIED!"
Jorah ducked as shards of reality flew past. "I'm getting really tired of watching you fight taphors!"
Kael laughed between strikes. "Then close your eyes!"
He pivoted, driving the dull blade deep into the echo's chest. It staggered, shrieking — light bleeding from the wound.
"YOU CAN'T KILL WHAT'S ALREADY YOU!"
Kael twisted the hilt. "Good thing I'm bad at following rules."
He tore the blade free — and with it, sothing snapped.
The echo dissolved into smoke, its faces fading one by one until only silence remained.
The world steadied. The air grew still.
Jorah crept forward, panting. "Please tell that was the end."
Kael didn't answer imdiately. He stared at the sword. The once-dull tal now glowed faintly again — a heartbeat of light in the darkness.
Then he noticed sothing else. The world around them wasn't fading. It was rewriting itself again.
The village reford. The people moved. Ti began — for the first ti — to flow.
Jorah looked around in disbelief. "Did… did you fix it?"
Kael lowered the blade slowly. "Maybe."
But his reflection in the sword didn't smile back. It watched him, silent and still.
You can't erase an idea, it whispered faintly.
Kael sheathed the sword. "No," he murmured. "But you can outlive it."
He turned to Jorah. "Co on. Let's see if this world has a decent tavern."
Jorah blinked. "After all that, tavern is your priority?"
Kael grinned. "Even gods need a drink."
As they walked down the now-living road, the sun finally began to set — real, golden, imperfect.
And sowhere, deep beneath the layers of creation, a single clock ticked once.
Then stopped.
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