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The Blank Realm changed as I walked.

It always does — that's the trick of writing sothing alive.The fog that once felt endless began to shape itself into roads, bridges, towers.Lines of gold ink threaded through the air, curving and looping until they ford streets.

By the ti I realized what was happening, the horizon had blood into light.

[ System Notice : New Sub-Realm Ford — The Readers' City ][ Origin : Autonomous Manifestation of Narrative Observation ]

Arjun's ember pulsed uneasily. It's building itself from every eye that's ever read your story.

"So… basically, reviews with architecture."

Let's hope they're five-star.

The closer I got, the louder it beca.Not noise — murmur.Thousands of overlapping whispers, half-laughing, half-arguing, echoing lines I'd once said aloud.

"He's too calm.""He's not human.""He'll regret this."

It took a second to realize: they were reading .

The gates rose ahead, carved from solid sentences.Each word glowed faintly when I brushed my fingers across it.

ENTRY DENIED TO THE UNWRITTEN.

I stared at the inscription, then shrugged. "Good thing I'm fully scribbled in."

The gates opened on their own.

[ Access Granted : Identified as Active Protagonist ]

That's new, I thought.

Arjun chuckled softly. Guess they know your genre.

The city inside was impossible —buildings stacked on each other like overlapping paragraphs, roads that curved in loops and rewound mid-step, lights shaped like quotation marks.

Everywhere I looked, people moved.Not real people — silhouettes made of perception.They shimred with faint colors, their faces blurry, their voices clear.

Each one whispered sothing about .

"He's not supposed to be here yet.""Why did he skip the foreshadowing?""Wait, I thought he died three chapters ago."

The air rippled with anticipation.It wasn't judgnt. It was engagent.

A world built by curiosity itself.

Arjun's voice softened. They're not hostile.

"Readers rarely are," I said. "Until you change the ending."

I walked deeper into the city.The whispers followed, growing louder.

Every corner held a story — murals painted in light showing fragnts of my journey: the first title, the fractured realms, the Author's Section.Except the endings were all… wrong.

In one, I died saving a city that never existed.In another, I beca the god I'd killed.In a third, I vanished mid-sentence, leaving only a pen behind.

Each mural had its own interpretation of — rewritten, reimagined, reinterpreted.

[ System Notice : Reader-Origin Narratives Detected. ][ Warning : Continuity Drift Possible. ]

Arjun muttered, You're walking through fan theories.

"Feels nostalgic."

Don't let them overwrite you.

"Trust ," I said. "That's my whole brand."

At the city's center stood a tower.It wasn't tall — it felt tall, like it stretched through aning instead of height.Every window pulsed with text.Every floor whispered in paragraphs.

And at the very top, I could see soone waiting.

A shape seated behind a massive desk made of bound pages, head bent as if still reading.

I started walking toward it.But the crowd thickened, the whispers turning sharper.

"He can't reach the Reader.""He's not ant to know who's watching.""If he looks back, the story resets."

I ignored them.Mostly.

When I reached the tower's base, a figure stepped out from the entrance.He looked ordinary — mid-thirties maybe, neat coat, ink-stained hands.But his eyes glowed faintly, reflecting entire chapters in miniature.

"You shouldn't have co," he said.

"That line's getting overused," I replied.

He smiled faintly. "You always say that too."

[ Entity Identified : Reader-Pri ][ Role : First Audience of the Author. Custodian of the Reading Realms. ]

Arjun whispered, He's not part of your world. He's one layer above it.

The man nodded. "I am the first to read your story. The one who rembers every version that didn't make it past the draft."

"So you're the archivist of my mistakes."

"Of your beginnings," he corrected.

He studied like soone re-reading a favorite line."Do you know why Readers exist, Ishaan Reed?"

"To misunderstand things creatively?"

He laughed softly. "To preserve what the story forgets. We are the mory of your echoes."

"I already have a title for that."

"I know," he said. "The Keeper of Unfinished Tales."

I frowned. "You're aware of my titles?"

"I'm aware of everything the Author left unguarded."

"That sounds threatening."

He shook his head. "No. It's gratitude."

He stepped aside, gesturing toward the tower door."He's waiting for you."

"Who?"

"The one who reads the Readers."

