The air convulsed.
Arbiter's fractured hand lifted, trembling with faint golden fissures glowing along her wrist and palm. Her breath pulsed once, shuddering against the silence, and the world responded with a deafening groan. Cracks spiderwebbed across the castle walls, violet thread-light leaking from the seams as if the very foundation of time was bleeding.
Shadows peeled from the walls. Shapes. Hunched silhouettes, flickering as if glimpsed through shattered glass, their forms bent and smeared across fractured space. They dragged the walls, the floor, even the air with them, distorting reality like wet paint smeared across stone. Fingers lengthened into tendrils, legs bent and reformed mid-step. No two shapes held the same outline for more than a second.
I braced my feet, blade crackling with green thread-light, the glow coiling up my arms like veins of living fire. My heart hammered so loud it almost drowned-out the screeching noise the shadows made as they crawled forward.
Konrad dropped into a low stance, golden sword glinting faintly. His breath was slow, measured, but his hands were wrapped so tightly around the hilt that thin trails of thread-light pulsed from his skin.
Erich shifted, barely visible as a blur of blue motion. His daggers spun once, twice, leaving arcs of sharp golden light in the dense mist. He flashed me a sharp, quick grin.
"Ready?" he murmured.
I barely nodded. I didn't trust my voice to say it out-loud.
Then—the first wave surged.
The creatures lunged forward in a wave of writhing limbs, dragging shards of space and time in their wake. Where they passed, the ground pulsed, stretching and crumbling at once. The nearest wall flickered between ancient stone and fresh marble. The ceiling arched high, then collapsed inward, then vanished altogether into open sky. Time convulsed, bending forward and backward, reality folding in on itself.
I roared as I plunged into the gray, blade arching in a wide, sweeping slash. Green thread-light blazed along the edge, hissing as it met the nearest creature. It tore apart with a ripple of distortion, its body splitting into threads that scattered like sparks, its death collapsing the stretched space around it with a violent snap.
Erich blurred into motion, golden daggers flashing in rapid arcs, cutting limbs before they fully formed, darting between twisted arms that extended halfway through one second and halfway into the next. His footfalls cracked the stone, shattering them into suspended fragments that hung weightless in the distorted field.
Konrad held the rear, his blade a barrier of golden force. A creature lunged, its claws flickering across mismatched moments. Konrad met it head-on, locking its twisted limb against his blade, freezing the entire limb mid-motion, and then driving his sword upward in a brutal cleave that shattered the creature's form into splintering light.
But the battle wasn't fair.
The very space we fought in twisted with every moment. Gravity tilted without warning, pulling us sideways into walls that weren't there a heartbeat ago. The floor cracked open, revealing impossible voids that flickered between past and present. I felt my own blade lag for a second, my swing slowed by pockets of heavy time. I shoved forward through the resistance, severing a creature that dissolved into a soundless wail.
Erich blasted forward, a flash of light ripping between two massive beasts stitched from skeletal limbs and unraveling futures. His daggers arced wide, slashing through their warped spines, golden sparks raining down as their bodies folded inward and imploded in slow-motion collapse.
Konrad braced his legs, absorbing the impact of another surge. A massive claw slammed against his blade, the force shattering the air in a ripple of golden shock. He grunted, pushing back, his blade flaring as it locked the creature mid-attack. For a second, the entire field froze around him—I could see the ripple spread, halting the nearest creatures in place, giving Erich a critical window to tear them down one by one.
We moved as one. Strike, shield, rewind, blink, repeat.
We fought not just against the creatures, but against the very collapse of the battlefield. Walls bent in on themselves, ceilings fragmented into stuttering loops, the floor stretched and tore until I felt myself running up what should have been a vertical surface. My breath came sharp, rapid, each inhale burning like ice in my chest.
Wave after wave.
And still, Arbiter watched, slowly stepping backward into the heart of the castle, her fractured silhouette fading into the dense, violet mist.
The final wave rose.
The ground cracked. Columns crumbled. The air thickened until it was hard to breathe. Shadows loomed taller, spindlier, their bodies flickering with remnants of shattered moments. Erich swore under his breath, shifting his grip. Konrad set his jaw, golden blade raised. I tightened my hold, feeling the pulsing heartbeat of my own thread-light dim slightly with exhaustion.
"Push through!" I snarled, my voice barely carrying over the roar of the collapsing hall.
We surged forward.
The three of us cut through the final tide, every strike splitting the air with pulses of radiant light. Sparks and fragments of broken moments remained down around us, each step blasting through crumbling stone and smeared memory. THe air blurred at the edges. Time dilated, compressing into jagged pockets where movements stuttered unnaturally.
Konrad slammed his blade through the final beast, golden light detonating outward in a shockwave that splintered the ground, the collapsing space cracking open like shattering glass. Erich blinked through the mist, landing beside me, breathing hard, shaking with raw effort.
Before us, the mist parted.
The shattered gates to the inner sanctum waited.
Arbiter was gone, vanished inside.
I straightened slowly, gripping my blade, green thread-light flickering like a fading heartbeat.
"We go," I whispered.
And we ran inside.
