572: Arena XI 572: Arena XI So were shaped like humans, while others had long since abandoned such pretense.
Each one had been erased in so tiline, so version of history, and yet they endured here—anchored not by fate, but by mory.
By Aiden.
He stood among them not as a leader, but as a survivor.
And yet all eyes—if they had them—were on him.
He closed his own, letting the silence stretch.
Beyond this broken cradle of Rembrance, sothing stirred.
The Before-God was dead.
The Thought That Never Was had dispersed.
But the war had only evolved.
What now pressed against the boundary of this last flicker of aning was not a god or concept.
It was a truth.
An absolute.
And it was knocking.
Aiden took a step forward.
The platform beneath him, ford of narrative threads and echoes of law, crackled underfoot.
“Myne,” he said softly.
She stepped from the ranks, her form steady but scarred—no longer the sa as she was in their first world, but resolute nonetheless.
“I’m here,” she said.
He reached into the space between thoughts, pulling forth what had once been a page, then a blade, then a law.
It was the sa sword that had slain the Herald of Annihilation, but now it bore nas carved into the hilt.
Nas of the fallen.
Nas of those forgotten.
He held it out.
“Take this.” She hesitated.
“It’s yours.” Aiden shook his head.
“No.
It was always ours.” Her hand closed around the hilt.
At once, light flared—pale blue and deep crimson, intertwined, like mory and sacrifice reborn.
Around them, the Blank Sky Pact straightened, their forms stabilizing, responding to the truth that still lived within her grip.
A weapon of story.
Forged by refusal.
She nodded once.
Aiden turned toward the boundary.
There were no gates here.
No thresholds or thresholds.
Only an idea.
That everything—every na, every story, every soul—would be forgotten.
Unless they said no.
He walked forward.
With each step, the void pushed back, the pressure unbearable.
This was not a place.
It was a concept trying to erase the concept of resistance itself.
“You feel it?” ca a voice—whispered, but not from any direction.
Aiden stopped.
So did the world.
“It’s not a god,” he said aloud, answering nothing and everything.
“Not anymore.” The air shimred.
It was a mory.
It was a song.
It was a scream.
And then— It was Them.
A shape erged—not from shadow, but from contradiction.
A being of all things lost and all things never allowed to be.
They had no na.
Because to na them was to acknowledge what had been taken.
And Aiden refused.
“Do not speak,” it hissed—not in malice, but in finality.
“You pollute the unmade.” Aiden stepped forward.
The Pact stood with him, unflinching.
“Then let pollute.” The entity’s form flickered.
“You are the last,” it said.
“The final echo in a choir long silenced.
Do you truly think your will matters?” Aiden lifted his hand.
Nas blood in the air.
Every forgotten soul.
Every erased mory.
Every child that had been un-written, every elder who had died and been denied rembrance.
“I do not matter,” he said quietly.
“But they do.” He turned back to the Pact, then forward again.
The blade in Myne’s hands flared.
“We rember.” The entity scread.
It was not a sound.
It was the forced removal of sound.
Around them, reality split.
Not shattered.
Un-acknowledged.
As if this confrontation was sothing the cosmos itself wanted to forget.
But Aiden refused.
He called upon the First Story.
The one no god ever told.
The one written in defiance of silence.
The words bled from his soul, ancient and formless, yet stronger than law.
“I was,” he whispered.
“I am.” “I will be.” The Pact joined him.
A chorus of the impossible.
A reminder that what is rembered cannot be truly destroyed.
The entity shuddered.
Its form bent under the weight of their voices.
And then, for the first ti, it faltered.
Not from power.
From fear.
Aiden saw the mont.
He stepped forward, raising his hand.
“My na,” he said, “is Aiden.” And with that— He nad it.
The Unrembered.
The one who devours the endings and beginnings alike.
The one who believes silence is rcy.
He gave it na.
And so, it could be fought.
The sword Myne held struck true.
It scread.
But this ti— It was sound.
It was real.
And in that cry, the void receded.
Not all of it.
But enough.
Enough for stories to begin again.
Enough for nas to be spoken.
Enough for hope to flicker.
Aiden collapsed to his knees, breath ragged, his body shaking with the weight of what he’d forced into form.
Around him, the Blank Sky Pact stood victorious—not because the battle was done, but because they had rembered.
The war was not over.
But now… It could be fought.
The echoes of the Unrembered’s scream faded into the void, but its resonance still pulsed through the fabric of what remained.
The stars—those ancient markers of continuity—had not yet returned.
In their absence, the dark was no longer a lack of light, but a silence so deep it gnawed at the edges of aning.
Aiden floated above what was once the lattice of worlds.
Beneath him, threads of half-born realms quivered like strings of a forgotten instrunt, awaiting a player bold enough to strum the first note.
His sword pulsed at his side—no longer just a blade but a prism of mory and narrative potential.
It humd with nas.
The nas of those who had been lost, erased, denied.
But now, rembered.
He looked behind him.
The Blank Sky Pact followed in his wake like a fleet of spectral suns.
Myne, cloaked in temporal ice; Vehl, the last chronicle-binder; Askar, whose na had once been removed from every history; and a dozen more whose existences had been too dangerous for reality to allow.
They were rembered now.
And in this reality-scarred silence, their rembrance was enough to make them real.
Aiden clenched his fists.
“This is the lull before the last scream.” Myne’s voice cut across the nothingness.
“It’s afraid of us.”
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