It was funny.
So very funny.
So funny she could laugh.
And so she laughed.
A sharp, bitter thing. A sound that carried through the silence like a blade through silk. The kind of laugh that scraped its way up her throat, hollow and rasping, as though her body was rejecting it. It wasn't joy. It wasn't amusement. It was something deeper, something broken, something spiraling through the vast emptiness inside her.
She died in a hate crime.
A ridiculous thing to happen in the year 2088, when people liked to pretend they had moved beyond such things. That society had grown, had evolved, had left such ugliness in the past. That hatred had been washed away by progress. But it hadn’t. It had only been dressed up in better words, in cleaner veneers, in justifications that made it palatable to those who didn’t want to see it for what it was.
She had been on a simple family outing. Just a day out, nothing special. A meal at a little place her husband liked, their children laughing at the table, the world moving along in its predictable, mundane way.
And then the protest started.
A sea of people, voices raised, furious, self-righteous. Their words burned with the kind of conviction that only the truly blind could wield. Decrying those who suffered in their own bodies. Howling for their submission. Calling for their death.
She wasn’t even part of it. Just caught in the crossfire. Her family, too.
Her husband stood in front of her. Her children behind. A human wall, instinctively trying to shield her.
And then—
A gunshot.
Just one.
A single, deafening crack.
And then nothing.
No pain. No time to process what had happened. No final thoughts, no desperate scramble to stay in her body. Just an ending, a sudden severance.
And yet, it wasn’t the end.
A deal was made.
A pact formed.
A new body. A new life. A world that wasn't Earth, where the air tasted different and the sky had its own unfamiliar hue. Where magic thrummed beneath the surface, where creatures walked that had never belonged in human nightmares or myths. Where she could be something else.
Something more.
And oh, her new instincts were
delightful
.
She was a monster.
And she
loved
it.
Not just because of the power. Not just because of the raw, visceral thrill of it. But because it
fit
. Because it was
right
. Because for the first time in forever, she wasn’t forcing herself into a mold that had never been shaped for her. She could be what she was without apology.
And the first person she met in that new life showed her kindness.
Didn’t flinch at her teeth. Didn’t recoil at her hunger. Didn’t demand she make herself small or safe or easy to swallow.
They traveled together. For months upon months, moving through landscapes that had never existed in the world she once knew. They fought side by side, lived in the same spaces, saw things that no human eye had ever seen.
They fell in love.
And love, true love, was something she had known before. In her past life. But it was different now, deeper, because there was no need to carve away pieces of herself to fit.
And now—
Now, one of them was battered, broken, brought to the very brink of death.
And the other was dead.
The laughter broke apart, shattering into nothingness.
She stood in the wreckage of it all, ichor dripping from her wounds, her breath ragged, her mind unraveling thread by thread. She couldn’t process it. Couldn’t
understand
it. How could the world take something
again
? How could she
lose
again?
How could Rava be dying?
How could she be
gone
?
No.
No, it wasn’t real. It couldn’t be real.
Vivienne
refused
to let it be real.
She had been given this new life, this new body, this new self. And she had been given
her
.
She wasn’t dead.
This world couldn’t exist without Rava.
It wouldn’t exist without Rava.
Lyridia stepped back, each thunderous footfall sending tremors through the war-torn earth beneath her. Dust and shattered stone scattered with every movement, the air thick with the lingering echoes of battle. She was not a warrior. Never had been.
She was a storyteller. A poet.
And yet, when Vailora fell, she had known what had to be done.
It had been terrifying. The titans were not like mortals, not even like the gods who ruled over them. They were closer in form and nature to the Primordials, vast and unfathomable, beings of raw existence rather than mere flesh and bone. To strike against one was to challenge something ancient, something that had stood since the shaping of the world itself.
But she had
succeeded
.
Nythara lay motionless in the wilds, her immense form already dissolving into shimmering strands of aether, the divine essence unraveling and seeping back into the fabric of the world. It would take centuries—perhaps longer—but she would reform. Titans always did.
Still, Lyridia could only
hope
that this was what the thing that
pretended
to be the goddess of chaos had wanted. Maybe it was. Maybe it wasn’t. It was impossible to say. But Lyridia was not made to act with certainty—she was made to
guide
, to
nudge
, to shape the tale in subtle ways.
And so she had.
She had turned threats toward Akhenna’s champion, toward that little void in existence, ensuring they were obstacles she could overcome. Not easy, never easy—where was the joy in that? But challenges. Trials that forced her to
grow
.
She had tricked one of Praxus’ champions into hurling herself into the fray, throwing everything she had against the beast. A necessary sacrifice. A calculated move. All without the primordial deity of order ever realizing
who
had set the pieces in motion.
And now, she had
subdued
the Dawn Titan.
The greatest threat to the champion of chaos had been removed from the field.
