The coffee had gone cold again.
He didn’t notice until he’d already taken a sip, the tepid liquid sitting wrong in his stomach alongside everything else that sat wrong these days. He set the cup down carefully—both hands required now, the trembling had gotten worse—and returned to his parchnt.
The observatory was quieter than usual. It had been quiet for weeks. He’d stopped receiving visitors long ago, stopped responding to the rare correspondence that found its way to his door. The work consud everything. What little remained of him belonged to docuntation.
Write it down. Leave a record. Soone needs to know.
His quill scratched across parchnt in handwriting that had deteriorated noticeably over recent weeks. The letters were larger now, compensating for his failing eyesight. The lines wandered slightly, compensating for hands that no longer held steady.
He had weeks. Not months.
He’d known it for so ti. The visions had told him—they always told him things he’d rather not know, and his own death was no exception. He’d seen it clearly enough: a quiet morning, a chair, a cold observatory, a heart that simply decided it was finished.
Peaceful, all things considered.
He’d prevented seventeen world-ending events. He deserved peaceful.
-----
Forty-one years ago.
The vision had co without warning, as they always did in those early years before he’d learned to brace for impact.
He’d been younger then—still strong, still capable, his soul talent newly matured into sothing he was only beginning to understand. The observatory had been his for less than a decade, inherited from his predecessor who’d died of the sa thing that was killing him now: excess use of gifts humanity was never ant to possess.
The vision showed him Central.
Not the orderly administrative capital he knew. Central in ruins. The Senate building collapsed. The market districts burning. Citizens fleeing through smoke-choked streets that had been morning shopping routes hours before. And moving through it all, deliberate and unhurried, a champion Monarch unlike any docunted in the Republic’s records.
Not the standard variants. Not the spider-forms or the plague-carriers or the brute behemoths that squads hunted in organized campaigns.
This one thought just like all monarchs did.
He’d seen it in the vision—the cold intelligence behind its compound eyes, the deliberate nature of its destruction. It wasn’t feeding. It wasn’t following instinct. It was executing a strategy.
Targeting weaker Champions first. Drawing them into engagent in the northern districts before revealing the secondary swarm it had positioned in the underground drainage channels beneath the city—months of patient tunneling, hidden from surface detection, waiting for the signal.
The Republic’s three stationed Champions would die separated from each other, each believing they were the primary responder. The Senate would fall before anyone realized the northern engagent had been a feint. And without political leadership or military command during the breach, the defensive response would fragnt into individual units fighting in isolation, each unaware of the others’ positions or the actual scale of what they faced.
Central would fall in seventy-two hours.
He’d sat with the vision for three days, mapping its consequences.
Without Central, the Republic’s administrative structure would collapse entirely. Supply chains for outer outposts would fail within weeks. Vester, Grim Hollow, forty other installations would lose reinforcent and resupply. The noble houses would retreat to their territorial strongholds, abandoning commoner settlents to manage their own survival.
Within three years, the Republic would exist only in na. The actual territory it controlled would fragnt into isolated pockets fighting independent survival battles against Crawler incursions that grew bolder as human resistance weakened.
Within ten years, humanity’s population on this continent would be reduced by sixty percent.
He’d sat with those numbers for another day.
Then he’d taken his quill.
He couldn’t stop a Monarch directly. He had no combat capability—his talent was precognition and subtle influence, not destruction. He couldn’t warn the Republic without revealing himself, and revealing himself would trigger a whole lot of karmic events, political exploitation that would compromise everything he’d built. Every noble house, every Senate faction, every ambitious Champion would want to use him as a weapon or a tool.
They would make things worse.
What he could do was nudge a single thread.
He’d spent two weeks studying the branching possibilities, looking for the smallest intervention with the largest consequence. Most paths required complex cascading nudges—too expensive, too costly, too much life to sacrifice for uncertain outcos.
Then he’d found it.
A young and newly minted Champion stationed at a border outpost. Technically ineligible for Central deploynt under its current rotation schedules—her posting had five months remaining, and the administrative machinery of the Republic’s military structure didn’t permit early reassignnt without docunted cause.
