603: Arena XLII 603: Arena XLII The Pact hit the Unwritten like a tidal truth crashing down on a sea of lies.
Nareth moved with impossible rhythm, her every footfall a stanza, every breath a ter.
As she sang, the world responded—soil hardened beneath her companions, ti bent around her notes, shielding them from being unraveled.
Her voice tore one Unwritten apart, then looped its fragnts into a refrain, using its own echo as a weapon.
Thail, astride his extinct beast, hurled his runes with thodical wrath.
Each was a mory of a promise broken and then kept—remade stronger than before.
When they struck, the Unwritten around them shuddered, unable to hold their unstable forms.
They fell into the pasts they never had, screaming in confusion as paradoxes devoured them.
To Aiden’s left, a warrior of light and bone—Kira, the Forgotten Fla—descended in a spiral of falling cinders.
Her body bore hundreds of tattoos: each one a na the world had once lost.
When she moved, those nas whispered their gratitude.
Her blade wasn’t tal—it was composed of living rembrances, a mory reforged into a weapon sharp enough to cut through nonexistence.
“Aiden!” she called.
“Where’s the heart of it?” He pointed.
The Amalgam lood at the Garden’s center now, its throne dragged into the inner sanctum.
Around it, reality bent and sagged.
Pages from the Garden’s core flared and burned, trying to rewrite themselves before being consud.
The Amalgam had not raised its hand again—not yet.
It was waiting.
“I think it’s reading us,” Elowen breathed, sweat beading her brow.
“Trying to find the ending.” Aiden’s jaw tightened.
“Then we’ll show it we’re not finished.” With the Pact at his back, he moved toward the center.
Every step they took cost sothing.
One warrior was lost to a loop of their own death, drawn into a vortex of unchosen regrets.
Another beca a statue of ash, burned by the friction of being forced back into reality.
Still, they pushed forward.
Together.
The Unwritten wailed.
So broke off from the Amalgam, trying to swarm, to suffocate, to consu.
But the Pact was not just warriors.
They were authors.
Scars.
Possibilities rewritten into defiance.
Elowen raised her lantern again.
This ti, she didn’t call.
She released.
From it spilled the Archivory of What Could Have Been—a cascading array of glimring thoughtforms, each one a stillborn idea, given temporary breath.
These were not warriors—they were questions.
What if the tyrant had beco a savior?
What if the child had grown into the storm?
The Unwritten faltered before them.
Not because they were outmatched.
But because they were seen.
They howled in recognition.
And hesitation.
In that pause, Aiden surged forward.
He leapt from the upper rampart, landing hard near the throne, Sword of Becoming blazing like a new law written in the margins of an old, dying script.
The Amalgam turned toward him.
Not physically.
Conceptually.
Reality distorted as its will coalesced.
A field of unreality ford around it, devouring all assumptions, all logic, all futures.
The chain trailing from the throne began to rise—floating like a serpent, coiling around unseen boundaries.
Each link was still a na.
And now they began to speak.
Millions of voices, layered and overlapping.
So scread.
So whispered.
But so simply asked why.
Aiden’s hands trembled.
It wasn’t the sword that felt heavy.
It was the burden of those stories.
Unlived.
Unchosen.
Unwritten.
He lowered the blade for one trembling mont.
Then Elowen was there.
Her hand on his shoulder.
Her voice steady.
“You are not their killer.” He turned to her.
“I am their gate.” She nodded once, stepped back, and raised the lantern.
This ti, instead of light, she released a page.
Blank.
Untouched.
Unclaid.
The Amalgam scread.
Because it feared that emptiness.
A blank page was choice.
It was freedom.
It was a future.
Aiden stepped forward, blade raised again.
“I offer you one ending.” The Amalgam surged forward, the chain whipping toward him like a tongue of entropy.
And he struck.
Not the creature.
Not the throne.
But the blank page.
The Sword of Becoming did not cut—it wrote.
One sentence.
“Even the Unwritten can begin again.” The sentence burned into the page.
And the page burned into the world.
The chain shattered—nas unhooking from one another, no longer bound to failure, no longer tethered to nothingness.
The Amalgam scread one final ti—and the sound was release.
It folded inward.
Uncoiled.
Unspooled.
Not into death.
But into possibility.
Fragnts of it rained down like ash—each spark finding a place in the Garden.
Roots reached up to receive them.
Soil parted to enfold them.
Trees whispered in languages yet to co.
And the Garden breathed once more.
Aiden fell to one knee.
The Pact surrounded him.
The sky above, still cracked, no longer bled.
Instead, it pulsed softly—like it, too, was breathing again.
And the throne?
Empty still.
But now… waiting.
For soone to choose to sit.
To lead not by force… …but by story.
Elowen knelt beside him, her eyes glistening.
“We held.” He nodded.
“No,” he said softly.
“We rembered.” The throne waited.
No longer dragging a chain of denial, no longer radiating the grief of extinguished stories—it sat quiet at the heart of the Garden.
The space around it was still raw, the air thick with the scent of ink and possibility.
Not ash.
Not death.
Rebirth.
Aiden stood slowly, the Sword of Becoming dim now, its fury spent.
Around him, the mbers of the Blank Sky Pact moved like survivors of a flood—checking wounds, gathering fragnts, retrieving nas from the battlefield before they could be forgotten again.
The Garden was quiet.
But not silent.
Its silence had changed.
Before, it had been the hush of dread.
Now, it was the hush after a story is told, when all wait to hear what cos next.
Elowen approached the throne, her cloak of pages trailing half-written stanzas across the mory-soaked soil.
She didn’t speak.
She didn’t need to.
The throne was not made of tal or wood.
It had no jewels.
It wasn’t even solid—it shimred, part stone, part idea, carved from narrative bedrock and shaped by consensus.
The Throne of the Possible.
It had once been the anchor for the Amalgam’s pain.
Now, it was empty.
Not abandoned.
But available.
Aiden moved toward it, his breath shallow.
Each step felt heavier than the last—not because of exhaustion, but because of the weight of what he carried.
He had rewritten the world.
He had fought erasure.
He had stood against the tide of discarded potential and nad it worthy.
But the throne was not a reward.
It was an invitation.
And an obligation.
“Don’t,” ca a voice.
It was gentle.
Not warning.
Pleading.
He turned.
Reviews
All reviews (0)