At central command in a dilapidated observatory hall, an old man took his ti getting up from his chair, each movent calculated against the protest of weakened joints and brittle bones. His fingers looked crusted, the skin paper-thin and mottled with age spots that hadn’t been there a ti ago. His eyes were sunken, ringed with the kind of exhaustion that sleep could never touch.
The office was a controlled disaster. Books scattered in organized chaos across every surface, their spines cracked from repeated consultation. Large amounts of parchnt spread through his dwelling, each one covered in notes written in crambling handwriting that deteriorated noticeably from top to bottom of each page. But there was only a single quill—the sa one he’d used for forty-seven years, since the day his soul talent had first awakened and shown him what a burden knowledge could be.
He moved to the small brazier where a pot of coffee sat warming. One of the few pleasures he allowed himself. His hands shook as he poured, the dark liquid sloshing dangerously close to the rim.
The cup was halfway to his lips when it happened.
A jolt passed through his skin like arcs of lightning, sudden and violent. His fingers spasd. The cup tumbled from his grasp, shattering against the stone floor. Hot coffee splashed across his boots and soaked into the hem of his robes.
He didn’t notice.
The vision had him.
Not the gentle unfurling of possibility he was used to—the soft shimr of branching futures that he could study and analyze. This was a cascade. A torrent of inevitability pouring through his consciousness like water through a broken dam.
War.
Not with the Crawlers. Not with any foreign powers.
Human against human.
The Republic tearing itself apart from within. Noble houses mobilizing private armies. Commoner uprisings in the outer territories. The Senate fracturing into factions, each one convinced their vision would save humanity while dooming it. And through it all, the Crawlers waited, patient as death, ready to feast on the corpse of civilization.
He saw cities burning. Sparkshire Academy reduced to rubble. Champions killing Champions while Monarchs watched from the Shroud.
And at the center of it all— faces he’d seen before.
The children from Grim Hollow.
The old man staggered backward, catching himself against his desk. His breath ca in ragged gasps. The vision released him slowly, reluctantly, leaving afterimages burned into his mind.
So months ago, he’d nudged fate for them. Just once. Just enough.
The mory was crystal clear despite the fog that had settled over so much of his recent past. He’d seen their deaths in Grim Hollow’s Tier 2 Shroud—all of them torn apart by a Monarch that should never have manifested. He’d taken his quill and written their nas on a parchnt, then burned it in a ritual that cost him years of his life.
The Monarch had been killed in a very absurd manner.
He’d felt the price extract itself imdiately. His left hand had withered, the fingers curling inward like a dying spider. His lungs had weakened until every breath beca a conscious effort. And the visions—always frequent—had beco constant, an unending stream of possible futures that left him unable to distinguish between what was and what might be.
A fair trade, the tapestry had judged. Lives for ti.
He’d sworn then that he would never do it again. Not for individuals. Only for world-ending threats. The kind of catastrophes that would erase humanity entirely.
But this...
The old man lowered himself back into his chair, ignoring the spreading pool of coffee at his feet. He pulled a fresh piece of parchnt toward him and took up his quill with trembling fingers.
He began to write, docunting what he’d seen. The war’s probable catalysts. The factions that would erge. The foreign powers that would capitalize on the Republic’s weakness. The Crawler incursions that would intensify while humanity was distracted.
And those nas, appearing again and again throughout the branching possibilities.
They weren’t the cause. They were... nexus points. Places where the threads of fate pulled taut. Their choices would ripple outward, affecting thousands. Perhaps millions.
In so futures, they prevented the worst of it. In others, they accelerated the collapse.
The problem was that he couldn’t see which choices led to which outcos. The variables were too complex, the threads too tangled. Even his gift—rare enough that he’d never t another soul with the sa talent—had limits.
He could see the tapestry. He could even nudge it, pulling gently on specific threads to shift outcos by minutes or ters.
But this wasn’t a single thread that needed adjusting.
This was the entire weave coming undone.
To stop it—to truly prevent what was coming—would require more than a nudge. It would require tearing out threads wholesale and reweaving them from scratch. The cost of such an intervention would be asured not in years but in decades.
He didn’t have decades. Looking at his withered hands, feeling the labor of his heart, he wasn’t certain he had months.
The old man set down his quill and leaned back in his chair. For the first ti in half a century of service that no one knew about and no one would praise, he felt sothing he’d never allowed himself before.
Despair.
He’d prevented seventeen world-ending events over his lifeti. Crawler breaches that would have released Monarchs into population centers. Assassination attempts on key Champions whose deaths would have fractured the Republic’s defense. Natural disasters that would have killed tens of thousands.
Each intervention had cost him. Each one had taken another piece of his dwindling vitality, carved another year from his remaining ti.
And now, when it mattered most, he was too broken to act.
The war was coming. Those children would be at the center of it. And for the first ti since his talent had awakened, the old man who had spent his entire life nudging fate toward better outcos would have to simply watch as the worst one unfolded.
He looked at the spilled coffee spreading across the floor, dark and bitter, seeping into the gaps between stones.
An apt taphor, he thought.
The old man closed his eyes, too tired to even clean up the ss. Outside his observatory, the Republic continued its dance toward destruction, and he—the only man who could see it coming—could do nothing but bear witness.
So futures, it seed, were ant to arrive.
And maybe, just maybe, he was only ant to narrate it.
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