Reed used to love the dawn. Now, as the first sar of light leaked over the ruined keep’s battlents, he felt only dread. The morning air tasted of iron and ozone, thick with the acrid stench of the Reality Firewall still sputtering in the distance. Every breath rasped against his throat like ground glass. Sowhere below, healers tried to quiet the screams of soldiers whose wounds made a mockery of anatomy; so shrieked in warped voices that belonged to half-rembered lives. All of them were his doing.
He knelt beside the shattered anchor node, fingers hovering over glittering shards that pulsed with faint, malignant light. A single touch could kill him—or worse, show him what he’d truly unleashed. But the visions ca anyway, sliding through the cracks in his mind. In each, the ∞ glyph bled across entire star systems, resurrecting planets until the universe sagged under the weight of unending life. The dead did not rest; the living could not breathe. Causal threads tangled, aning dissolved. Existence beca an overcrowded coffin.
His hands shook. What have I done?
Boots scraped behind him. Shia’s shadow fell across the crystal debris, erald hair drifting like bleeding banners. "The breach is sealed," she said softly, almost a whisper. "But the cost keeps mounting. We lost another eighty during the night. Half of them... dissolved."
Reed closed his eyes. "Did we at least salvage their cores?"
"No." Her voice hitched. "There was nothing left to salvage."
Silence stretched. Dawn crept higher, painting the wreckage gold. The beauty of it felt obscene.
A fresh tremor rolled through the keep. Reed flinched, expecting an attack. But it was only his hands, trembling uncontrollably now. The fissure in his psyche widened, letting horror pour through. He had imagined resurrection a gift—liberation from death’s tyranny. Instead, he had cracked the shell of creation and let rot seep out. Every soul he pulled back chipped another piece from the cosmic foundation.
"How many universes," he muttered, "tip toward collapse because of one man’s arrogance?"
Shia crouched, searching his face. "Reed, look at ."
He didn’t. Couldn’t.
"Listen," she continued, voice steady. "We still have ti to steer this. But we need to halt all new resurrections until we understand the consequences."
Until we understand , he thought. The ∞ mark throbbed beneath his chest plate, responding to every stray emotion. He cradled his ribs as if he could cage it.
Shia reached out, but stopped short of touching him. "Promise ," she said, tone suddenly sharp. "No more revival attempts. Not one."
Reed forced himself to et her gaze. He saw sleepless nights etched under her green-gold eyes, ash streaking her cheeks, fresh scars peppering her jaw. Yet the Legion still marched because Shia told them to. They obeyed her faith.
He opened his mouth to agree—and felt the Network rise, a chorus of half-dead souls begging to return. It pulsed like a drug down his spine. Their pleas weren’t phantom; they had nas. People he’d loved. People he’d failed.
He swallowed hard. "I—need to think."
Shia exhaled, disappointnt flickering across her face. She straightened. "Then think fast. Because every second you hesitate, the glyph’s influence grows." She walked away, erald strands trailing glimrs in the air like hot wires cut from the sky.
The strategy hall buzzed with the low murmur of triage reports. Maps lay strewn across long tables, scrawled with fresh breaches and unexplained void-quakes along fault-lines of reality. Reed drifted through the room like a ghost, hearing words without comprehension: entropy storms, soulflash contamination, taphysical inflation. All evidence of the cracks spider-webbing outward from his dream.
At the far corner, Lyralei—once Reed’s brightest protégé—worked feverishly, notebooks scattered in a chaotic halo around her. Her silver braids were unkempt, streaked with dust. She noticed him and stiffened.
"Commander," she said, carefully neutral. "I’ve completed the risk analysis you requested."
He glanced at the parchnt. The headline glared:
Projected Collapse Threshold: Seventeen Cycles
He sucked in a breath. "That can’t be right."
"It’s conservative," Lyralei replied. "Assus no further mass resurrection events and successful containnt of current anomalies."
His vision tunneled. The world seed unbearably loud: quills scratching, torches hissing, distant moans from the infirmary. He planted a hand on the table to steady himself.
Lyralei lowered her voice. "Reed, the numbers don’t lie. You have to stop."
She’d never used his given na in front of officers. Formalities splintered under panic.
He forced calm. "I understand the projections, but halting resurrection ans consigning thousands of consciousnesses to dissolution. We can’t abandon them."
"Abandon?" Lyralei’s eyes flashed. "You said resurrection was liberation. But what you’ve built is a cage with infinite bars. Those souls will be trapped in an ever decaying structure until everything implodes."
