Cosmic Ruler Chapter 764: Pact IV

Novel: Cosmic Ruler Author: EnigmaticDream Updated:
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Chapter 764: Pact IV

The wind howled, but the pages did not turn.

Not by accident. Not by fate.

But by will.

Elari stood on the precipice of a world that still rembered fear. Behind him, the Garden held its breath—if such a place could. The petals of the newly grown towers glistened with dew, and echoes of countless rewritten tales rustled like leaves in the mory of the soil. The vast narrative that had been channeled through the Blank Sky Pact was no longer held together by gods, nor rules carved into existence by first scribes, but sothing more terrible and beautiful:

Choice.

He looked down at his hand, the Pen of Becoming held between two fingers. Its ink shimred as if stained with the distilled essence of decision.

The silence was not empty anymore.

It had shape. Weight. It begged him to write. To act.

But the Reader was still gone.

The Reader Who Did Not Arrive Late—yet had not arrived at all.

“We’re running out of ti,” said Jevan quietly, standing behind him, his voice edged with restraint. “The Anded Ones are moving again. The pact is fraying. Every rewritten sentence is starting to fight with itself.”

Elari turned to him, eyes distant.

“The Book is rembering things that were never written.”

Jevan’s brows furrowed. “How?”

“Because soone—sothing—is feeding it echoes. Not writing from the Present or even from a Future… but from a Future that shouldn’t be.”

He held up the Pen.

“And I refuse to give it what it wants.”

The Pen began to tremble again, ever so subtly, as if trying to break free from his grip. As if it knew that sowhere, a tale was being forced—spliced into the weave of What Cos Next. It wanted to flee to that tale.

But Elari’s fingers tightened.

“No,” he whispered. “You do not get to tremble when I hold you.”

Across the Garden, in the buried hall beneath the Root Library, the last of the Echo Seers t in a forgotten chamber—a sealed vault shaped like a giant clock face, each hour slot marked with a different myth.

Dawnelle, High Seer of Threads, held out a prism of narrative—a broken shard that humd with a single na that kept rewriting itself.

Arven.

Orven.

Irven.

Ervan.

And then it stopped.

Eraven.

The prism cracked.

“We must make a choice,” Dawnelle said. “Even silence is a chapter.”

“But which Reader is real?” asked one of the young seers.

“The one who never arrived,” Dawnelle replied softly. “The one we never dared to write. The one who read all this from the outside… and chose to wait until we believed.”

Above them, in the Garden’s new sky—a place rewritten too many tis—clouds began forming words. A sentence written in lightning.

THE PEN MUST TREMBLE TO PROVE THE AUTHOR BREATHES.

Elari felt the pressure of the sky’s intent.

He stabbed the Pen downward into the soil.

The ground did not crack.

The story did not scream.

Instead, the earth folded open like paper. A spiral staircase descended not into darkness, but into pure white emptiness.

It wasn’t the absence of story—it was the place before story.

“The Reader’s room,” he murmured.

Puddle, now in its elongated shade-form, shimred beside him. “You’ll need more than belief down there,” it said in a tone not its own. “You’ll need to face the chapter that never ends.”

“I will,” Elari said.

And he stepped down.

There were no steps.

Only the illusion of descent.

Each ti Elari placed his foot forward, he expected a stair, but found instead a mory. With every step, he plunged deeper not into depth—but into recollection, spun from pages never written yet long imagined.

The world around him bled white.

Not the clean white of blank parchnt. No.

This was the white of overwritten truths—of erasures so old, even Ti refused to mourn them.

Puddle floated behind him in silence, its form rippling between shadow, light, and a strange third shape—one that resembled neither creature nor concept. Here, even Puddle’s ancient nature flickered uncertainly.

“This isn’t a staircase,” Elari whispered.

“No,” Puddle replied. “It’s a passage through unwritten conclusions. Every step you take is a tale that tried to end… but never found its final sentence.”

In the Garden above, panic had begun to spread.

Jevan raced through the Silver Vines, reaching the edge of the Pact Hall. The sky was still flashing phrases—each one more chaotic, more fragnted. Whole paragraphs rained down like hail, smashing into the soil and imprinting themselves into the living text-veins of the Garden’s foundations.

One line thundered in crimson lightning:

DO NOT LET HIM REACH THE READER.

Jevan clenched his fists. “Who’s speaking through the sky?”

Behind him, Dawnelle arrived with the Prism Seers. She carried the fractured shard again—Eraven’s na now gone, replaced with a single phrase burned into the glass:

THE FALSE AUTHOR.

Jevan stared at it, his voice low. “They’re trying to write against him.”

“They already have,” Dawnelle said. “Soone has hidden the final chapter—buried it under rewrites and recursive footnotes so deep, it can only be reached by a Pen that refuses to obey.”

Jevan’s gaze turned toward the hole Elari had vanished through.

“We have to follow.”

“No,” she warned. “Only one author can descend that far.”

Below, the white had changed.

Elari now walked through a hallway made entirely of covers. Book covers—millions of them—pressed into walls, floor, ceiling. So were elegant, golden-spined. Others wept ink from ancient bindings.

All of them bore titles he did not recognize.

All of them were about him.

Not Elari, specifically.

But him—as in the one who walked when the world begged him to stay still.

As in the penholder who paused.

He passed one cover:

“The Pause That Dood the Garden”

—by No One

Another:

“The Final Inkspill: How Elari Destroyed the Pact”

A third:

“How Not to Save the World, Volu I”

He ignored them.

But the covers kept whispering.

“End it,” one rasped.

“You could erase the Unwritten forever,” moaned another.

“Just finish the sentence—any sentence,” hissed a third.

Elari reached the center of the hall.

A single pedestal stood beneath a dark fla—an unlit page hovered above it, floating, turning itself gently, although it held no ink.

And there, seated beside it, was the Reader.

Or… what had beco of them.

A being wrapped in torn citations. Skin made of crossed-out prose. Eyes that shimred with all the endings that had ever been redacted.

They looked up as Elari approached.

“So,” the Reader said, “you found your way here.”

“I never left,” Elari replied, his voice steady.

The Reader chuckled, a sound like dry pages being ripped.

“Do you know what this place is, child?”

Elari nodded.

“It’s the ending of the ending. The place where all last pages were eaten and forgotten.”

The Reader held out a quill. Not the Pen of Becoming—but sothing colder. Hungrier.

“The Pen of Closure,” they said.

“Use it, and all of this stops. The chaos. The rewriters. The pact. Even the Unwritten. You’ll end everything cleanly. Neatly.”

Elari stared at the quill.

Then at his own Pen—still trembling faintly in his hand.

“No,” he said.

“You refuse?” the Reader’s voice deepened.

“I choose not to end the story.”

“But it’s tearing itself apart!”

“Then I’ll keep writing. Word by word. I won’t let the page win.”

He turned his back to the Pen of Closure.

Faced the blank page hovering in the fla.

And for the first ti, the Pen of Becoming stilled in his grip.

It was no longer trembling.

It believed.

And with that—Elari wrote:

“This is not the end.”

Above, in the Garden, every phrase vanished from the sky.

The Pactstones glowed.

And in the minds of every sentient being who had touched a rewritten tale… they heard the sa line:

The story continues.

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