The silence of the garden was absolute, a heavy velvet shroud that seed to press against Eris’s eardrums. For a fraction of a second, she allowed herself the luxury of doubt.
I imagined it, she thought, the logic of a desperate mind grasping for a rational anchor. I am depleted, I am cold, and my mind is inventing ghosts to fill the vacuum Soren left behind.
But then the voice ca again, crisp, effortless, and possessing a tonal weight that no hallucination could mimic.
Her body reacted before her consciousness could give the order. She spun, the heavy woolen blanket swirling around her ankles like a dark cloud.
In the center of the frost-flower patch, the moonlight began to warp. It wasn’t the natural, pale glow of the moon; it was a different quality of silver entirely, a searing, pearlescent radiance that she hadn’t seen since the mont she had stood in the void between deaths.
From that light, a shape assembled itself. It was the familiar, frustrating geotry of Orrian, an entity that existed in the uncomfortable friction between having a body and rely suggesting one.
He didn’t so much appear as he "beca" present, stitching himself into the reality of Nevareth with the nonchalance of a man stepping through a doorway.
I did not imagine that, she realized, her heart hamring against her ribs with a violence that made her wince. This insolent creature is really back. And he was back like nothing happened.
Orrian didn’t offer an explanation. He didn’t offer an apology. He simply stood there, his luminous form casting long, impossible shadows across the frozen petals.
"It has been a while," he observed. His tone was cheerful, the casual remark of a being who viewed centuries as re footnotes and was only now recalling that, for mortals like Eris, months were a lifeti. He tilted his featureless head. "You missed , didn’t you hmm?"
It wasn’t a question. It was like a smug statent of an author who knew his favorite character couldn’t function without the narrator.
This piece of...
Eris didn’t answer with words. Before he could even finish the sentence, she moved.
Under any normal law of physics or taphysics, grabbing Orrian should have been impossible.
He was made of light and narrative intent, not flesh and bone. But the laws of the possible had always been negotiable where Eris was concerned.
Her hands shot out, her fingers sinking into the materialized edges of his luminous "neck."
She caught him. Her grip was iron, her knuckles white as she physically anchored the cosmic entity to the dirt of the garden. The entity shrieked as though Eris was about to dissolve him into nothing with her grip alone.
A smile spread across her face, the specific, terrifying smile that had preceded the downfall of many a Solmire nobleman. It was a pleasant expression that promised a very long, very painful conversation. Orrian took a loud gulp of air imdiately understanding he was in big trouble.
"Yes," she said, her voice dripping with a sweetness that made the frost flowers seem warm by comparison. "I missed you."
Orrian went very still. It was the stillness of a creature that had spent eons observing the universe and had just realized it had fundantally miscalculated the physical reach of its subjects.
"You are," Orrian said carefully, his voice vibrating under her palms, "going to release . Aren’t you?"
"No," Eris replied.
"Please," he tried, tapping her hands with the glowing suggestions of his own. "Release . Woman. This is highly irregular. How are you even able to hold ?"
She didn’t budge. The war of fire and ice inside her seed to pause, cowed by the sheer force of her current fury. "What took you so long? Where have you been? You used to appear whenever the mood struck you, and then you simply... stopped. Weeks. Months. Nothing."
Orrian began to look, as much as a being without a face can manage, like he was about to pass out from sheer indignity. Eris knew he couldn’t, of course, but she enjoyed the visual nonetheless. Only when she felt the hum of his essence begin to agitate did she release him, stepping back but keeping her eyes locked on the space where his eyes should be.
Orrian imdiately recoiled, shifting several steps away until he was safely out of arm’s reach. He straightened his non-existent lapels, his luminosity flickering with annoyance.
"You evil woman," he huffed, the indignation of a thousand years condensed into three words. "That was entirely uncalled for."
"Answer my question," Eris demanded.
Orrian cleared his throat, the sound like the rustling of ancient parchnt. He seed to reassemble his dignity piece by piece until he looked once more like the arbiter of fate.
"Its simple. I have been busy," he began.
Eris’s expression told him exactly what she thought of that excuse without her having to waste the breath.
"Busy managing the... overflow," Orrian elaborated, his tone turning clinical. "You aren’t the only soul in transition, Eris. There are transmigrations, other stories, other worlds. There are characters who require far more navigation than you do because they aren’t nearly as... stubborn."
He paused, and the light around him dimd into a more serious, somber hue.
"But more importantly," he continued, "I am technically breaking a rule every ti I appear here. Every ti I interact with a character or interfere in the direct flow of a fictional realm, I am committing what my kind considers a considerable offense. There are others like , Gatekeepers, who notice when the boundaries are thinned. I have already broken rather a lot of them on your behalf."
He looked around the garden, his gaze lingering on the palace walls as if he could see the eyes of celestial auditors watching from the stars.
"There are limits to how many more I can overstep before the consequences beco significant. Including right now. This very mont is a rule being broken."
Eris listened, her mind moving with the predatory speed of a tactician. She assessed his explanation, weighing the cosmic danger he described against the literal danger she was currently in.
"Fine," she said at last. "That is marginally acceptable."
Orrian was visibly relieved. The "marginally" was enough to keep him from being grabbed again.
His manner shifted then. He moved from defensive to observational, the way he always did when he found sothing interesting enough to distract him from his own rules. He looked at her, not just at her face, but at the entirety of her being, seeing the taphysical weight she was carrying.
"It seems," he said mildly, "that you have been quite busy yourself while I was absent."
He was looking at her abdon. He was looking at the storm of fire and ice raging beneath her skin. Eris didn’t flinch.
"Yes," she said. "I have been busy. And I am currently in the middle of trying to find out why my husband has disappeared into nowhere and cannot be located."
The word husband landed between them like a heavy stone. Orrian’s luminosity flickered, a slight change in the frequency of his light that suggested he had been waiting for this specific point in the conversation.
"Yes," Orrian said. "About that. That is one of the reasons I am here."
Eris stepped closer, her breath hitching. "What do you an?"
"Your husband," Orrian said, choosing his words with an almost surgical precision, "is the second person to have discovered sothing about the nature of the world he lives in."
Eris felt the world go still. "The second? You an... like ?"
"No," Orrian replied. "Not like you. Not through death, or the void, or through my intervention. The world itself revealed its own truth to him."
He drifted closer, his voice dropping into a register of genuine awe. "He did not need to die to see the seams. The cracks he saw in the sky, the ones only he could see, were the reality of this fiction showing him its own edges. And because of what he is, and because he dared to reach for those seams, he crossed the threshold."
"Where?" Eris whispered, her hands trembling under the blanket.
"He crossed the boundary between the fictional world you inhabit and the space between fiction and reality," Orrian explained. "The Void. He crossed it without aning to, without understanding the weight of what he was doing. He is currently in a place where the rules of the page do not apply."
Eris processed the words, her mind screaming a thousand questions at once. Is he alive? Is he cold? How do I get him back?
"Tell how to reach him," she said, her voice cracking for the first ti. "Tell how to bring him ho."
Orrian looked at her, and for the first ti, he didn’t look like a narrator or an architect. He looked like a man watching a tragedy he no longer knew how to write.
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