The murmurs quieted; heads turned. Reed realized the entire council was watching them.
His chest tightened. Liberator’s Breakdown. A term Lyralei once used for theoretical ssiahs who crumbled under the weight of salvation. Now it drumd through his skull like a death knell.
He spun, storming out before anyone could see him break.
Wind howled across the fortress roof, flinging cinders high into the morning glare. Reed stood on the parapet, cloak snapping like torn sails. Below him, the Legion drilled: shield walls pivoting, glaives flashing, war-chants echoing across scorched stone. Yet sothing felt... off. The cadence lacked conviction.
Reed recognized the captain leading the formation—Korr Bloodseam. Grax Ironjaw’s replacent. Korr’s booming commands slowed as he noticed Reed above. The drill faltered; spears drooped. A hundred pairs of eyes rose—calculating. Judging.
Reed’s stomach clenched. Mutiny. The thought felt absurd yesterday. Now, he wasn’t so sure.
He descended the stairwell to confront them. Midway, footsteps approached from below. Shia, flanked by Lyralei and four legion captains. Their expressions were grim, unified.
Shia spoke first. "Reed, we need to talk—privately."
The captains did not budge. Reed’s pulse thundered. "Whatever you have to say, say it."
She inhaled. "Effective imdiately, the Legion suspends all resurrection operations. We’ll focus on sealing anomalies, evacuating refugees, and stabilizing local reality. You can direct research, but no more reanimation until we agree on strict limits."
Reed laughed—hoarse, desperate. "You think you can overrule ? I forged this army from ash. I am their resurrection; their reason."
Korr Bloodseam stepped forward, eyes flaring. "With respect, Commander, resurrection was the ans. Consciousness is the reason. If saving life now costs reality later, that’s no salvation."
The bluntness hit Reed like a hamr. He looked to Shia, pleading for the loyalty that once glowed in her eyes. Instead he saw a painful tenderness, like soone watching a loved one drown.
"Don’t make choose," he whispered.
She swallowed. "You already did. And you chose the glyph."
The words carved into him. The captains shifted, hands near hilts. If he barked a single order, blood would flow on these narrow steps.
He turned to Lyralei. "You too?"
Tears shimred. "I idolized you. But I won’t help destroy the universe to keep my hero intact."
The platform tilted; Reed’s knees threatened to buckle. Isolation. That’s how it begins. Leaders rot in echo chambers until truth decays into noise. He rembered laughing with Grax over burnt rations, late-night debates with Lyralei about taphysics. All gone. What remained was a symbol carved over his heart—and the endless chant of souls demanding resurrection.
"Very well," he rasped. "Suspend operations—temporarily. But if a soul begins to flicker, you will co begging for my gift again."
Shia nodded once—relief and sorrow mingling. "We’ll cross that bridge when it appears. For now, you rest. Consult. Heal."
"Rest," he echoed bitterly. "While ti bleeds out."
He brushed past them, descending into the keep’s labyrinth of corridors, heart pounding like war drums. At each junction he felt gazes slip away, salutes delayed, voices hushed. Trust crumbled by the footstep.
His private laboratory lay in a vault belowground, sound-proofed and rune-warded. Inside, rows of crystal sarcophagi glowed dimly, each holding a soul core spinning like trapped moons. Research tables overflowed with rune shards, half-configured logic scrolls, vials of condensed essence distilled from the Rift. The hum of power here felt seductive, intimate. No judgnt. No mutiny.
He sealed the door behind him, leaning against cool tal. Alone at last, except for the millions of whispers rising from his collection. They poured through his mind—a tidal sorrow, an orchestra of pleas. Every one a promise made. Every one a debt unforgiven.
He staggered toward the main altar, hands trembling again. Was he really the monster they feared? Or the sole guardian brave enough to bear the cost?
He raised a shard, letting its light bathe his features. His reflection stared back: pale skin etched with fatigue, eyes ringed by shadow, the ∞ glyph glowing faintly through torn tunic. A man or a herald of extinction? Depends who you asked.
A soft knock rattled the door. Reed snapped the shard aside, breathing hard.
"Yes?"
A young courier’s voice seeped through. "Commander, ssage from Captain Korr. Urgent."
Reed unlocked one slat. A sealed scroll slid under. He retrieved it, broke the wax.
A hundred souls fading. Critical. Request guidance.