But her soul talent was unique. The ability to perceive and disrupt coordinated Crawler behavior—to sense the invisible signals that Monarchs used to direct swarm attacks and introduce interference that scrambled those signals into noise.
Against a standard Monarch, the talent was moderately useful.
Against a thinking Monarch executing a complex coordinated strategy, it was devastating.
She was the answer.
He’d written two things on parchnt. First, her na. Second, a clerical error—a rotation schedule discrepancy that technically required her reassignnt to Central for administrative reconciliation. A mistake so mundane that the clerk who processed it would never think twice. So routine that it would pass through four levels of bureaucracy without a second look.
Then he’d burned the parchnt.
The cost had extracted itself imdiately. He’d felt three years leave his body like water draining from a cracked vessel. The strength in his legs diminished overnight. His vision blurred in ways that never fully corrected. The trembling in his right hand that had been occasional beca permanent.
But the woman had been reassigned to Central.
And when the Monarch had erged six months later, it had encountered sothing its intelligence hadn’t accounted for: a Champion whose talent reached into the underground channels and scrambled the swarm’s coordination before the surface engagent had even fully developed. The secondary attack had collapsed into chaos before it could execute.
The breach had been contained in eleven hours.
Forty-three casualties. Not forty-three thousand.
The woman had been celebrated as a hero. Her instinctive response to the breach, her ability to sense what others couldn’t—the Republic had praised her talent and her courage and her decisive action. She’d eventually advanced to the Senate’s military advisory board, where she’d spent decades shaping the Republic’s Crawler response doctrine.
She never knew why she’d been reassigned to Central.
She never knew that her presence there hadn’t been coincidence.
He’d never told her.
That was the nature of the work. You saved people and they thanked fate, or luck, or their own capability. They built statues to themselves and nad buildings after their houses and wrote histories that centered their own agency.
And he sat in his observatory and drank cold coffee and watched the tapestry continue its weaving.
-----
Back to the present.
He set down his quill and flexed his fingers, working through the stiffness that had settled permanently into his joints. The morning light through the observatory’s cracked do was gray and thin—autumn asserting itself over Central’s skyline with the indifference of seasons that had no interest in individual human tilines.
He returned to the parchnt in front of him.
Nas. Written at the top of the page in the clearest handwriting he could still manage.
Below them, everything he’d been able to docunt about what was coming. The war’s probable catalysts—noble house fractures amplified by Senate manipulation, foreign nations exploiting internal instability, Valdris’s economic warfare creating betrayals at critical junctures that would feel like random corruption but were actually systematic harvesting of human desperation.
The Crawler threat that would intensify precisely when humanity was least equipped to respond to it. As if the Shroud itself could sense weakness and pressed harder against the boundaries between dinsions when human attention was divided.
And these nas appearing again and again throughout the branching possibilities, in futures both catastrophic and rely terrible, in tilines where the Republic survived in diminished form and tilines where it didn’t survive at all.
Not because they were the most powerful people in the Republic. They weren’t, not yet—most of them were barely Initiates, children by any aningful asure. Not because they were politically positioned to influence outcos through institutional leverage.
But because they occupied nexus points.
He’d learned to recognize them over forty-seven years—rare individuals whose soul force signatures resonated with the tapestry itself in ways that amplified consequences beyond what their raw capability should permit. Every choice they made landed harder than physics should allow. Every relationship they built created structural connections that other people couldn’t replicate. Their presence in a situation changed the mathematics of outcos in ways he’d never been able to fully explain, even to himself.
The boy with the absurd soul force was the most significant nexus point he’d encountered in four decades of watching. A talent operating on a soul that was trying to harmonize multiple contradictory signatures simultaneously. He’d seen maybe three such individuals in the historical records, and none of them had managed the feat the boy was attempting. Two had collapsed under the dissonance. One had succeeded and beco sothing that the historical records described in terms that suggested the authors hadn’t had adequate vocabulary.
He’d nudged that boy’s fate in Grim Hollow. Burned years of his remaining life to kill an initiate tier Monarch.
He didn’t regret it.
But he also couldn’t do it again.
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