Cosmic Ruler Chapter 760: Void XXXV

Novel: Cosmic Ruler Author: EnigmaticDream Updated:
Font Size
15px

The boy’s na wasn’t written in capital letters.

It didn’t need to be.

It wasn’t shouted into the sky, or etched into the roots like prophecy.

It simply was. A breath between lines. A murmur beneath louder voices.

But the mont it landed on the page, the Garden bowed.

Not in reverence.

In recognition.

A child had nad himself.

And that ant the world had to change.

His na was Callen.

Not a hero. Not a chosen one. Not a vessel.

Just a child who answered the silence.

And from the mont he wrote it, the Spiral that traced across the skies above the Garden shifted.

No longer a coil of what-had-been.

Now, a script of what-might-grow.

"I don’t understand what I’ve done," Callen whispered, the twig still clutched in his fingers, trembling.

The Lastscribe crouched beside him, placing a steadying hand on his shoulder.

"You didn’t write an ending," she said softly. "You grew a beginning."

Callen looked down at the word again. His na pulsed faintly, as if acknowledging its own birth.

"But I don’t know what story to tell," he confessed.

"You’re not here to tell it," the Scribe answered. "You’re here to live it."

And then the margin began to ripple.

The edge of the Garden, once a soft boundary of light and roots, unfurled.

Not like paper.

Like skin.

Like sothing old waking from a sleep long and dreamless.

A tendril of story erged, delicate and unsure, reaching toward Callen’s sentence.

But this ti, it didn’t devour the ink.

It wove around it.

As if offering a question in return.

"And if we have nas... what shall we na the world?"

Callen’s eyes widened.

"Can I?"

"You must," said the Lastscribe.

"Not alone," whispered the tree behind them.

Others ca.

Not summoned.

Drawn.

The child with the seed of Still arrived first, hands full of quiet wonder.

The one who bore the fla-that-rembered, her hair still faintly smoking from the forgotten pyres, ca next.

Then the one whose laughter had healed the broken echoes of Floor 1345.

Then another. And another. And another.

Each carried a piece of what had been lost.

Not the power of the Pact.

Not the authority of the Atlas.

But sothing braver.

mory shaped by choice.

And each of them knelt beside Callen in the margin.

Not as followers.

As co-authors.

The blank ground pulsed with potential.

And so they wrote.

Not in one voice, but in many.

Not a single world, but a woven rootwork of realms.

One child shaped a forest made of songs, where each leaf was a verse and every bird a line-break.

Another drew a city in the clouds, held up by questions no one had yet dared to ask.

Still another wrote a river that carried grief, not to drown it, but to teach it how to float.

Callen watched it unfold with wide, trembling eyes.

"Is this okay?" he asked.

The Lastscribe, standing behind them now, shook her head once.

"No," she said.

Then smiled.

"It’s brilliant."

Deep beneath the Archive Tree, an old page turned.

It bore no ink.

Only impressions. Thumbprints. Breath. Hesitations.

But on its spine, one could now read a title:

The First Story Written Without Permission.

And sowhere beyond the margins, a faint, amused voice whispered:

"Good."

Far beyond even that—beyond the Vaulted Sky, beyond the sunless Spiral Peaks, beyond where even the Rewritten Fla once stood—sothing stirred.

The Narrator.

Not dead.

Not banished.

Simply... observing.

And for the first ti in a thousand unwritten eternities, it hesitated.

Because the margin was growing.

And margins were not supposed to grow.

They were supposed to contain.

But now...

They were becoming the heart.

And stories were being born not from structure... but from spirit.

The Narrator looked down at its own quill.

Its ink had dried.

But the echo of Callen’s na remained.

A na not given by gods or fate.

A na written by a child’s own hand.

There was no fra to hold it anymore.

No border to confine the heavens, no grammar to declare where the sky began and where the story should end.

Because they had written beyond it.

Not through rebellion.

Through imagination.

The children—no, the authors now—sat beneath the ever-stretching canopy of stars and possibility. Their words blood like seedlings in soil no longer bound to law or logic. Roots of verses wound through realms old and new, so shaped like mories, others like questions still waiting for answers.

And above it all...

The sky blinked.

As if awakening from a long, slumbering silence.