She couldn’t do
everything
, of course. That would make for a
bad
story, and the void in existence—her champion—wanted
entertainment
. Struggles, losses, victories paid for in blood and defiance. A tale worth
telling
.
Then—
She
felt
it.
A presence, sudden and overwhelming, erupting into the heart of the besieged city. A new force, a new thread woven into the grand tapestry of fate. Lyridia's mind reeled, her senses flooding with the weight of its existence.
It had a
storyline
already. A destiny tied to it, thick and unyielding.
Praxus had made another champion.
While he still had one left.
And this one—this one was
so much more powerful
than should have been allowed.
A shiver of anticipation rippled through her.
Akhenna had
toed the line
before, but with this?
The Concord was shattered.
The fragile balance that had held for so long was broken.
There would be war.
Lyridia could feel it unfurling before her, the threads of fate twisting, weaving, pulling tight in preparation for the storm to come. A tale not seen since the
First War
. Not since the
Sundering
.
And war—oh, war made for
such good stories
.
Tragedy. Triumph. The fall of great powers, the rise of new ones.
Just as it had been when she herself had ascended, borne aloft by the cataclysm that had shattered the world.
The next great tale was beginning.
And Lyridia was both horrified and enraptured.
She let out a slow breath and
willed
herself smaller, withdrawing from the towering divine presence she had worn moments ago. Her body folded in on itself like ink washing away on parchment, reforming into her preferred guise—an unassuming, bookish human, the image of a scholar caught somewhere in the middle of her presumed mortal years.
Mortal.
That was what she needed to be right now. Small. Forgettable. A witness, not a force.
Then the world
lurched.
It was as if the very fabric of reality had twisted, coiling in on itself before snapping loose. A sickening, cosmic
wrongness
spread out in all directions, something she could not see but
felt
in the depths of her being.
The ground beneath her buckled.
She was thrown violently off her feet, her body tumbling in a graceless sprawl. The impact barely registered—what mattered was what she
felt
.
Something had
happened.
Something
dreadful
.
Something
horrible
.
She scrambled up, bracing herself against the trembling earth. Her breath hitched, her senses screaming as she reached out—searching,
feeling
, trying to understand what had just been unleashed upon the world.
And then she
felt it.
The little void.
The one that mimicked the Creator of all things.
It had
cracked.
Then it had
expanded.
So fast.
Too
fast.
Like some fundamental barrier had been shattered, like something once bound in place had finally been
let go.
Lyridia’s form flickered, and in less than an instant, she was elsewhere—standing atop a distant hill, the winds tugging at her clothes, her hair whipping wildly around her face. The siege-ravaged Lekine city sprawled below, but her gaze was locked on the horror consuming it.
And horror it
was.
A
formless mass
, a writhing nightmare of
tentacles, eyes, and mouths,
surged through the ruins. It was spreading, creeping outward with grotesque
hunger
, enveloping stone and steel, flesh and bone, swallowing half the city whole.
And it was
still expanding.
Its tendrils lashed out, slamming into buildings and walls, crumbling them to dust.
Its eyes—uncountable, shifting, forming and unforming—stared in every direction and
none at all.
Its mouths—dozens,
hundreds
—gaped wide, their voices an ear-splitting
chorus
of wails, whispers, and inhuman
laughter.
And the armies below?
They ran.
Aegis and Drakthar alike, enemies locked in brutal combat only moments before, now fled in utter
vain
. It did not matter who they were. Their banners did not matter. Their allegiances did not matter.
The mass consumed
indiscriminately.
This was not war.
This was
annihilation.
And the worst part?
Lyridia
knew
who had done this.
Who had
become
this.
The little void had broken, and in its place—
Something else had awakened.
“Shit, shit, shit, shit!” Kivvy
yelled,
her voice nearly drowned out by the cacophony around her as she practically
flew
down the stairs of the city wall.
Her feet barely touched the stone, boots skidding on the dust-coated steps. One wrong move, one misstep, and she’d
tumble
—but there was no time to be careful.
She had seen something.
Something massive.
Something
wrong.
Is that Vivienne?!
The thought rattled in her skull, barely processing through the sheer
panic
flooding her veins.
She hit the ground level in a near-stumble and
bolted
toward the castle’s side entrance. The main doors were no good—barricaded, barred, reinforced by panicked defenders who were too busy
fighting for their lives
to let in a frantic goblin.
And even if they weren’t, there was no way she could budge those doors. They took
several
big folk to open on a normal day.
So the servant’s door it was.
Her legs burned.
Her lungs
ached
.
She wasn’t built for this. A decade and a half
holed up in a workshop
did not a fit goblin make, and every ragged breath felt like she was swallowing
fire
.
But she didn’t slow.
Didn’t
dare
.
Because if that
thing
out there was Vivienne—
Then she needed to get to Renzia.
Now.
