Morning sunlight filtered through the mist.
For the first ti in eternity, the air didn't hum with collapsing tilines — it slled like rain, soil, and life. Kael watched the light spill across the valley, painting gold over an unbroken horizon.
He should've felt victorious.
Instead, he felt… empty.
Jorah stumbled out from behind a boulder, covered in dirt and confusion. "So, uh… did we actually fix everything? Or did we just die really dramatically?"
Kael smiled faintly. "If this is death, it's better decorated than I expected."
The two of them started walking down a narrow dirt path that hadn't existed a mont ago. The air shimred with faint traces of creation energy — threads of raw potential weaving themselves into trees, rivers, and mountains.
Jorah kicked a pebble. "You sure we're not still in so paradox dream thing?"
Kael hesitated before answering. "We're not."
But he didn't sound sure.
He touched the faint golden scar on his palm — the only remnant of the Chrono Blade. It pulsed once, like a heartbeat, then faded. He blinked, and for half a second, he couldn't rember why it mattered.
"What… was her na?" he murmured.
"Whose?" Jorah asked, glancing back.
Kael frowned. "The witch. The one who—" He stopped mid-sentence, a sharp ache behind his eyes. "I… I don't rember."
Jorah tilted his head. "Kael, you okay?"
He nodded quickly, brushing it off. "Yeah. Just a glitch. Ti residue."
But deep down, he knew it wasn't.
They camped that night under a canopy of stars too bright to be real. The fire flickered in soft rhythm with Kael's heartbeat. Jorah was asleep, snoring softly, muttering sothing about "god-level insurance."
Kael sat alone, staring into the flas.
He could feel the world breathing through him. Every spark in the fire, every gust of wind — it was all connected to his pulse. He had rebuilt ti itself, rewritten existence from its origin.
But each ti the fire flickered, a piece of his mory vanished with it. Nas. Faces. Laughter. All slipping away like grains of sand through open fingers.
He clenched his hands. "Not again."
The wind shifted, carrying a whisper.
You chose this, Kael Vorrion.
He stood, scanning the darkness. "Who's there?"
No answer. Only the echo of his own na — fading.
The next morning, Jorah woke up to find Kael standing at the edge of a cliff, looking down at a city that hadn't existed yesterday. A place of gleaming towers, shining rivers, and thousands of people walking below — all newly born into the world Kael had rewritten.
"Guess you've been busy," Jorah muttered, joining him.
Kael didn't answer. His eyes were unfocused, watching the city like it was a dream he wasn't sure he rembered dreaming.
Jorah squinted. "You… rember any of their nas?"
Kael frowned. "Whose?"
"The people down there."
Kael blinked. For a heartbeat, he didn't understand the question. "I… think they rember . But I don't rember them."
Jorah stared at him, unease creeping in. "You're telling you built an entire world — and forgot you did it?"
Kael exhaled, voice distant. "I think I'm becoming the world itself."
The words hung heavy in the air.
They descended into the city that day, blending with the crowds. Everywhere Kael walked, the people paused — eyes flicking toward him, as if recognizing sothing sacred without knowing why.
Children laughed when he passed, flowers blood where his shadow fell, and the clocks — every single one — stopped for one second when he looked at them.
Jorah whispered, "You're leaking god-energy again."
Kael smirked weakly. "Better than leaking blood."
But the smirk didn't last.
At the marketplace, a woman dropped to her knees as Kael walked by, tears streaming down her face. "You ca back," she whispered. "The Luminous One returns."
Kael froze. "I—"
Her eyes filled with awe. "You remade us. You gave us days again. Thank you, great one."
Kael stepped back, shaking his head. "No… I didn't an to be worshipped."
But even as he spoke, he could feel it — threads of faith binding him tighter to the world, feeding off belief, rewriting his very existence. The godhood he'd tried to bury was returning, not by will, but by worship.
That night, the stars whispered again.
The world rembers you, even if you forget yourself.
Kael woke with a start, sweat dripping down his brow. His reflection shimred in a puddle nearby — his eyes glowed faint gold, his hair faintly silver at the tips. He didn't recognize the face staring back.
"Jorah," he said hoarsely. "If I ever forget who I am… you have to remind ."
Jorah rubbed his eyes. "That's kind of our thing, isn't it?"
Kael smiled weakly. "Yeah. Just… don't let beco what I was fighting."
Jorah's tone softened. "You won't."
But Kael wasn't sure anymore.
Days turned to weeks. The city grew. Temples rose, prayers filled the streets, and Kael's na beca a whispered hymn. Each prayer made him stronger — and emptier.
He couldn't rember Lyra's laugh.
He couldn't rember the Architect's face.
And worst of all, he couldn't rember his own.
One evening, as the sun dipped below the horizon, Kael stood on the edge of the world he'd made and whispered into the wind, "Who am I?"
The wind whispered back — not with words, but with laughter.
Familiar. Gentle. Fading.
Kael smiled, even as tears stung his eyes. "Right. I rember now… just a little."
He turned as Jorah approached. "We need to find the fragnts. The parts of that got lost during the rewrite."
Jorah raised a brow. "Fragnts? You an mories?"
Kael shook his head. "No. People. The world made them flesh. My past selves are out there — living, breathing. If I don't find them first… they'll beco gods of their own."
Jorah sighed. "And I thought this was going to be our vacation arc."
Kael grinned faintly. "Sorry. Fate doesn't give refunds."
Jorah smirked. "Good thing we don't take orders from fate."
Kael's golden eyes burned brighter as he looked toward the horizon — where faint silhouettes of golden storms pulsed across the sky. "Then let's go remind ti who it belongs to."
The wind carried his laughter — half god, half man, entirely Kael.
And sowhere, deep in the bones of creation, the universe whispered back:
Welco ho.
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