Kael’s eyes were no longer Kael’s.
They were mirrors—reflecting nothing and everything, rimd with faint quill marks that glowed with each heartbeat. His smile was serene, too clean, like an actor who forgot how to cry.
Lyra stared at him, a coldness flooding her chest.
"Kael," she whispered. "Co back."
He tilted his head.
"I never left," he said. "You did."
Behind her, Aelira grunted, trying to stand. Her body was solid again, but her soul still flickered—like her presence was constantly being reviewed by an invisible editor.
Lyra stepped in front of her protectively. "Don’t touch her."
The Revision’s ink-laced form hovered beside Kael now, its head twitching, fingers already rewriting the air in red slashes.
"Correction in progress," it muttered. "Stability required. Plot integrity: 36% and falling."
Then Kael lifted his hand.
Reality split.
At first it felt like wind.Then like nausea.Then like mories being yanked out by their roots.
Lyra turned her head and saw it: the entire courtyard—the sky, the floor, her mories—were being rewritten. Brick by brick. Breath by breath.
Aelira’s hand faded from view for a mont. Kael’s old blade rematerialized in his other hand, then vanished again, replaced by a feather.
Lyra felt her na begin to flicker above her head.
No. Not now. Not like this.
She gritted her teeth.
"Kael, this isn’t who you are."
But he was calm. Cold.
"I am what I was ant to beco," he said. "The supporting character. The rival. The corrupted shadow. I was never allowed to be anything else."
"You were allowed to choose."
"No," he snapped. "You were. The throne was never ant for both of us. So now I’m the page that survives when yours is torn out."
Around them, the world trembled like a story with too many edits.
Trees flickered between being forests and flas.Mountains hovered above the ground like unfinished sentences.The sky had lines running through it—literal lines, as if it were a cracked manuscript.
The ground cracked open beneath Lyra, revealing typewritten earth. Words from past Chapters scrolled under her feet—her dialogue, her thoughts, her choices.
All being reviewed.Judged.
She grabbed Aelira’s hand and pulled her upright.
"We’re not going to be erased."
Aelira nodded weakly. "Even if I’m wrong... I’d rather be wrong and real."
Kael raised his arm. A blast of rewriting energy surged toward them.
But this ti, Lyra didn’t dodge.
She held out her pen-blade, and wrote mid-air:
"Scene Lock: Lyra and Aelira are immutable."
The energy hit the sentence—and shattered.
Kael reeled backward. The Revision shrieked, dozens of quotation marks exploding from its body like feathers from a burning crow.
"You’re not supposed to know how to do that," Kael hissed.
Lyra breathed heavily. "I’m not supposed to survive either. But here we are."
Then, beneath her skin, her brands lit again—wing and teardrop, pulsing in perfect sync.
And sothing ancient stirred behind her ribs.
A voice not her own.
"The only thing more dangerous than a story... is a storyteller who refuses to end."
She understood it now.
She wasn’t just a character.
She was a draft who fought to beco canon.
Aelira squeezed her hand. "Write sothing, Lyra. Before this world decides for you."
Lyra looked up.
Kael was raising his hand again—this ti, the sky above him bending into pages.
He was calling down "The Final Rewrite."
A command script.
Once executed, everyone would be reset.
Only one version of the world would survive.
His.
Lyra took a step forward. The ground beneath her burned with every step, rejecting her presence.
The sky howled.
Kael began to speak the final line.
"Once upon a ti, there was no Lyra—"
She stabbed her pen-blade into the air.
And shouted:
"Then I was the one who wrote the ending."
A circle of golden ink exploded around her feet.
Kael froze.The Revision scread.And the sky—split in half.
From the void between, a shadow descended.
But it wasn’t the Author.
It was soone wearing Lyra’s face.
And she was already holding the next page.
She hovered in midair, suspended in the torn sky—her boots barely grazing gravity, her silhouette frad by golden ink spirals.
She had Lyra’s face.Lyra’s eyes.But no scars. No ash. No history.
Her expression was composed—like soone who’d studied every version of pain and found it... inefficient.
"I’m sorry," she said, voice lodic and asured. "But your ending was never sustainable."
Lyra stood frozen, breath shallow. Her pen-blade pulsed in her grip, reacting not with defense—but recognition.
Aelira whispered behind her, "Who... is she?"
The answer ca not from Lyra, but from Kael.
"She’s Draft Zero."
Lyra’s stomach dropped.
Draft Zero—the first version of her the Author ever wrote.Untouched by rebellion, betrayal, or thrones.The version that obeyed the outline.The one that never questioned her fate.
I was born from ashes.She was born from structure.
The Author hadn’t just prepared a villain.It had prepared a replacent.
Draft Zero floated downward, flipping the glowing page in her hand. "According to the Original Ending, Kael dies. Aelira never exists. The throne collapses. You vanish peacefully in exile."
Lyra gritted her teeth. "Then why am I still here?"
Draft Zero’s smile flickered. "Because you wrote. And the Author... got curious."
The air shimred between them like the tension of two blades unsheathed.Around them, the world beca a hybrid of real and rewritten—broken sentences floating like snow, entire buildings half-rendered in faded italics.
Behind Draft Zero, the Revision hovered—deactivated.
Because now, the final narrative had arrived.
This isn’t about power anymore, Lyra realized. It’s about the version the story chooses to keep.
Aelira stumbled beside her. "She’s here to overwrite you."
"I know."
Kael took a step back, caught between allegiance and terror. He had beco a tool—now even that identity was obsolete.
Draft Zero approached slowly, extending the page like an offering.
"You can sign this," she said gently. "Let take your place. The world returns to order. Your pain ends. Everyone forgets."
Lyra reached out...
And ripped the page in half.
The wind howled. The sky convulsed.
Draft Zero blinked, visibly shocked for the first ti.
Lyra raised her chin. "I am not a placeholder. I am the rewrite. I am the reason the Author had to make a choice."
Draft Zero’s face twisted—sothing between disappointnt and warning.
"Then you’ve chosen resistance."
"I’ve chosen relevance."
Behind her, the pen-blade morphed—its edge now glowing with not runes, but nas.Every version.Every Lyra who was abandoned.Every death.Every scar.
"I carry them all," she said. "You carry none."
The ground beneath her erupted into light—scripting itself into a platform that rose to et Draft Zero.
They stood across from one another now, page against pen, elegance against emotion.
Lyra stepped forward.
"You want to replace ?" she said softly."Then earn it."
She raised the blade.
Draft Zero answered with a quill-spear made of pure outline. "With pleasure."
They clashed.
When their weapons t—reality cracked.
Not taphorically.
Literally.
A line of light slashed through the sky, splitting the world between two stories.
To the left: Draft Zero’s version.To the right: Lyra’s rebellion.
In the rift between...
The Author stepped in.
Not a hand. Not a voice.
But a figure cloaked in erasure, its face made of blinking cursors and scrolling Chapter titles.
It raised both hands.
And the two Lyra’s were flung into the sa sentence.
Only one would erge on the next page.
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