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Artor wasn't sure what he was expecting from the stranger that had dropped into his Trial, though stranger was perhaps a strong word for it. He'd t He-Who-Guards before. The problem was that the version he'd t had always been an empty shell—a re receptacle for the She-Who-Whispers. He'd always thought the tale was a tragic one, but if Guard was to be believed, then soone in the far future had managed to fix it.

Maybe that ant there was still hope for him, after all.

He sighed, leaning back on the bench and staring up at Isthanok's sky. Sowhere along the way, the sight had beco sothing comforting to him.

"What yer tellin' —it's a lot to take in," Artor said. He reached out with a hand, staring at the scars he'd accumulated since the Trials began. Technically, the loops should have protected him, but one of the Trialgoers...

He winced at the mory, shuddering. It felt like it was real, for a mont. Like his core was being carved open once again, his connection to the Interface dissected and analyzed. Sohow, that process left an ugly hole torn open in the carapace of his right hand.

"It is hard to forget such trauma," Guard said, as if reading his mind. Artor glanced sharply at him, and he shrugged. "I apologize. I do not read your mind, as I said. I am simply... familiar with it."

"Aye. Suppose you didn't have it easy either." Artor forced himself to relax, staring back up at Whisper's cathedral. Supposedly, the skill circuit Guard had drawn in the ground would keep them safe for her eavesdropping. He didn't care enough to check. "I heard a little about what she did."

"I am fortunate that many of my mories of that ti are gone," Guard said. "But the ones I do recall are unpleasant."

"Ain't gonna argue that." Artor snorted. "But as I said, I ain't gonna help you, either. Yer plan's suicide."

"And this is not?"

"You ain't gonna get on semantics." Artor's mandibles twitched in spite of himself. "I've been fighting for a long ti, Guard. And my family ain't gonna be alive even if I follow you into the future. I ain't gettin' nothin' outta this, and I'm tired of fightin'."

"I do not bla you." Guard was silent for a mont. Artor waited for him to argue, to try to recruit him once more. He nearly fell out of the bench when the automaton followed up with: "Perhaps a vacation, then?"

"A what?" Artor asked. "Are ya outta yer mind, machine? The continent's crawlin' with Hestia's Trialgoers!"

"And I know how to avoid them." Guard shrugged. "In addition, we do not have to stay on this continent. I am aware you lack long-distance travel skills, but I am quite capable of carrying you with ."

"You ain't gonna convince to help with a vacation," Artor said, narrowing his eyes. Guard only smiled.

"As much as I may hope you will change your mind, I do not require it," Guard said. "And I do not do this for you alone."

Gently, Guard reached out, and a smaller, younger silverwisp stepped out of thin air—cloaked by so sort of invisibility skill, Artor realized, startled. He hadn't even sensed the use of Firmant. "This is my son," Guard said. "His na is Harmony. I have much ti to make up for, and ti is only stable while I remain close to you. Will you help ?"

Artor stared. "...I still ain't helpin' you fight," he muttered. "But fine. We can go on this... vacation."

He wondered if Guard knew, sohow, that he'd lost his own son before the Integration had even begun. If Guard sohow knew Artor had resigned himself to failure even before the Trial had truly started.

No, he decided. He knew liars. Guard was many things, but even in the short period of ti they'd known one another, Artor was pretty sure he wasn't a liar.

And yet...

It had been so long since he'd had anyone to protect. He felt an old instinct surge to the forefront and shook his head, doing his best to suppress it. He couldn't let himself be hurt again. He couldn't let himself fail again.

He just... couldn't.

Kauldri didn't know what she was doing at the best of tis, and Hestia's Trial was certainly not the "best of tis", as far as she was concerned. She felt like she'd been running forever! Especially since that strange mantis-thing had appeared in the air and started chasing after her. Even with all her Speed skills, that thing moved impossibly fast.

"Stop chasing !" she yelled, panicked. The mantis-thing yelled back sothing she was pretty sure was an angry roar, and she flinched and yelped as a sharp, cutting breeze passed right over her antenna. "Go after soone else!"

"I'm not chasing you," the voice said, suddenly right in front of her. Kauldri scread, but couldn't stop in ti, and ended up slamming facefirst into his chest.

...He had a very nice, solid chest. Kauldri blinked.

"You can talk?" she asked.

"Yes, I can talk," the mantis said with a sigh. "My na is Ahkelios. You're a pretty good runner, you know that?"

"Thank you?" Kauldri said, bewildered.

"That wasn't a complint," Ahkelios said dryly. She deflated.

The story has been taken without consent; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.

"You can't just show up and start chasing people," she muttered. "This planet is full of monsters. I thought you wanted to eat ."

"Have you tried talking to anyone on this planet?" Ahkelios asked.

"Why would I do that?" Kauldri asked, confused.

"...I can see there's a lot we're going to have to discuss." The mantis sighed, then held a hand out to her. "Co on, let's find sowhere safer to talk."

Kauldri stared at the hand for a mont, flicking her antennae, then took it shyly. Ahkelios narrowed his eyes. "And just for the record, I'm not interested."

Kauldri deflated for a second ti.

Oh well. At least there was soone here that could talk. For a while, she thought she might be running from the monsters forever. She was even beginning to consider using that Death's Hand skill she'd gotten, even the Firmant that ca out of it felt kind of gross. Now she maybe probably wouldn't have to! And even if this Ahkelios wasn't interested, he was at least nice to look at. Unlike the funny feathered things she'd seen earlier.

