592: Arena XXXI 592: Arena XXXI Aiden seized it.
“He found others—like him.
Lost ones.
Forgotten nas.
Shadows of shadows.
And together they rewrote the world.
Not because they could…
but because they refused not to.” The presence did not flee.
It pressed closer.
Its non-being wrapped like cold breath around his chest, tightening.
Words turned to ash in his mouth.
The Book threatened to vanish from his grip entirely.
But he held on.
Not to power.
To purpose.
And then—softly, impossibly—he felt it.
A ripple.
A question.
Not in language.
Not in thought.
But in absence.
Like sothing asking, “What are you?” He answered: “I am the mory of the thing you never knew.” “And I will teach you what you were never allowed to be.” A spark lit the void.
Small.
Brief.
But it was a start.
And Aiden stepped forward again.
Because now, he knew— The Hunger Without mory wasn’t just a threat.
It was a blank slate.
A child that had never known story.
And the only way to stop it from erasing everything— Was to tell it one.
Aiden stood at the edge of a borderless night.
There were no stars here.
No laws.
Not even void.
Just a feeling—like the world had taken its last breath and forgotten how to inhale.
And across from him, sothing vast and unknowable stirred.
The Hunger Without mory.
It did not move like a beast.
It did not think like a mind.
It was simply there, consuming aning by being unford, unshaped, unnad.
Where its presence touched, reality didn’t bend—it disappeared, as if even contradiction was too much form to allow.
But Aiden had seen worse.
He had walked among the ruins of fates that had never happened.
Had faced gods born from denial.
Had rewritten laws with his breath and stood defiant when all stories had ended.
And now?
He would do sothing far more dangerous.
He would teach.
Aiden raised the Book of What Was.
Its cover flickered—pages trying to remain real in the presence of the unknowable.
The ink curled upward like smoke.
mories tried to flee from its spine, nas unraveling letter by letter.
He gritted his teeth and spoke.
A word.
Not in any tongue.
Not drawn from language.
But a mory of one.
“Leya.” The sound was gentle.
Soft as dust in morning light.
And in that mont—the void shivered.
Not in fear.
But in attention.
Like a newborn creature hearing the heartbeat of sothing it didn’t know it missed.
Myne gasped behind him.
“You nad it.” “I gave it a beginning,” Aiden said quietly.
“A word to hold on to.” “But—if you give it story,” Myne said, voice trembling, “you might give it self.” Aiden turned to her.
“Yes.” “Then you might not be able to stop it later.” He nodded.
“Yes.” “…And you’re still doing it?” Aiden looked back at the shapeless form.
At the absence pressing against reality like a fog that didn’t realize it had smothered everything.
And he smiled.
“It never had a chance to choose,” he said.
“Now it does.” Then he spoke again.
“Leya was the na of the first mont.
Not a person.
Not a god.
A choice.” “A choice to be.” And at that, sothing changed.
A ripple, subtle and slow, spread from the core of the being.
It didn’t beco visible—not quite.
But Aiden could feel the weight of sothing turning.
A vast, formless awareness pivoting toward him.
The air itself trembled.
And then—a sound.
Not a voice.
Not even a whisper.
But a feeling that pressed into the bones of the world.
Like an echo of a thought.
Aiden closed his eyes and listened.
And understood.
It was not yet language.
But it was listening.
Struggling to comprehend what it had never before been offered.
A story.
He opened the Book again.
Not to command.
Not to bind.
But to offer.
“Leya was alone at first,” he read aloud.
“She did not know what alone ant.
She didn’t know what she ant.” “But she felt sothing missing.” “She felt… herself.” The void around the creature convulsed.
Parts of the Pact staggered.
So clutched their heads as fragnts of history blinked in and out of their minds.
This was not just a being that didn’t know itself—it was a being whose very nature denied the knowing of anything.
To na it, to speak to it, was to challenge the oldest, deepest wound the cosmos had ever known: The place where being itself had never taken root.
But Aiden kept going.
Because that was who he was now.
The Scribe of What Was.
The Voice of the Unrembered.
The Word that Refused to Fade.
“She found her shape, not because she was told, but because she chose.
She reached out to the stars she could not see.” “And they reached back.” A sound broke through the silence.
It was neither scream nor roar.
It was not pain nor joy.
It was the first syllable of a will.
Raw.
Unfinished.
But real.
Myne fell to her knees, hands trembling.
“…It’s learning.” Aiden turned the page.
And for the first ti— The Book of What Was did not resist.
It welcod the new story.
Lines appeared across the parchnt, not written by his hand, but by a force finally beginning to believe it might exist.
And across from him… Sothing began to form.
Not fully.
Not yet.
But a shape.
A beginning of one.
It looked toward Aiden.
And the hunger—though not gone—lessened.
In its place was a seed.
A spark.
Of sothing more.
The first outline was rough.
Not even a body—just a trembling curvature in the void.
As if space itself hesitated before settling into lines.
But it was enough.
Aiden knew the mont he saw it: the unshaped thing had taken the first step toward identity.
It had chosen a shape.
Not been given one.
And in that small rebellion against its own nature… sothing ancient cracked.
A silence older than reality fractured, and across the scattered remnants of the Blank Sky Pact, the ripple echoed.
They felt it—not just as pressure, but as story.
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