The morning stretched golden across the hills, and for a mont, everything felt deceptively ordinary.
Jorah was whistling—a terrible sound that made birds reconsider living. Eira trudged ahead, her cloak fluttering, muttering about how "normalcy" made her uneasy. Kael followed a few paces behind, content to let the rhythm of travel and mild bickering fill the silence that once belonged to screams and collapsing tilines.
It was… nice. Too nice.
"Remind again," Jorah said, breaking a stick in half and tossing it aside, "why we're walking instead of, you know, teleporting, flying, or hitching a ride with one of those giant ti-serpents you're so fond of?"
Kael smirked. "Because the last ti you flew anything, you crashed into a volcano."
"That was once!"
"It was still a volcano," Eira said dryly.
Jorah pointed at her. "You said you forgave ."
"I lied."
Kael chuckled. "Good to see the apocalypse hasn't improved either of you."
"Apocalypse?" Jorah snorted. "This feels more like a hangover. Universe wakes up, doesn't rember what it did last night, pretends everything's fine."
"Accurate," Kael said. "Except this hangover occasionally tries to eat you."
That earned him a grin, and for a few blissful minutes, it really did feel like they'd finally escaped the shadow of the past. The road dipped through wildflower adows, streams whispered nearby, and the world seed content to breathe again.
But then Kael heard it.
Tick.
He froze mid-step. The sound was faint, buried beneath birdsong—but it was there. A single, chanical tick. Familiar. Wrong.
Eira glanced back imdiately. "You heard that too."
"Yeah," Kael murmured. His hand went instinctively to the Chrono Blade.
Jorah frowned. "I didn't hear anything."
Kael didn't respond. He stepped forward slowly, scanning the path. The sound ca again—tick... tick...—a heartbeat rhythm made of ti instead of flesh.
They followed the noise to a shallow stream running across the road. It looked harmless enough—clear, cold water flowing over smooth stones. But when Kael crouched, the reflection staring back wasn't his.
It was him—older. Worn. Eyes hollow. The other Kael. The one who'd died.
The reflection smiled, lazy and cruel.
Kael's breath hitched. Then the reflection reached up—out—and the water shattered upward like glass.
Eira yanked Kael back just in ti as a figure rose from the stream: a warped echo made of light and dust. Its shape flickered, fragnts of tilines stitched together. For a second, Kael saw flashes—mories that weren't this world's.
The betrayal. The blood. The altar.
It was his mory, trying to manifest.
The echo lunged.
Kael reacted on instinct, drawing the Blade. Its edge flared once, just enough to slice the thing in two. It dissolved instantly—no scream, no smoke, just gone. The stream flowed again as if nothing had happened.
Silence. Then Jorah exhaled shakily. "Okay, I definitely saw that one."
Eira's expression darkened. "You said the world was rembering."
Kael nodded slowly. "Looks like it's rembering ."
---
They didn't stop walking after that, but the air had changed.
The sun still shone, but the warmth felt thinner sohow—fragile. The hills stretched further than they should have, the sa trees repeating every few miles. Subtle things, the kind that most people wouldn't notice. But Kael did.
By afternoon, they reached the edge of a small town—a quiet place of wooden houses and winding roads. It looked identical to the last village they'd passed.
Too identical.
Jorah squinted. "Didn't we just co through here?"
"No," Eira said slowly, scanning the area. "But… yes."
Kael frowned. "Ti loop?"
Eira shook her head. "Not quite. More like déjà vu written into geography."
Kael sighed. "Great. The world's copy-pasting itself."
They entered anyway. The townsfolk greeted them the sa way as before—smiling, friendly, as if nothing strange was happening. The innkeeper was even the sa woman from the previous village, sa voice, sa joke about "travelers bringing the rain."
Kael forced a grin and dropped a coin on the counter. "We'll take three rooms."
"Three?" she asked. "Sa as last ti?"
The coin froze midair before hitting her palm. Kael's eyes narrowed. "What did you just say?"
The woman blinked, as if waking from a trance. "I—oh, my. Sorry, traveler. Must've misspoken."
But Kael had seen the shimr in her eyes—a faint silver glow. Temporal residue. The world wasn't looping; it was syncing. Reality was trying to stabilize, and in doing so, it was beginning to repeat.
That night, Kael couldn't sleep.
He stood by the window, watching the moonlight fall across the cobblestone street. Sowhere, deep beneath his ribs, that ticking sound persisted—slow, patient, like sothing waiting to be noticed.
Horizon's voice echoed faintly in his mory.
> Every act of defiance leaves an imprint, Kael. The more you fight ti, the more it learns you.
He hadn't heard from Horizon since the Axis collapsed. Maybe the automaton hadn't survived. Or maybe he was still out there, half a second ahead of reality.
Either way, Kael missed the noise.
"Can't sleep?" Eira's voice drifted from the doorway. She leaned against the fra, arms crossed, the firelight painting gold across her face.
Kael shook his head. "Never could."
She stepped closer, quiet as snowfall. "You're worried."
"Always."
She studied him. "You think the world's going to fall apart again."
Kael hesitated. "Not fall apart. Just… rember too much. Every echo wants to exist. Every erased thing wants to co back. And if they all do—"
"It'll collapse," Eira finished.
He nodded.
Eira's gaze softened. "Then we'll fix it."
Kael chuckled without humor. "You make it sound simple."
"It's not. But you've done worse."
He looked at her, and for the first ti in a long while, he didn't see the battlefield or the betrayal. He saw the present—the fragile, impossible peace they'd carved from chaos.
"Get so rest," he said quietly. "Tomorrow, we see how deep this goes."
Eira lingered for a mont, then nodded and left. The door clicked softly shut behind her.
Kael turned back to the window.
Outside, the moon hung low, silver and vast. And for a heartbeat, he saw a shadow standing in the street below—his own shape, watching him. It smiled once, then vanished.
Kael sighed, muttering, "I hate being predictable."
---
By morning, the town was gone.
In its place was open grassland—rolling, endless. The inn, the streets, everything had dissolved as if it had never existed. Jorah stood in stunned silence, clutching his breakfast plate, which now contained only air.
"Okay," he said flatly. "I don't care what dinsion this is—breakfast should never erase itself."
Kael ignored him. He was staring at the horizon. In the far distance, a fissure had appeared in the sky—a thin crack running through the clouds, glowing faintly gold.
Eira followed his gaze. "That wasn't there last night."
"No," Kael said. "It's new. Or old. Hard to tell."
"What do we do?"
Kael tightened his grip on the Blade. "We go see it. Before it sees us."
---
They reached the fissure by dusk.
It wasn't in the sky after all—it was in it. A tear in the fabric of the world, stretching miles high, humming with power. The closer they got, the colder the air beca. Ti shimred around it like heat haze.
Kael stopped at the edge of the ravine leading up to it. The ground trembled beneath his boots.
Jorah's voice dropped. "That's not just a crack, is it?"
Kael shook his head. "No. It's a door."
Eira frowned. "To where?"
Kael's smile was humorless. "That's what I intend to find out."
The wind howled, carrying whispers—half-ford, fragnted voices from every tiline he'd ever touched. Betrayals. Battles. Nas. Laughter.
The world that rembered was calling to him.
And Kael Vorrion, as always, couldn't resist answering.
He stepped forward, the Chrono Blade humming for the first ti in days. The air split around him, and the crack widened with a sound like a clock breaking.
Behind him, Eira shouted his na.
But Kael didn't stop.
He grinned, eyes bright with that familiar, dangerous joy.
"Round two," he whispered.
Then he walked into the light.
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