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"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it."

***

Na: Kaelen Leone

Level: 1

Class: [Lord of Stolen Tales]

Authority: ∞

Strength: C-500

Dexterity: C-500

Agility: C-500

Endurance: C-451

Magic: F-160

Skills:

[Narrative Appraisal]

[Skill Plunder]

[Master of Disguise] (1/3)

[Silent Step]

[Thread of Fate]

The parchnt slipped from Lyra’s fingers.

It drifted toward the floor in lazy spirals, giving her plenty of ti to stare at that infinity symbol where my Authority should have been. When she finally looked up at again, her crimson eyes held sothing that made deeply uncomfortable.

Religious awe. The kind of look you see on zealots who just witnessed their god show up in person.

Oh no. Please don’t.

"Infinite Authority," she whispered. The words ca out barely audible, like speaking them too loud might break sothing. "You broke the System itself, Master."

I let myself smile. Not the confident smirk of a protagonist. More like the tired expression of a guy who’d just pulled off the dumbest hack in history and still couldn’t quite believe it worked.

"I prefer to think of it as creative problem-solving." I bent down and picked up the fallen docunt. Placed it back on the desk with the kind of care you’d give a live grenade. "The Rune of Diminishnt was the key. Instead of trying to hide my power inside the System’s rules, I used it to create a mathematical impossibility. A paradox. Infinite Authority minus one. The System’s processing core couldn’t handle the recursive error, so it gave everything rather than let itself crash trying to calculate nothing."

God, I sound like I’m explaining a software exploit to a classroom.

Which, technically, I am. The System is just code. Very pretty, very deadly code written by sothing with a cruel sense of humor about narrative structure.

Lyra rose slowly from where she’d been kneeling. Her movents were careful. Controlled. Like soone whose entire worldview had just shifted on its axis. The reverence in her expression was almost painful to look at.

I’m still not used to being worshipped. It’s weird. Please stop.

"What does this an for us?" Her voice had steadied. The tactical part of her brain was catching up. "For our plans?"

"It ans the real work starts now." I walked to the window and looked out at the darkened estate grounds. The moon hung low and full, turning the Leone gardens silver and black.

Sowhere out there, the original tiline was still trying to drag back. Still pushing to make the pathetic villain who gets his mana core shattered by the hero in front of a cheering crowd.

Sorry, plot. I just broke your most fundantal constraint. The script is officially trash.

"I’ve spent weeks building one asset. You." I didn’t turn around. "Every resource, every bit of attention, all of it invested in turning you from a disposable background character into sothing the author never planned for. Now it’s ti to expand."

I pulled a folded parchnt from my jacket pocket. Different from the status sheet. This one was worn at the edges from how many tis I’d reviewed it. Revised it. Rethought the approach. I handed it to her without ceremony.

She unfolded it with the sa reverent care she’d shown my stats. Her eyes found the list of nas. Each one had brief notes beside it. Personality. Skills. And most importantly, the date they were supposed to die.

"Academy students," I explained. Watched her scan each line with growing intensity. "The extras. Background characters whose tragedies exist to make Leo feel sad for a few Chapters before he moves on. Every na on that list is soone the story marked for disposal."

Her crimson eyes moved down the page like a predator cataloging prey. "You want to save them, Master."

"I want to recruit them."

I took the list back. Ran my finger down the nas. Each one represented hours of plot details I’d morized. Character sheets I’d once mocked on internet forums. Tragic backstories I’d dismissed as lazy writing.

Now they were real people. Walking toward scripted doom.

Funny how that changes your perspective.

One na caught my attention. I rembered the Chapter where this character died. So pointless. So obviously manipulative. I’d written a three-paragraph rant about bad storytelling in the comnt section.

And now I’m trying to prevent it. The irony is not lost on .

"A recruitnt drive." Understanding hit Lyra’s face. The awe faded into sothing sharper. More practical. The tactical mind I’d been training for weeks finally engaged with the problem. "You’re building an army of the discarded."

"A family of the forgotten." The words ca out softer than I’d ant. I folded the list and tucked it back into my pocket. Felt its weight against my chest like a reminder of what I’d signed up for. "The Twilight Society was always supposed to be more than just us. A haven for people the story abandoned. A place where expendable extras could beco sothing the author never imagined."

She stepped closer. Her footsteps made no sound on the stone floor. Good. The training was paying off. Close enough now that I caught the sll of lavender soap mixed with steel oil. An odd combination that sohow fit her perfectly.

"What would you have do, Master?"

"Sa thing you’ve always done. Be my eyes and ears where I can’t go." I gestured toward the window. The distant lights of the Academy towers glowed on the horizon. "But the scope just got bigger. The Academy is full of students who think they’re worthless. Destined for nothing except supporting roles in soone else’s story. Find them. Watch them. Learn their patterns, their fears, what drives them."

"And when I’ve learned these things?" That eager edge crept into her voice. The predator ready for the hunt.

"You report back. We decide together who’s worth saving." I reached for her hand without really thinking about it. Her pulse jumped under my fingers. Her expression stayed controlled, but her body couldn’t hide the reaction.

The contact grounded both of us. Reminded this wasn’t just theory. Real people’s lives were on the line here.

"Not everyone can be saved," I said. "So people are fine being background characters. They’ve made peace with their roles. But the ones who want more? The ones who feel the injustice of their predetermined fates?" I rubbed my thumb across her knuckles.

"Those are the ones we want. Those are the ones who’ll fight to rewrite their own endings."

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