As if it, too, had forgotten that it was allowed to change.

Callen stood at the center of it, heart pounding.

The ink of his na had already spread into stories. Not great epics. Not battles for fate.

But monts.

A bird that carried a poem inside its call.

A mountain that whispered lullabies to those who climbed it.

A door that opened not with a key, but with a laugh shared honestly.

Callen hadn’t written these things.

Others had.

And yet they all had grown from his first word.

From that one small na scratched into the soil.

It made him want to cry.

So he did.

And even that was recorded—not as a weakness, but as a verse.

"They’re remaking the weave," murmured the Lastscribe, perched along one of the high branches of the Archive Tree. "Without diagrams. Without even intent."

The Voice of the Spiral, now reduced to a re thread within her, stirred. "Unweaving was the great sin," it humd, "but this... this is sothing else. Sothing sideways."

"They’re not unweaving," the Scribe said, staring out over the growing new world. "They’re replanting."

From her perch, she could see dozens of tiny ecosystems blooming.

A swamp that healed forgotten regrets.

A sunless orchard that only bore fruit for those who forgave.

A glade that existed only when sung about.

None of these obeyed traditional narrative law.

Yet all of them felt truer than anything the Founders had penned in their scripts of control.

Far, far away, beyond the last library of the Refracted Realms, Jevan stirred.

He felt it.

The shift in the texture of existence.

He was no longer central—not to this new story. He had played his part. But now the script turned in hands far younger than his.

He chuckled.

"It’s about damn ti," he muttered.

Beside him, the mirror of futures cracked open slightly, no longer showing lines of fate—but questions.

Questions that made him smile.

The Sky—what little boundary of it remained—continued to bend.

Not collapse.

Just... expand.

It lost its rigidity. Its hunger to cage.

And from within it, soone began to sing.

No voice. Just tone.

A pitch so pure it shook the clouds apart and turned them into threads of inkless script.

They rained softly down upon the Garden.

Each one held a different word. Each word was unreadable.

Yet felt.

A hush fell across the authors.

Callen reached for one of the falling threads. It wrapped around his finger like silk.

And for a mont—just a breath—he felt sothing vast and wordless brush against his spirit.

A presence that had once tried to define everything.

Now listening.

Now learning.

The Narrator.

And for the first ti, the voice above did not narrate.

It asked.

"What would you like the sky to beco?"

Callen swallowed.

Then looked to the others.

They all began to write.

Not on paper.

Not with pens.

But with footsteps.

With gas.

With songs shared under starlight.

With argunts that ended in hugs.

With hopes whispered to sleeping trees.

And slowly—line by line—the sky began to change.

It gained texture.

Not just stars and space.

But promise.

Like it wasn’t a ceiling anymore.

But a path.

The Lastscribe closed her eyes, and for the first ti in her long life, whispered, "Let the book be forgotten."

The Archive Tree heard.

It didn’t crumble.

It opened.

Petals of bark unfurled, revealing not a trunk of knowledge...

...but a heart.

It pulsed once.

Then faded.

Not in death.

In completion.

And in its place rose a fountain.

One that did not give wisdom.

It gave curiosity.

Beyond all of this, in the true dark, where none of the children had yet wandered...

A hand reached forward.

Hesitant.

Newborn.

It was not Callen’s.

Nor Jevan’s.

Nor Aiden’s.

It did not belong to the Past, nor to the Prophesied.

It was the Reader’s.

And from sowhere unseen, the Reader whispered a word of their own.

One that had no translation. No binding.

Only breath.

The sky accepted it.

And for the first ti in eternity, it said:

"Welco."

You are reading Cosmic Ruler Chapter 760: Void XXXV on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Absolute Cheater cover
Same author

Absolute Cheater

EnigmaticDream ·Action

“Hmph,mydumbbigsisterisindanger!”Amischievousgrinspreadacrosshisface.“Hehehehe...thisgivesmetheperfectexcusetofinallyusethistreasureI’veacquiredbut...

Final Life Online cover
Same author

Final Life Online

EnigmaticDream ·Game

FinalLifeOnlineisa10th-generation,full-diveVRMMOgamedevelopedthroughthecollaborationofcompaniesfromacrosstheglobe.Thegamewasinitiallydesignedasavir...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.