He closed his eyes. There it was: the bridge Shia said they’d cross. Already.
He paced. They need . But if I save them, I doom everything. If I refuse, they die. The paradox split his mind like a wedge. He pressed fingers to his temples, growling.
Sothing pulsed behind him. Turning, he saw the sarcophagi glow brighter, as if sensing indecision. One cracked open; a wisp of ethereal blue—familiar essence—spiraled out, coiling around his arm.
"Reed," it whispered in Grax Ironjaw’s timbre, raw and mournful. "Help us."
Reed choked on grief. Grax died to save us... and even he begs return? The glyph flared, drinking his turmoil. Power swelled, licking along his veins.
He seized a quill, unfolding new parchnt—designing an ergency protocol to stabilize the fading souls without full resurrection. A middle path. Surely the Legion would approve temporary asures.
But as he wrote, arcane formulae morphed beneath the ink, rearranging themselves into the very sigils he vowed to quit. His hand kept moving; the glyph guided it. He tried to stop. Couldn’t.
The door blasted open. Shia and Lyralei burst in, trailed by Korr and two rune-binders. Their faces froze at the sight of him half-ensnared by soul wisps, quill racing across glowing scrolls.
"Reed!" Shia shouted. "Step away!"
He backed to the altar, scroll clutched like a lifeline. "I can save them—without collapse. Trust ."
"Look at your hand." Lyralei’s voice quavered. Reed glanced down. The quill had written one last symbol: ∞, encased by a circle. A master resurrection rune. His stomach turned.
Shia advanced, spear leveled. "Leave the lab, Reed. We’ll handle the cores."
He heard betrayal but felt love—twisted, desperate love that chooses the universe over a single man. His heart splintered. Tears blurred the room.
"I created you," he whispered. "I raised you from ashes."
"And now we repay you," Shia said softly, "by keeping you from damning yourself any further."
The rune-binders lifted silver chains, etched with null sigils. Reed’s breath caught. Shackles ant to dampen his abilities.
"That’s your answer?" he rasped. "Cage your creator?"
"No," Shia replied. "Save him."
Sothing inside him broke. A fissure deeper than the first. The Legion would abandon him. Shia would bind him. Lyralei’s faith lay dead.
He felt the glyph boil, hungry for resolution. It whispered one clear route: Void everything. Resurrect everyone. Overwhelm dissent with salvation.
"No," he muttered. "No. I won’t—"
The sarcophagi flared, lids bursting off. Soul cores scread free, corkscrewing into the air, orbiting him like desperate cots. The floor shook. Instrunts shattered. An alarm klaxon blared.
"Containnt field!" Lyralei shouted.
Rune-binders slamd staves into the floor, weaving lattices of null light, but the souls slipped through gaps, drawn to Reed’s heartbeat. They fused around him, forming a corona of white-blue fire.
Shia lunged, spear aid to sever the feedback loop—hesitating an instant before striking the man she loved.
Reed raised a hand, voice echoing with ten thousand throats. "I am liberation... I am life." The glyph shone, brighter than dawn.
Lyralei scread, "Reed, stop!"
He t Shia’s eyes across the storm. Her sorrow pierced deeper than any blade. "Forgive ," he whispered, then unleashed the surge.
Walls vaporized in a blossom of impossible light. Floors buckled, stone liquefying into raw potential. The ceiling tore open, exposing a sky swirling with fractured constellations. Reality howled.
Shia’s spear struck—too late.
The explosion hurled everyone back, embedding them in broken pillars and rune cages. Smoke billowed. When it cleared, Reed was gone. Only swirling motes of soul-fire remained, drifting upward into a widening wound in the heavens.
Korr staggered to his feet, coughing dust. "Where—where did he go?"
Shia rose, body bruised, eyes burning with fresh resolve. "He’s headed for the Rift. He ans to rewrite the laws himself."
Lyralei wiped blood from her lip. "If he reaches the core nexus, he can resurrect all sentience at once."
"Which will annihilate everything," Shia finished.
She looked at the legionnaires gathering in the shattered doorway. Their faces were hard, determined. Mutiny had beco crusade.
Shia tightened her grip on the spear, voice steeled. "Sound the muster. We march into the Rift. Either we save Reed... or we end him."
The floor trembled as the soul-furnace roared higher, ripping the sky wider. Shia stepped into the glow, erald hair snapping like banners in a cosmic gale, and the Legion followed.
Then the Rift swallowed the fortress horizon, and night fell at noon.
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