Morning arrived too perfectly.
Too quietly.
Kael woke to sunlight that felt… polite. Not harsh, not soft — just there, as if the sky itself was trying not to disturb him. The grass beneath him humd faintly, warm as skin. Sowhere nearby, Jorah was snoring like an angry beast, and Eira was already awake, sharpening her dagger on a smooth, ti-polished stone.
For a mont, Kael let himself pretend everything was normal. No tilines, no paradoxes, no collapsing realities. Just a morning after too much chaos.
Then the ground shifted, the horizon flickered, and a mountain appeared that hadn't existed yesterday.
Kael groaned into his sleeve. "Of course. Can't even get one stable sunrise."
Eira didn't look up. "You felt it too?"
"Yeah," Kael muttered, sitting up. "The world's still reconfiguring. It's like watching a drunk god rebuild a puzzle without the box."
Jorah mumbled from under his blanket, "Tell the god to finish quietly. So of us need beauty sleep."
Kael threw a pebble at him. It ricocheted off Jorah's head.
"Rude!" Jorah said, glaring. "I almost died yesterday."
"You almost die every day," Kael replied dryly. "Statistically, I'm starting to think it's your hobby."
Eira suppressed a smile, though her eyes remained fixed on the distant mountain. "That wasn't here before. And the air feels different. Do you hear it?"
Kael closed his eyes, listening. The wind wasn't just air moving—it had layers. Faint whispers beneath the normal sound, a pulse buried deep within. Like the heartbeat of sothing sleeping just below the surface of the world.
"Yeah," he said softly. "It's humming."
Jorah stretched, rubbing his temples. "Please tell that's not another ancient cosmic thing waiting to eat us."
Kael stood, brushing off his coat. "No promises."
---
They set out by midday, following a trail of glass-like stones that glittered beneath their boots. The terrain felt new—alive and uncertain. Trees shimred as though rembering other shapes, and the sky occasionally glitched, switching between day and night for a single heartbeat before stabilizing again.
Jorah walked beside Kael, holding a half-eaten ration bar. "So, question. When you broke the Chrono Blade, did you… maybe… break everything else too?"
Kael glanced at him. "Define everything."
"The laws of physics, logic, basic narrative consistency—"
Kael shrugged. "Possibly. But in my defense, it was that or obliteration."
Eira walked ahead, her tone sharp but amused. "You two talk like the world is your experint."
Kael smirked. "Eira, everything is my experint."
"Then maybe stop before it explodes."
"No fun in that."
Jorah groaned. "I swear, if I die again, I'm haunting you both."
Kael grinned. "You already do."
---
By late afternoon, they reached the mountain. Up close, it wasn't stone at all—it was made of fractured mirror-like surfaces, reflecting pieces of different skies. Stars from one side of the world shimred on one face, while sunlight from another glowed on the other.
Eira touched the surface. "It's warm."
Kael placed his hand beside hers. "It's alive."
Jorah stepped back warily. "Everything here's alive. The rocks breathe, the rivers hum lullabies, and I think the tree we passed winked at ."
Kael leaned closer to the mirrored surface, and for a split second—just one—he saw sothing moving inside it. A shadow shaped like a person, but taller, less defined. It raised its hand in the sa motion he did.
Not a reflection.
A mimic.
"Okay," Kael said, backing up. "Not touching that again."
Eira frowned. "What did you see?"
"Sothing I don't want to have coffee with."
The mountain shifted slightly, a deep, resonant sound echoing through it—like a sigh, or the grinding of old ti gears. Then, without warning, cracks of light ran up its sides, forming glowing veins that pulsed in rhythm with the humming air.
Kael's heart skipped. "It's waking."
Jorah stared at him. "It? You're implying the mountain has consciousness."
"Of course it does," Kael said. "You think reality rearranges itself without supervision?"
Eira's eyes narrowed. "Then who—or what—is doing it?"
Kael hesitated. The thought had been there, quiet, since he woke up: that maybe he hadn't ended the loop. Maybe he'd just handed the reins to sothing else.
Before he could answer, the mountain spoke.
Not with words. With mory.
The air rippled around them, and for an instant, Kael was no longer standing on solid ground. He was falling again—through centuries, through versions of himself, through choices he'd made and ones he hadn't.
He saw Eira's face the day he vanished.
Jorah's broken laugh when he thought Kael was gone.
The mirror shattering.
Horizon's fading smile.
Then everything stopped.
He stood in a void of gold light.
And in front of him—a silhouette.
Tall. Featureless. Yet familiar.
"Kael Vorrion," it said, voice like echoing bells. "You broke my pattern."
Kael frowned. "Who the hell are you?"
"The first clock," it replied. "The architect of ti. The silence you filled with laughter."
Kael blinked. "Oh, great. A cosmic entity with a flair for poetry."
"You rewrote endings," it continued, unbothered. "Now the script must rewrite you."
Kael crossed his arms. "Yeah, I've been threatened by worse taphors."
The entity tilted its head. "Do you understand what you've done?"
"Roughly? I ended infinity, freed existence from recursion, and probably gave taphysics a headache."
It was silent for a long mont, then said, "You made ti choose. And now, it has chosen you."
Kael's smirk faltered. "That… doesn't sound comforting."
"Nor should it."
The light flared—and then vanished. Kael gasped and stumbled back into reality, collapsing to his knees in front of Eira and Jorah.
"Kael!" Eira knelt beside him. "What happened?"
He coughed once, steadying himself. "t the clock."
Jorah blinked. "You an a clock?"
"No," Kael rasped, standing slowly. "The clock."
Eira's face hardened. "And what did it say?"
Kael stared at the mirrored mountain, where the light had now cald to a steady glow. "That ti's not done with . Or with us."
Jorah groaned. "Fantastic. Another cosmic errand."
Kael gave him a crooked smile. "Cheer up. At least this ti, we're starting from the end."
Eira shook her head but smiled despite herself. "You're impossible."
Kael grinned wider, looking out over the new, impossible world. "Yeah. But apparently, so is the universe."
---
The wind rose, carrying faint laughter — not haunting, but hopeful. The mountain pulsed once, softly, and in its mirrored surface, the trio's reflections stood side by side — not distorted, not fractured.
Whole.
For now.
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