The tower door opened with a sound like paper tearing through ti.Inside was darkness — thick, absolute, the kind that felt printed rather than natural.

I stepped through.The door closed behind with a quiet click.

[ Location Updated : The Reading Hall ][ Ambient Narrative Pressure : Critical ]

Arjun's ember dimd instantly. Sothing here is reading you harder than the system ever could.

"Define harder."

Like it's trying to see how you end.

The hall stretched endlessly upward.Shelves curved along invisible walls, stacked with translucent books that glowed faintly.Each spine shimred with my na, followed by strange variations:

"Ishaan Reed and the City That Forgot Him.""The Last Quill.""Script Breaker: Canceled Draft."

Every possibility I'd never written.

I moved closer.The mont my fingers brushed one of the spines, the world rippled.A vision hit — , older, quieter, giving up before the ending.

I pulled my hand away.The vision dissolved.

"Great," I muttered. "My failures are getting hardcover editions."

A voice spoke from the shadows above."Stories crave endings, Ishaan. That's why they haunt their writers."

I looked up.

A figure sat high on a throne made of open books, legs crossed, posture relaxed.He looked young, but his eyes carried too much age to be mortal.Each blink rewrote a paragraph sowhere in the air.

[ Entity Identified : The ta-Reader ][ Tier : Beyond-System ][ Function : Overseer of Completed Narratives. ]

"I was told you'd been waiting for ," I said.

"I wait for everyone who refuses to finish."

"I'm more of a rewriter."

He smiled faintly. "Yes. You fix the unfixable. You undo the inevitable. You create hope where there was supposed to be tragedy."

"You say that like it's a flaw."

"To so, it is."

The hall trembled.Dozens of books slid off their shelves and opened midair, their pages spinning like a vortex.Inside them were scenes from my life — so that happened, others that never did.

In one, I died fighting the Thing Beneath the Blank.In another, I never found the Inkblade.In one particularly dramatic version, I beca the villain halfway through.

The ta-Reader gestured lazily."All these paths exist because you wouldn't let your story end. You fractured the narrative into infinite drafts."

"Sounds like job security."

He didn't laugh."You call yourself Script Breaker. But breaking scripts ans breaking purpose. Every story needs its end."

"I'll write mine when I'm ready."

He stood, and the air grew heavy.The books snapped shut in unison.

"Then I will show you what happens when a story outlives itself."

The floor vanished.

I fell through words — past entire libraries collapsing, ink streaming upward like reversed rain.Below , a vast abyss pulsed with starlight, each flicker a finished tale burning out.

Arjun shouted through the static. Ishaan! He's pulling you into the Archive of Endings!

"Guess we're skipping the exposition."

I landed hard on a surface made of glowing script.The ta-Reader hovered above, looking down with calm pity.

"This is where all stories go when no one rembers them," he said."Every na, every world, every emotion reduced to quiet light. Would you condemn yourself to this too?"

I looked around.The lights were beautiful — like constellations made of forgotten aning.

"No," I said. "I'll keep them awake."

He tilted his head. "Why fight inevitability?"

"Because inevitability's just lazy writing."

The books around us flared in response, pages rustling with faint laughter.

[ Title Resonance Detected : The Keeper of Unfinished Tales ][ Trait Manifestation : Reawakening Dormant Narratives. ]

The lights beneath my feet flickered, then began to rise —tiny motes of mory ascending like reversed snowfall.

Each one whispered a na.Each one rembered being read.

The ta-Reader's expression darkened."You're waking them."

"They were never dead."

"This is defiance."

"It's the sequel," I said.

The hall split open, light tearing through the shelves like sunrise.For a mont, I saw entire worlds flicker back into being — short stories, tragedies, poems, even jokes.They all pulsed once, grateful.

And then, everything went quiet.

The ta-Reader exhaled softly."Then may the audience judge your next act, Ishaan Reed."

The floor shattered, light engulfing everything.

When I opened my eyes again, I was standing back outside.The city around had changed — brighter, awake, watching.Every Reader I'd seen before now looked up from their pages.

And they all whispered the sa word:

Continue.

I grinned. "Gladly."

The Inkblade shimred in my hand.And sowhere in the fog above, another page turned itself open.

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