The archive spire didn't collapse.
It unraveled.
Stone softened into light, shelves of history peeling apart like wet parchnt. Nas bled from pages and drifted upward, letters loosening into dust. The city beyond wavered—two versions shuddering out of alignnt—until one finally won and the other fell away with a sound like a sigh.
When it was over, the spire stood as a husk: walls intact, aning gone.
Liora was on her knees.
Her hands were clasped so tightly her knuckles had gone white, eyes fixed on the empty space where the records had been. She looked small now—smaller than Kael rembered. Not the composed archivist who'd smiled through his funeral rites, not the woman who'd sealed his na into an official lie.
Just a person kneeling in the aftermath of truth.
Eira stood a pace behind Kael, tension wound tight through her shoulders. Jorah hovered near the doorway, weapon lowered but ready, gaze flicking between the trembling woman and the cracks spidering across the floor.
Kael felt the fracture humming through him, a low vibration under his skin. Not rage. Not triumph.
Completion.
Liora whispered, "I only… rewrote what they told to."
Kael crouched so they were eye level. "You rewrote ."
Her breath hitched. "You were already dead."
"No," he said gently. "I was dying. There's a difference."
The silence pressed in, thick with the weight of it. Liora's eyes shone with tears, but Kael found he didn't care whether they were genuine. He hadn't co for remorse.
He'd co for release.
"Your records anchored the lie," he continued. "That lie kept the world stable while it erased . Now it can't hold."
The fracture pulsed once—sharp, decisive.
Liora gasped as light lanced through the floor, wrapping her wrists like spectral chains. Not binding flesh, but mory. The world itself marking her.
Eira stiffened. "Kael—"
"It's not a punishnt," he said without turning. "It's a correction."
Liora cried out as the light flared, then settled into her skin like ink soaking into paper. Symbols etched themselves along her forearms—sigils of record and recall.
She slumped forward, sobbing.
"What did you do?" Jorah asked quietly.
Kael stood. "She'll rember everything. Every version. Every truth she buried."
"And?"
"And she'll never be able to lie in ink again."
The fracture eased, satisfied—for now.
They left her there, not because Kael was cruel, but because the world was done with her. The city stabilized as they crossed its threshold, sound returning in cautious waves: footsteps, voices, the distant call of a vendor.
Eira exhaled slowly once they were beyond the spire. "That could've gone differently."
"It didn't," Kael replied.
Jorah studied him. "You okay?"
Kael nodded. "Ask again after the sixth."
They traveled by dusk, following the pull Kael felt in his chest—a compass made of regret and unfinished business. It led them to a place the maps no longer agreed on: a ruin half-swallowed by marshland, where stone ribs jutted from the earth like the bones of sothing ancient.
"Council Outpost," Jorah muttered. "Or what used to be one."
Eira's gaze swept the broken walls. "Serik."
Kael felt the fracture spike. "And Sera. Their signatures overlap here."
Jorah whistled. "Two for the price of one. The world's feeling generous."
They entered as night fell, the moon painting the ruins in pale silver. Torches flickered inside—real light, not echo. Voices murmured, tense and hurried.
Serik's voice was unmistakable—asured, precise, even now. "We don't have much ti. The distortions are spreading."
Sera replied, sharp and urgent. "Then we move the assets and disappear."
Kael stepped into the firelight.
"You already tried that," he said.
Serik's composure shattered instantly. His eyes widened, mouth opening in disbelief. Sera spun, hand going to the knife at her thigh.
"Impossible," Serik breathed.
Kael smiled faintly. "That's been said."
The ruins reacted violently. Stones groaned. The air thickened, vibrating with temporal pressure. Sera lunged—
—and froze mid-step as the world seized her.
Serik backed away, palms raised. "Listen. If you're here, it ans the weave is unstable. Killing us will only make it worse."
"I'm not here to kill you," Kael replied.
Sera snarled. "Liar."
He t her gaze. "You spread the lie that made my death acceptable. I won't beco one to undo it."
Eira moved to Kael's side. Not touching. Just present.
"Tell them," she said to Sera. "Tell the truth you buried."
Sera's jaw clenched. "You betrayed the Council."
Kael tilted his head. "I questioned it."
"That was enough."
The fracture flared. The ruin shook.
Serik sagged, horror dawning. "We didn't think they'd actually kill you."
Kael's voice softened. "But you made sure they could."
He lifted the Chrono Blade—not to strike, but to draw. Light spilled from its edge, sketching the mont into the air: guards diverted, exits sealed, whispers spreading like smoke.
The truth, undeniable.
Sera scread as the illusion wrapped around her, forcing her to watch. Serik fell to his knees.
"Stop," Serik pleaded. "Please."
Kael lowered the blade. The light faded.
"Your influence ends tonight," he said. "The Council will see what you hid."
"And us?" Sera spat.
"You live," Kael answered. "Knowing the world rembers you now."
The fracture released them both. The ruin steadied, cracks sealing.
Jorah exhaled. "You're collecting confessions like trophies."
Kael shook his head. "No. I'm dismantling a lie."
They left before dawn, the marsh swallowing the ruins behind them. As they walked, Eira finally spoke.
"You're changing."
Kael glanced at her. "Am I?"
"Yes," she said quietly. "You're not trying to win anymore."
He considered that. "I'm trying to finish."
They camped beneath a broken aqueduct, stars flickering uncertainly overhead. The world felt… thinner now, as if stretched too tight.
Jorah poked at the fire. "That's three."
Kael nodded. "Vessra's next."
"And Kieran," Eira said.
The na settled heavily between them.
Kael stared into the flas. "He's last."
"Why?" Jorah asked.
"Because he deserves to see the truth when there's nowhere left to run."
The fire popped. The fracture humd, restless.
Eira shifted closer to Kael, voice low. "You don't have to carry this alone."
He didn't look at her. "I know."
But when she reached out—just barely brushing his sleeve—he didn't pull away.
Above them, far beyond the stars, sothing ancient stirred.
The Source felt the corrections stacking, felt the weave tightening around a man who refused to be erased.
And it waited.
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