One of them was squawking.

Shuddering, Kauldri hurried after Ahkelios.

"You're an Integrator." Karfi narrowed his eyes at the interloper that had invaded his loops. "What are you doing here?"

"Oh, just visiting," the Integrator said cheerfully, putting a finger to his lips. Mouth? He didn't really have lips to speak of—it was more a hard line in his face that opened and closed. "Don't tell the others, though. They might get mad at . The na's Gheraa, by the way."

"They're already watching," Karfi said steadily. It was true, as much as he'd figured—the Integrators were using his connection to the Interface to essentially stream everything he was doing to 24/7, even if not all of that footage was actively reviewed.

"Well, they're supposed to be watching," Gheraa said, waving a hand airily. "But Hestia's a dead end, so they're a little lazy about it most of the ti. Even if they're not, they wouldn't be able to see us."

"And why is that?" Karfi asked suspiciously.

"Through the magic of ti pockets!" Gheraa winked. "The downside of being an all-powerful Firmant construct that exists only in the primary iteration of reality is that we can only be real in the primary iteration of reality. Anything else is just a poor copy following a script. If you used an Inspiration right now and tried to tell... I don't know who was in charge during your Trial. Fhorma? If you tried to tell Fhorma about , she would probably still just tell you to choose your Inspiration."

"Forgive if I would prefer not to test that," Karfi said, though he took that information and filed it away carefully. He had no idea what this Integrator was on about, but it was clearly sothing important. What did he an, they weren't in the primary iteration of reality? "You still haven't told why you're here."

"I'm here to prevent the darkness from taking you over, of course," Gheraa said cheerfully.

Karfi stared at him, then turned to leave.

"Hey!" Gheraa sounded indignant. "Stop leaving! Why do they always leave when I say this?"

"Because you are either a fool, or a man who acts like one, and I do not have ti for either."

"You had the ti to plant bombs all over the Great Cities, though," Gheraa said casually, and Karfi froze in place, his heart leaping up to his throat.

"How did you—"

Gheraa was next to him before he could blink; he felt the Integrator wrap an arm around his shoulders, and the strength in them almost forced him to his knees. "Why don't you disable them first?" the Integrator said with a smile. "Then we can have a talk."

"I—I just—I need the credits," Karfi said. The excuse felt empty, now that he was saying the words out loud. "I don't want to do it, but you don't understand—"

"Believe ," Gheraa said, and for a mont Karfi thought he heard the Integrator's sheer age buried deep in his voice. "I understand all too well what we've done. Like I said. Disable them, and then let's talk."

Karfi hesitated. But there was sothing in Gheraa's voice that struck him as strange, and what this Integrator was asking him to do... it went against everything the Interface had been trying to encourage in him. Sothing within him said this Integrator wasn't like the others.

Maybe this wasn't another trick. Maybe it was a choice. A new possibility.

"Alright," Karfi said. Part of him was loathe to give this plan up—the amount of ti it had taken him to gather everything he needed alone was astronomical. But at the end of the day, what did he have to lose? If this Gheraa couldn't convince him, he had all the ti in the world to try again.

Too much ti, really.

He stopped the flow of Firmant into his Echo Bomb skill. Gheraa grinned at him. "Excellent," the Integrator said. "Now, there's this great place over in Inveria we really have to try."

"You knew this was going to happen, didn't you?" I accuse, though there isn't any heat to it. Fyran just laughs brightly. He's seated across from , and the both of us are back in that tavern in the middle of Inveria. The food here is just as good as ever. It's a nice break after the three other Trials I just pushed to completion and the three Trialgoers I brought through.

"I might have," Fyran says with a lopsided grin. "Is that so bad?"

"You could have warned ," I mutter, although even as I say the words I know it doesn't quite work like that. "Your Truth helped you figure it out?"

"I see inevitabilities," Fyran says. "The end of Hestia was one of them. You, Ethan Hill, are another."

"What, all of ?" I ask, my tone light. He smirks.

"Kauku is an inevitability," he says. "So is the Sunken King. It should have been impossible for you to beat him, and yet far in my future, you were able to find a way. A lot of people would have been satisfied with that, but you? You decided it wasn't good enough."

"What can I say?" I shrug. "I'm stubborn."

"So stubborn that fate bends around you harder than it does around the very gods themselves." Fyran seems more amused than anything.

"Kauku isn't a god."

"Close enough. You know what I an." Fyran chuckles. I roll my eyes.

"Does that an we're going to win?"

"I can't predict the outco when two inevitabilities clash," Fyran says, shaking his head. "But I can nudge things in our favor. I've had all this ti to figure out so many tricks with Temporal Firmant, you see. For example, I have this skill I got just for this occasion. It's called Ti Tether."

A string appears in his hand as he speaks. I examine it curiously, and then my eyes widen when Inspect tells exactly what it does. Fyran grins when he sees my understanding.

"Remind not to get on your bad side," I say.

"Oh, you're very much on my good side." Fyran nudges . "Shall we?"

"Yeah, but I'll have to borrow a skill from Ghost. Didn't expect this to be quite so quick."

Tiskip.

In all these other Trials, the planet still explodes. It's a remnant from a choice I never made, a ti that never happened. But now that I've broken ti open from the other side... The Anomaly is a portal. An exit, just as long as one can navigate it.

And as Firmant cracks the ground open beneath us, I yank us through back to Hestia 307B.

You are reading Die. Respawn. Repeat. Chapter 268: Book 4: Trialblazers, (2) on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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