The mountain was high enough that the clouds sat below them.
Noel had chosen the place carefully. Not because it was beautiful, though it was, in the cold indifferent way that places untouched by people tended to be. He had chosen it because no one would ever co here. No pilgrim. No soldier. No noble family looking to build sothing lasting over soone else’s mory. Just rock and wind and the kind of silence that had nothing to do with peace and everything to do with distance.
Noir stood a few steps behind him, arms crossed, purple eyes fixed on the small arrangent of stones near the cliff’s edge.
"I still don’t like him," she said.
"I know."
"I never will."
Noel did not argue with that. He crouched down in front of the grave instead, brushing a loose stone back into place with one hand. It was not much to look at. A few flat rocks stacked with basic care, nothing carved into them by a craftsman, nothing expensive or ceremonial. Enough to mark that sothing had been placed here on purpose.
The inscription was his own work.
Roberto, the biggest son of a bitch in the universe.
Noel looked at it for a mont, then straightened.
"You’re really burying him," Noir said. There was no softness in her voice, but no heat either. Just the flat observation of soone trying to understand sothing she had already decided she disagreed with.
"He was my friend," Noel said simply. "I don’t forgive him. But that doesn’t change what he was."
Noir said nothing to that. She ca forward anyway and sat beside him when he lowered himself to the ground near the edge, legs hanging over the drop below. The world stretched out beneath them in silence, white and grey and impossibly far away.
Then Noel raised one hand.
The wind stopped.
It simply ceased, as if the air itself had been told to wait and had obeyed without argunt. The cold remained, but every movent around them stilled completely. Noel’s hair stopped shifting. The loose edges of his clothes went flat. Even the faint sound that wind made against stone disappeared, and what replaced it was a silence so complete it almost had weight.
Noir looked around slowly, then at him.
"Your magic feels limitless now," she said. Not with awe exactly. With the careful attention of soone noting sothing important.
Noel smiled, small and tired. "It doesn’t have limits, Noir."
She held his gaze for a mont, then looked back out over the still world below them. Neither of them spoke again for a while. They sat together at the edge of the highest place either of them had ever stood, in the silence Noel had made, with three simple words and a handful of stones marking the only grave Roberto would ever have.
Eventually Noel looked up at the sky.
"Status."
A window opened before him.
[The reward of the unique quest Save the World is available, would you like to claim it?]
This was it. The last thing. The final reward tied to the first mission that had dragged him into all of this. His story. His life in this world. The thing that had started with a screen and a sentence, and sohow ended with six dead Pillars, a broken cycle, and a world that finally belonged to itself.
Noel accepted it.
The window flickered once, then faded, and sothing light appeared in his hands. Not a weapon. Not an artifact. Not a core, a ring, or so absurd treasure from a god. Just a folded letter.
Noir leaned in slightly. "A letter?"
Noel looked down at it, and sothing in his expression shifted before he had even opened it. He already knew. Or maybe he wanted to know badly enough that his heart had decided first. He unfolded it with slow care, smoothed it out against his knee, and the mountain remained silent around them, the wind still held back by his will, the whole world waiting without knowing it.
Then Noel began to read.
Hello, Noel.
If you’re reading this, then it ans one thing. You actually did it. Congratulations.
To be honest, I never really expected this mont to co. A mont where the cycles would truly end. A mont where all of this would finally stop. I spent far too many years trying to bring it to an end, more than I would have liked, and little by little I started losing parts of myself along the way.
There are many things I never told you. For example, when you appeared in the dinsion where I imprisoned my brother, the place where I was waiting, that area was safe. It had to be. If I had brought you sowhere deeper inside, everything could have gone wrong. You might have lost your mind just by seeing what existed farther in.
You went through more than most ever could. Bombs. Infiltrations. Fear. Pain. Pressure that broke people much better than you. ntal strain that would have made many others give up. And yet you didn’t stop. You kept moving forward even when you had every excuse not to. For that, I’ll always be grateful.
By the ti you read this, I am already dead. Don’t be sad about that. If anything, these were probably the best final monts of my life. Watching you grow. Watching the world around you change. Watching things begin to move sowhere better. I think that was what allowed to hold on until the end.
And thanks to you, I was finally able to put my dear brother to rest. It was sothing I wanted for a long ti. He was a massive son of a bitch, yes, but he was still my brother in the end. I felt like I had to do it myself sohow. Thanks to you, I managed it. Now both of us can finally sleep.
This letter is the last thing you will ever receive from . After this, the system will shut down forever. You won’t be able to use it again, though I don’t think you’ll need it. You had to reach an absurd level of power to do what you just did. At this point, the system would only be clinging to soone who no longer needs chains.
To be honest with you, I had my eyes on you for a very long ti. I always thought you had terrible luck. Even back on Earth, I watched you for more than you ever knew. Maybe that was part of why I kept believing in you. Soone with that much bad luck surviving that long had to be stubborn in a special way.
So I’ll give you one last request. You can think of it as a quest, if that makes it easier for you.
Live a good life, Noel. You deserve it more than anyone.
Your friend, Noctis.
When Noel reached the end, he did not move for a while. The paper remained steady in his hands, but his eyes had gone wet sowhere between the middle and the final lines, and now he simply looked at the signature as if reading it one more ti might let the voice linger a little longer.