Thankful for her sharp memory, Kivvy raced through the winding corridors, navigating the castle’s familiar halls with ease. Her small frame let her slip past soldiers and panicked civilians, darting between their legs as they clutched weapons or whispered prayers to whatever gods might still be listening. The air was thick with sweat, fear, and the lingering sting of smoke from the battle outside.
She turned a corner—then
froze
.
Bodies.
A half-dozen figures sprawled before the door she had left behind. Their blood pooled thick on the stone floor, reflecting the dim torchlight in eerie, rippling puddles.
They weren’t Drakthar.
They weren’t Aegis soldiers either.
They were dressed in black—
too
black—loose-fitting garments meant to meld with the shadows, meant to conceal movement.
Assassins.
Their weapons lay scattered at odd angles, curved daggers slick with their own blood, throwing needles embedded in the walls where they had missed their mark.
Kivvy
swallowed hard
.
She tightened her grip on Burnstick, the weight of the weapon a small comfort in her hands. Slowly, carefully, she crept forward, heart hammering in her chest.
Were they all dead?
Had the others survived?
The door to the room stood ajar, a jagged splintered edge where someone had tried to force their way in.
She took a breath and leaned in to peer inside—
And stopped
dead
as a pair of bloodstained needles hovered
inches
from her face.
She
squeaked
in surprise but forced herself
not
to flinch, not to
move
.
The needles lingered, trembling slightly, before retracting just as quickly as they had appeared.
Renzia stood in the doorway, unmoving. Blood smeared the canvas of her fingers, soaking into the seams of her wooden joints. She looked like a statue, frozen in time, save for the way her head
twitched
slightly, the dull glow of her gem flickering in the dim light.
“Kiv-vy,” she rasped through her gem, her voice disjointed and static-laced.
Kivvy let out the breath she had been holding and gave a small nod.
The needles fully withdrew.
She swallowed again, glancing past Renzia to the others inside. “What happened here?”
Renzia tilted her head slightly. “Enemies,” she said, voice crackling like an old recording. “Came to ta-ke young miss-tress.”
Kivvy’s stomach turned.
Someone had come for Liora.
It was even
better
than she had dreamed.
Not that she dreamed—no, not in the way mortals did.
She
had no need for such fragile hallucinations of possibility. She
knew
. She had
seen
this unfolding from the moment existence first exhaled itself into being.
An inevitability.
A tragedy undone.
A horror wrought.
She almost pitied what was to come. Almost. But pity was a sentiment for lesser things, for those bound by time and consequence.
She
was neither. She had no beginning, no end—only the ever-weaving, ever-winding
middle
that unfurled in infinite spirals around her.
The first thought. The first breath. The first story.
She
, the origin.
And this moment? This grotesque symphony of fate? It was but one of many. A spectacle among spectacles, a melody within a grander cacophony. There were
millions
of realms,
countless
threads woven and tangled in maddening complexity, and yet—
And yet—
This one
thrilled
her.
Her head
jerked
to the side in an unnatural tilt, neck bending at angles not meant for perception. That
pestilent
omniscience crept in again, threading through her thoughts like veins of molten light. It always did, when she wasn’t careful. When she wasn’t
watching herself watch.
With a flick of will—a mere sliver of her vast existence—she
partitioned
. She folded the knowing away, locked it in some faraway corridor of reality, where it would run its course without her ceaseless meddling.
And then, she
laughed
.
A sound without a source, without a throat, without breath or limit.
A laugh so deep and
wide
that it bled into all things, rattling the bones of dying stars, whispering through the gaps between thoughts, echoing in the places where light had never touched.
A laugh that could be heard by
any
who dared to listen.
Perhaps…
Perhaps she could meddle a little
more
.
Her partition for this realm was
passive
, a whisper in the dark, a guiding hand that never left fingerprints. A breath against the lattice of fate, imperceptible even to the gods who thought themselves omniscient.
They
never noticed the gentle nudges, the unseen adjustments, the quiet unraveling of rules long thought unbreakable.
That was the game. That was the joy.
Watching
without interfering.
But oh, how she
ached
to reach deeper, to
press
her will into the bones of reality and mold it into something even
greater
.
This realm had already yielded such delights. Her partition—so carefully restrained—had nudged a god of
order
, of all things, into
breaking
his own laws.
Magnificent!
A cosmic principle, a being of rigid and unyielding design, forced to shatter its own commandments under her invisible hand.
But it wasn’t
enough
.
She wanted
more
.
More
drama
. More
stakes
. Higher highs and lower, deeper,
bottomless
lows.
She wanted despair that could crack the hearts of the divine, triumphs that could shake the very pillars of creation. She wanted ruin and revelation entwined, suffering that teetered on the edge of meaning, victories so grand they could only be paid for in the coin of devastation.
She wanted the story to be worthy of her eyes.
And so, she leaned closer—just a little—just enough to let a single thread slip through her grasp, just enough to
let something happen
that shouldn’t.
Let’s see what they
do
with it.