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They stepped into the realm at dawn — or what passed for dawn here. The light had no source, and the ground shimred as though the world itself couldn't decide if it existed.

Jorah imdiately cursed as his boots sank half an inch into sothing that wasn't quite earth. "I hate this place already," he muttered, pulling free with a wet shlurk.

Kael barely glanced at him. "Good. Stay consistent."

"Consistently miserable?"

"Exactly."

Eira was silent, her eyes scanning the distorted landscape. The horizon bled into itself, folding and unfolding like paper caught in a storm. Trees grew sideways, rivers flowed upward, and the ruins of cities flickered in and out of existence — sotis whole, sotis dust.

"The Realm of Paradox," she said softly. "A place where ti keeps trying to rember what it's supposed to be."

"Sounds familiar," Kael muttered.

Jorah snorted. "Yeah, sounds like your autobiography."

Kael shot him a glare. "Careful, or I'll edit you out of this tiline."

"Can you actually do that?" Jorah asked, half curious, half terrified.

Kael smirked. "I don't know. Want to find out?"

Eira rolled her eyes. "Focus, both of you. The Blade of Paradox is here — but so are the echoes guarding it."

"Echoes?" Jorah asked.

"Fragnts of what was," she explained. "They're mories that gained form. So are harmless. Others… rember what it felt like to kill."

Jorah swallowed. "Great. Ghosts with trauma."

Kael's grin was sharp. "My favorite kind."

---

They moved cautiously through the flickering terrain. One mont, they walked through a forest of crystal trees; the next, it was a desert of black sand. Kael noticed the patterns — the way the air seed to ripple every thirty seconds, like the world resetting itself.

Eira's expression darkened. "The loop is collapsing faster than expected."

Kael raised a brow. "aning?"

"aning if we don't find the Blade soon, this realm might erase itself — and everything in it."

Jorah groaned. "Fantastic. I didn't even get breakfast."

"Think of it as intermittent fasting," Kael said dryly.

"I think of it as emotional abuse."

Eira ignored them both, tracing a glowing sigil into the air. The light pulsed, and the world around them flickered — stabilizing briefly. Through the haze, a massive stone structure ca into view.

"There," she said. "The Citadel of Paradox. The Blade's resting place."

It looked less like a citadel and more like a nightmare — half temple, half impossible geotry. Staircases twisted into walls, doors opened into themselves, and every surface shimred like it was made of mory.

Kael's pulse quickened. "Now that's craftsmanship."

Jorah stared. "That's madness."

"Sa thing, really."

They entered.

---

Inside, the air was thick — not with dust, but with presence. Every breath Kael took ca with whispers not ant for mortal ears. He could feel ti tugging at him, rewriting him in microscopic incrents.

Eira kept her hand near her blade, though she didn't draw it. "Be careful. The echoes here are strongest."

As if summoned by her words, the air shimred — and figures erged from the walls. Dozens of them. Ghosts of warriors, mages, kings, and scholars — each bearing Kael's face.

Jorah swore loudly. "Why do they all look like you?"

Kael smiled grimly. "Because they are . Or versions of that failed."

Eira's expression tightened. "Don't engage them."

Too late. One of the echoes — a version of Kael clad in black armor and madness — lunged forward, blade drawn.

Kael parried easily, but when their swords t, ti itself buckled. Images flashed — worlds burning, friends dying, laughter fading. Kael's eyes widened as he felt the echo's rage, its grief. Its hunger to exist again.

"Get out of my head," Kael hissed, shoving it back with a burst of magic.

But three more stepped forward, all grinning the sa grin.

Jorah drew his dagger. "You said don't engage, right?"

Eira sighed. "I changed my mind."

---

The battle was chaos — not the loud, fiery kind, but the distorted kind, where sound ca half a second late and blades cut through seconds instead of flesh. Kael fought like he was dueling himself — because he was.

Every strike brought mories flooding back. The day he built the first Chrono Gate. The mont Kieran betrayed him. The laughter of the twins as they struck him down.

"Enough!" Kael roared, slamming his palm into the ground. A wave of golden energy pulsed outward, scattering the echoes like dust.

For a mont, the world was still.

Jorah panted. "Tell that was the hard part."

Kael's expression didn't change. "That was the welcoming committee."

---

They reached the heart of the citadel — a vast chamber suspended over nothing. In the center floated the Blade of Paradox, spinning slowly in the air. Its tal shimred in impossible ways — as if it was being forged and unmade simultaneously.

Eira stared, awed. "It's beautiful."

Kael stepped closer, eyes narrowing. "It's dangerous."

Jorah frowned. "Then why do you want it?"

"Because everything dangerous used to belong to ."

Before anyone could stop him, Kael reached out. His fingers brushed the blade—

—and the world stopped.

---

Everything froze.

The fire in Eira's eyes, the motion of Jorah's breath, the trembling of air — all gone. Only Kael moved.

He looked around slowly. "So. This is your test."

A voice answered — deep, old, and eerily familiar. "You seek power again, Kael Vorrion?"

Kael smirked. "Power seeks . I'm just polite enough to say yes."

The voice chuckled, echoing from everywhere and nowhere. "Arrogance. Still your finest sin."

"Consistency," Kael said. "It's a virtue."

The air shimred — and before him appeared a figure made entirely of shifting reflections. It wore his face. Not the past Kael, not the future one — but all of them at once.

"You don't deserve this Blade," it said.

"Probably not," Kael replied. "But since when has that stopped ?"

The reflection smiled — a perfect, terrible mirror. "Then prove it."

Ti lurched.

---

Kael was standing in a thousand realities at once — reliving every choice, every regret, every betrayal. Each one a tiline where he fell, where he broke, where he gave up.

His reflection spoke from everywhere. "You think you've changed? You still crave control. You still can't let go."

Kael's voice trembled with fury. "Let go of what?"

"Yourself."

The mirror shattered.

Kael dropped to his knees, gasping. Around him, the echoes faded one by one. The Blade hovered before him, silent now.

Then it spoke — not in words, but in understanding. It didn't offer power. It acknowledged him.

Kael reached out once more. This ti, it didn't resist. The Blade dissolved into light and sank into his chest — rging with him.

The world restarted.

Eira gasped. "Kael—what happened?"

He stood slowly, his eyes glowing faintly with mirrored light. "We passed the test."

Jorah blinked. "We?"

Kael smirked. "I delegate spiritually."

Eira stepped closer, searching his face. "You don't feel… different."

He t her gaze. "That's because I finally am."

For the first ti, the realm stabilized. The cracks in the sky began to fade, the ground solidifying beneath their feet. The air grew warm again.

Jorah let out a long sigh. "Well, that's a relief. Can we leave before sothing else tries to kill us?"

Kael chuckled, turning toward the distant portal that shimred back into existence. "For once, Jorah, I agree with you."

Eira lingered for a mont, watching the Blade's light fade within Kael's chest. "What now?"

Kael looked ahead, the ghost of a smile playing on his lips. "Now," he said, "we find the next one. Before the past decides to rewrite us again."

The world shimred — then folded around them, and the Realm of Paradox was gone.

You are reading CHRONO BLADE:The hero who laughed at Fate Chapter 36 - 36 – The Realm That Forgot Itself on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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