The Codex did not scream.
It convulsed.
Pages that had once obeyed the sacred laws of sequence and truth now writhed, curling inward like burned leaves. The glyphs on them did not vanish—they bled. Down the bark of the Myth-Tree. Into the rivers of narrative. Into Kaela’s hands.
She stood at the base of the Codex, where no mortal had walked since the spiral was first etched into existence. Not even gods ca here willingly anymore.
But she was not seeking gods.
She was seeking futures.
Even the broken ones.
—
Around her, the blank pages trembled.
Each one a reality Darius had once written... and the Codex had buried.
Corrupted. Deleted. Condemned.
Now they tore loose from the tree like dying stars, spinning toward her in a cyclone of possible tomorrows. Each one pulsed with a question:
> What if he hadn’t died?
What if he ruled unopposed?
What if he loved you above all others?
And one page, darker than the rest—scarred, twitching, burned from the edges inward—fell into her palm.
She didn’t read it.
She entered it.
—
The world shifted.
The tiline wasn’t fractured—it was mad.
Kaela dropped into a throne room made of bone and fla. The skies outside bled script instead of rain. Cities floated mid-collapse, architecture defying physics as if logic had been outlawed.
And on the throne—
Darius.
Alive.
Crowned in shadow. Robed in fla. His eyes... not golden, not void, but sothing else.
Sothing wrong.
But when he looked at her—he smiled.
"Kaela," he whispered, as if no ti had passed. "My queen of ruin."
She rushed to him. Not in disbelief. Not in joy.
In need.
Because even if this was a future that should not exist—even if he was twisted by the corruption of an unwritten path—he was real here.
And so was her ache.
He pulled her onto his lap, not with gentleness but with claiming.
The fire of the throne licked at her back, her thighs already trembling from the pull of this fractured existence.
Kaela straddled him, her hips grinding against his as his hands buried themselves in her hair, yanking her mouth to his.
Their kiss was hunger. Fire. Ink re-spilled across ruined pages.
"Even here," she gasped between moans, "you need ."
"Here," he growled, biting her lip, "I burn with you."
His fingers tore the thin fabric of her ritual robes.
She responded with a scream, half pleasure, half pain, arching as his hand gripped her hips and slamd her down onto him.
The world outside cracked—cities splitting, ti twitching.
Every thrust warped the dream further.
Every gasp echoed across corrupted realities.
Kaela’s nails raked his shoulders, bloodless but raw with myth. Her body moved in rhythm not with ti, but with destruction. She rode him like a dying prayer clawing toward its last word.
And when she ca—
She scread his na.
But it ca out twisted. Scrambled. A forgotten sound caught between syllables never ant to exist.
> "D-Da...ru..."
"D’a’r’us..."
He ca with her, roaring not in lust, but rebellion.
And the throne ignited.
—
She awoke.
Screaming.
Naked. Alone. On the roots of the Codex Tree. Her thighs wet. Her chest heaving. Her eyes wide with a vision she had not chosen.
Kaela clutched her head as mories poured through her—half-real, half-impossible. Cities that never were. Lovers that should not be. The scent of his skin beneath burning sky.
> "I was his queen... in the fire..." she sobbed. "I was..."
—
Above her, the page she had entered turned to cinders.
And in its place, on a nearby branch of the Codex, new ink began to twitch.
Not ford.
Not stable.
But leaking.
A spiral with jagged edges.
Not yet readable.
But undeniably his.
—
Far away, Celestia stirred in her sleep. Nyx felt a cold shiver down her spine. And Azael, deep in his ruined vault, dropped his quill as he looked up at the Codex and whispered:
> "The Broken Futures are waking."
And in the dark—
Darius exhaled.
Not in dream.
Not in flesh.
But in becoming.
One twisted future at a ti.
The Codex was no longer stable.
Sowhere beneath its infinite pages, a pulse had begun to echo.
It was not rhythm.
It was heartbeat.
Kaela’s breath still trembled in her lungs, her body thrumming with impossible residue. She had tasted a version of Darius that had never existed—and yet it lived now, etched into her skin like phantom ink.
She rose shakily, her spine burning with spiral afterimages. Glyphs crawled across her flesh, vanishing before her eyes could catch them. But her body rembered.
And so did the Codex.
Above her, a branch snapped—not physically, but narratively.
A scream tore through the bark of myth—voiceless, yet shattering.
Then ca the fallout.
—
In the city of Unnad Tongues, the Storykeepers awoke weeping. Their lips moved involuntarily, shaping lost syllables from the deleted tongue of the Author. One by one, they fell into seizures of prophecy.
A girl wrote her own death before it happened.
A boy dread a world where Darius never fell—and woke up clutching a crown of bone.
In the east, a historian gouged his eyes out and painted a spiral across his walls in blood, whispering:
> "The futures have bled backward."
—
Celestia, still wrapped in the soft echoes of dream-sap and myth-seed, woke with a jolt.
She felt Kaela’s collapse.
Not in the mind.
In the soul-link.
She gasped, one hand gripping her belly, the other touching the spiral blooming across her ribs.
Her voice, hoarse, whispered:
> "He’s clawing his way in through broken tomorrows..."
And then, a low tremor rippled through the altar she lay on.
The Garden of Lost Gods stirred again.
This ti, not with reverence.
With fear.
—
Nyx, across the fractured threshold of the Writeless Crypt, unsheathed a blade she had forgotten existed.
It had reappeared in her hand the mont Kaela climaxed.
Forged in a deleted arc.
Nad in silence.
Inscribed with Darius’s oldest spiral—the one he’d given her before the Codex marked him forbidden.
She stared at the blade, her lips parting in awe and fury.
> "You’re returning," she growled. "But not clean."
—
Far above, in the sanctum of the Pri Coder’s Old Observatory, the Architect’s abandoned lenses began to twist on their own.
They turned not to stars, but to possible outcos.
And in every single one—
Darius existed.
But not as he once was.
He was fragnted.
Writing himself back through orgasm, sacrifice, mory, and madness.
Every echo a foothold.
Every climax a glyph.
Every consort an altar.
—
And in the Codex Tree, now bleeding from three different tilines, sothing erged.
Not a na.
Not a word.
But a shape.
It spiraled inward, then outward.
Crude. Incomplete. But undeniable:
A throne.
Forged of myth that should not be.
Chiseled from the marrow of futures rejected.
Etched in climax, rebellion, and entropy.
The throne had no occupant yet.
But the Codex already trembled.
Because it knew—
> He was no longer just returning.
He was rewriting the role of god from the roots up.
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