Noctis was gone. After everything, after all those years and all that quiet suffering behind the system and the missions and the small manipulations that had shaped Noel’s path from the shadows, his wish had finally been fulfilled. The cycle had ended. Elarin was gone. The world had been left alone.
And the last thing Noctis had given him was not power. It was permission.
Noel folded the letter again with even more care than before and slipped it away safely. Sothing in the air changed after that, a faint sense of closure, like a door that had remained open for too long finally settling into place.
The system was gone.
Noir looked at him quietly. She did not ask what was written there. Not at first. Then, after a mont, her voice ca softer than usual. "Was it from him?"
"Yeah." Noel stood up from the edge of the cliff, one last glance passing over Roberto’s little grave, then over the endless world below. The mountain remained still for a mont more, untouched by wind, untouched by hurry.
Then he rested one hand lightly on Noir’s head. "Let’s go ho."
Darkness bent around them. "Spatial Shift."
Years passed.
Not in a rush, not in the violent blur that had swallowed so much of Noel’s life before. They passed in seasons, in classes, in als shared at ho, in children growing little by little until their voices and footsteps beca part of the shape of every day. Ti stopped feeling like sothing hunting him. It beca sothing he was allowed to live inside.
The Imperial Academy of Valor changed with him in it. Noel ended up becoming a teacher there, though no one in their right mind ever asked him to handle theory. He taught practical spell combat instead, and before long his class beca the most sought-after in the entire academy. Part of that was because of who he was. The man who had ended the Circle. The only Manacode in the world. The one no one else had managed to match. But the other part was simpler. Noel taught in a way people never forgot. Hard and direct.
Marcus used to say he would still catch up one day. He never stopped saying it, even after the years made it obvious that catching Noel had beco less a goal and more a tradition between them. He and Clara built their family and took control of the Nivaria Estate, with Clara standing at its head exactly as she should. Marcus still challenged Noel from ti to ti, and their duels ended up drawing crowds large enough to feel like festivals. Students, nobles, wandering mages, all of them gathered to watch Marcus get thrown around the arena and then stand up swearing that next ti would be different.
Garron opened a restaurant in Valor. Noel had laughed the first ti he heard it, then laughed even harder when he learned it was actually good. Annoyingly good. The place beca famous for massive portions, a loud atmosphere, and Garron personally walking out to threaten anyone who insulted the food.
Laziel sohow ended up with Anastasia from Luceria Grand Academy, which remained one of the most absurd things Noel had ever witnessed. The news spread through their circle so fast it practically beca a celebration before the two of them even had the chance to explain how it had happened. Noel never let him live it down.
Seraphina was crowned empress in the end, and no one with functioning eyes could pretend she had not been born for it. Balthor married and had a son of his own. Daemar remained headmaster, as if the academy itself had decided it could not look right under anyone else. House Thorne continued existing sowhere off to the side of the world, but Noel never returned to them. He had no reason to.
Charlotte left the role of Saint after Orthran finally passed away from old age, and in ti stepped into his place. Elena built a quieter life filled with children, mornings, gardens, and the kind of peace she had more than earned. Elyra inherited the full weight of her family’s business empire and then expanded it until half the world seed to move through her hands at so point. Selene never truly forgave her mother, but she went on to have a daughter of her own, and that little girl was considered a prodigy almost from the beginning. A child born from Noel and Selene had never been going to live an ordinary life.
All four of them stayed with him. That had never been in question.
And through all of it, Noel lived too. That was the point. His ho stayed loud enough to feel warm, and as the years passed it only grew louder. Nicolas, Elyria, and Cloe had long since beco the oldest among a house full of younger siblings, each one arriving with their own personality and their own particular way of making ordinary mornings feel like organized chaos. The mansion that had once felt large beca sothing else entirely. Lived in. Full. Noel’s.
Noir remained close in the way she always had, never quite losing the habit of following him around even after she beca more than capable of terrifying half the world by herself. So days were busy. So peaceful. So exhausting beyond reason. But they were his days, and that alone made them worth keeping.
On one quiet afternoon, after finishing another class at the academy and watching his students leave half-awed and half-terrified by what they had just been put through, Noel stood alone for a mont with the fading sounds of campus life around him. The sky above Valor had already begun slipping toward evening.
"Spatial Shift."
The world folded, and when it settled again he was standing in a cetery.
Erick’s grave was there, just as it always was, kept clean and rembered the way it deserved to be. Beside it stood another, simpler than most around it but no less cared for. Noel had made this one himself. The stone was smooth, the inscription clear.
The true savior of the world. Noctis.
Noel stood before it in silence, one hand resting in his pocket. He ca often, not out of grief or guilt, but because mory mattered. Because gratitude mattered. Because so promises were not the kind you fulfilled once and then set down.
Roberto had told him to live a good life. Noctis had asked the sa. And Noel had done exactly that. He had taught, loved, raised children, laughed with friends who had survived long enough to grow older alongside him. He had mourned the dead without letting death hollow out the shape of his whole life. He had kept going, but toward ho this ti, toward ordinary days, toward the kind of future that n like Roberto and Noctis had wanted him to reach even when they could not reach it themselves.
The evening breeze moved softly through the cetery. Noel stayed there until the sky darkened further, looking at both graves, the old one and the newer one, each tied to a different kind of loss and a different kind of debt.
Then he breathed out slowly and turned to leave.
He was no longer fighting fate. He was simply living.
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