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The world held its breath.

Light still shimred on the ruined cathedral walls, but it wasn't the sa light I'd seen before the collapse.It pulsed—slow, uncertain—like it was relearning how to shine.

I stayed on my knees, hand pressed against the stone I'd just rewritten.It was warm. Alive.And for the first ti, I could hear it breathing.

Arjun's ember flickered inside my chest.You stabilized the world, he whispered, disbelief soft around the edges.

"For now," I said.My voice echoed oddly, half a beat late, as if the air still needed practice carrying sound.

Above, the sky stitched itself together, lines of light sealing the cracks like hurried handwriting.

[ System Notice : Narrative Integrity Restored — Partial ][ Warning : Anchor Synchronization In Progress ]

The Inkblade rested across my lap, silent for once.Its reflection in the stone trembled with faint ripples that didn't belong there.

"…you held the page closed, fracture," it murmured finally."…but the ink doesn't forget where it spilled."

"I know."

My hand found the mark on my forearm.The quill-shaped scar glowed faintly through the skin, its rhythm matching my heartbeat.Every pulse sent a faint hum through the air—not pain, not power—sothing in between.

I pushed myself to my feet.The air slled different now: ozone, burnt parchnt, and rain that hadn't fallen yet.Outside the broken archway, the horizon wavered like a reflection disturbed by touch.

We should leave, Arjun said. The gods won't like what you've done.

"They can file a complaint," I said. "I'm not taking editing notes right now."

The ember dimd, almost amused.You joke too easily for soone who just rewrote a world.

"Humor's cheaper than sanity."

I stepped into the sunlight.Each footfall left faint letters in the dirt, vanishing a second later.Even my shadow lagged behind by half a second, as if deciding whether to follow.

[ Title Effect Active : The Anchor of Fractures — World Stability Radius 15 m ]

The ssage faded as quickly as it appeared.

"So I'm a walking patch now," I muttered.

"…until the next tear," the Inkblade said."…anchors never rest."

The mountain breeze carried whispers.Not words—echoes of pages turning far away.

I stopped at the edge of the cliff where the city had once stood.It was still there, technically.But the streets no longer lined up the way they used to.A clocktower leaned at a strange angle, pointing toward the wrong sky.People moved below—slow, uncertain shadows—and their outlines flickered like drawings corrected too many tis.

You fixed it, Arjun said quietly. You saved them.

"For now," I repeated.

That was when the whisper changed.It started speaking back.

At first, I thought it was wind.Then I realized the voice was inside the whisper, curling through it like smoke through glass.

You used my quill.

I froze.

[ Incoming Transmission : Source Unverified ]

You wrote where no mortal was ant to write.

The voice was soft, genderless, older than mory.It didn't sound angry.Just… curious.

"I didn't have a choice," I said."Everything was breaking."

Everything always is.

The words slid through the air, brushing against the back of my mind like a fingertip on wet ink.

Do you rember what you erased to make this world stand?

"I didn't erase anything," I said too quickly.

Silence answered.Then the sunlight dimd.

Shadows lengthened in shapes I didn't recognize.One stretched the wrong way—uphill instead of down.Another bent across the horizon like a wound.

[ Temporal Displacent Detected : Residual Data Manifesting ]

They rember you, the voice whispered. The drafts you left behind.

The ground trembled.Across the ruins, tiny motes of black light rose from the cracks—each one the size of a tear, each humming faintly with a heartbeat that wasn't mine.

Arjun's ember flared.Ishaan—

"I see them."

The motes floated higher, clustering together, forming vague human shapes.Dozens of them.Then hundreds.Faint outlines of people I'd never t but almost had—the other Ishaan Reeds from the Archive.

Each one stared at with hollow recognition.

"Not again," I whispered.

You anchored this world with mory, the voice said. Now mory cos to collect.

The air shivered as the echoes solidified.So looked almost real—faces with half-finished eyes, mouths that spoke my words a heartbeat too late.

One stepped closer.Its body was pure script, paragraphs floating where flesh should be.It opened its mouth, and the sound that ca out was my own voice, but broken across ti.

"Why did you leave us behind?"

I stepped back instinctively.The Inkblade humd in warning, its edge rippling with thin bands of light.

"I didn't leave you," I said. "You were never supposed to—"

The ghost cut off with a scream made of ink.Lines of text whipped outward, coiling around my arm like living ropes.

Pain flared, sharp and cold.Every letter burned.

[ Warning : Narrative Contamination Detected ][ Suggestion : Purge Infected mories ]

"Purge?" I gritted my teeth. "These are my mories!"

Arjun's ember trembled. Not anymore. They've rewritten themselves.

The world bent around us.The mountain cracked, air rippling in concentric circles as if a stone had been thrown into reality itself.Each echo dragged more of the shadows upward.

We were stories too! they cried, their voices overlapping. We wanted to live!

I slashed the Inkblade through the nearest wave.The edge tore their sentences apart, scattering fragnts of half-born words.

"Then write your own damn script!" I shouted.

The ghosts hesitated.For a mont, they flickered—doubtful, confused—like pages trying to rember which side held the ink.

That hesitation was enough.I pressed my bleeding palm against the scar on my forearm.The mark flared, and light erupted from my veins.

[ Title Effect Activated : The Anchor of Fractures ][ Stabilizing Zone… 32% → 71% ]

The ground steadied.The echoes scread again, but this ti they were pulled backward—into the fissures, into the very cracks they'd crawled from.

When silence finally returned, my knees gave out.The Inkblade dimd, its edge smoking faintly from the strain.

Arjun's ember flickered in and out. Ishaan… your tiline…

"I know."

It was unraveling, thread by thread, visible even to now—a shimr of light peeling off my skin with each breath.Every ti I anchored a broken piece of the world, I lost one of my own.

Above, the clouds began to move again.The stitched sky twisted into new constellations I didn't recognize.The city below was still there—alive—but subtly wrong.A few streets had changed shape.A tower that hadn't existed before now pierced the skyline.

I'd saved it.But not the sa one I'd known.

[ Worldline Divergence : 3.4 % ][ Anchor Synchronization : Unstable ]

I closed my eyes, breathing through the ache in my chest.The wind carried faint laughter from sowhere far away—children playing, rchants shouting, the rhythm of a world pretending nothing had happened.

Arjun spoke softly. You can't keep doing this alone.

"I don't have a choice," I said. "If I stop, everything falls apart."

Then maybe let it.

I looked down at my hands—stained with ink, glowing faintly in the veins."Not yet."

Sothing small drifted from the sky.At first I thought it was ash, but when I caught it, it was a feather.White.Weightless.Still warm.

The mont I touched it, the wind stilled.A line appeared across my vision, faint gold.

[ System Notice : External Observation Detected ]

Another followed.

[ ssage Received – Source : Unknown Origin ]

My stomach tightened.

The letters unfolded midair, forming a single sentence:

Do not die, Ishaan Reed. The creator wills it.

I stared at the glowing words until they faded.The voice didn't echo this ti—it simply was.Quiet, certain, too familiar to be denied.

Arjun's ember pulsed nervously. That presence again?

"Yeah." I looked up at the shifting sky. "The sa one who keeps pretending not to interfere."

What did it say?

"Exactly what you think it did."

Another line appeared, faint enough that it almost vanished in the light:

If the creator wills it, we will et again. Until then, walk alone.

Then everything went silent.

I stood there for a long ti, the feather still in my hand, feeling the faint pulse of a world that wasn't mine but now depended on .

Finally, I tucked the feather into my coat."Fine," I said to no one in particular. "I'll walk. Just don't expect to behave."

The wind carried my words away—sowhere beyond the margin.

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