***
We ran through the shattered archway, the echo of our footsteps swallowed by the vast, breathless silence within. The sanctum stretched-out before us like the hollowed chest of a dying god. Pillars leaned and twisted, their surfaces flickering between broken ruin and untouched perfection, fracturing reality itself with every heartbeat. The walls warped in and out of focus, their edges bleeding light and shadow, the air thick with ash, dust, and the faint scent of something old, something forgotten.
My chest heaved as I crossed the threshold, the green glow of my thread-light pulsing faintly along my arms, My hands tightened around the hilt of my blade, its weight familiar but heavy, as if the threads that bound it strained to hold shape. Konrad moved to my left, his broad shoulders squared, golden sword clenched tightly in his grip, but his steps remained solid, unwavering. On my right, Erich advanced, daggers spinning once in a sharp, silent flourish, his lean frame tense, his eyes sharp and alive with flickers of blue thread-light.
The ground shifted beneath us as we moved deeper. Stone tiles buckled underfoot, stretching into strange patterns that looped back on themselves, warping space into impossible shapes. With each step, I felt the world pulling apart just slightly more, the air thickening with the hum of broken moments, twisting around our ankles like grasping tendrils.
At the far end of the chamber, Arbiter sat.
Her throne rose from the end of the sanctum, a jagged monument forged with frozen memories. Strands of thread-light, pale violet and black, twisted up around her like the ribs of some long-dead beast. She slouched against the throne, one hand limp over the armrest, her cloak shredded and curling at the edges, thin strands of memory peeling off her form like burnt silk. Cracks webbed across her skin, glowing faintly with violet light. Her chest pulsed slowly, each rise and fall of breath drawing faint shudders through the tangled threads beneath her.
Her head was tilted slightly, as if listening, through her eyes—deep, hollow, flickering with fractured moments—never lifted to meet ours.
But she was not alone.
Three figures stood before her.
They were featureless, sculpted from smooth shadow, their bodies tall and thin, shoulders hunched slightly forward. They had no faces, no mouths, no features, no weapons. Only their eyes marked them apart.
Soft Pink. Pink thread-light pulsed faintly through its fingertips, waves of destabilizing force ready to strike.
Faded Violet. It stood poised with a long, sleek glaive, its shaft forged not of wood or steel but shadow. The weapon flickered unnaturally, its edges misaligned with the space it occupied, striking as if it existed seconds ahead or behind itself.
Deep Maroon. It gripped a massive blade, carved from the absence of light itself. It left thin, rippling trails of shadow behind every subtle movement, its presence heavy, commanding, unshakeable.
The glow in each pulsed softly, as if echoing the faint heartbeat of the room itself, casting dim halos of colored light onto the stone beneath their feet.
I swallowed hard, feeling the raw pulse of exhaustion ripple through my body. My grip on my blade tightened until my knuckles arched. My vision blurred at the edges, the dim glow of green thread-light flickering weakly across my skin.
Konrad shifted slightly, the faint golden light threading along his arms strengthening as he raised his sword into a defensive stance. His breath was slow, controlled, but the subtle tension in his posture betrayed the strain pulling at his muscles. Erich twirled his daggers once, then again, his sharp grin absent now, his eyes narrowed, focused entirely on the unmoving shadows before us.
The silence in the sanctum deepened.
The walls shimmered, the surfaces bending inward as if the room itself inhaled, drawing the weight of the countless broken moments into a single breathless moment. Thin strands of thread-light wove upward along the walls, pulsing softly, running like veins into the fractured ceiling above. Somewhere, faintly, the sound of something cracking echoed through the chamber, the distant snap of an unraveling thread.
I stepped forward, the faint scrape of my boot against the floor impossibly loud in the stillness.
The three shadows did not move. Their glowing eyes remained fixed, watching without watching, their bodies coiled in perfect stillness. The soft pink pulsed gently, the faded violet flickered, the deep maroon burned low and steady, each glow a silent heartbeat in the dark.
Arbiter exhaled softly, the faintest shift of her ruined form sending thin cracks racing down the side of the throne. She did not raise her gaze. She did not lift a hand. And yet, the space around her seemed to tremble, as if every inch of the sanctum waited for a signal, a command, a breath.
I felt my pulse quicken, my breath catch in my throat. My legs tensed, ready to move, through where or how I did not know. Beside me, Konrad adjusted his grip, the golden light at his arms flaring faintly. Erich shifted his weight forward, the sharp glint of his daggers catching the flickering of light from the warped ceiling above.
The air thickened.
The ground under our feet hummed softly, pulsing with the faint tremor of threads stretched to their limits. Somewhere in the walls, the ceilings, the floors, time folded together, grinding against itself, pulling the breath from the chamber until even the sound of our own heartbeats felt distant, swallowed by the immensity of the space.
We stood at the edge.
The edge of something final.
I drew a slow, steady breath, tasting ash and dust on my tongue, the faint metallic edge of fading thread-light heavy on the air.
Without a word, without a signal, we stepped forward.
***
The instant we stepped forward, the storm broke loose.
The three shadowed figures lunged without warning, their forms slicing the air with terrifying speed. The pink-eyed figure surged ahead, its hands glowing with rippling resonance, waves of destabilizing pulses warping the air around its arms. The violet-eyed figure twisted forward, long glaive in hand, its blade shimmering just out of sync with time, striking with a rhythm that existed half a second before its body moved. And the maroon-eyed figure roared in silence, its massive shadow blade trailing arcs thread-light, the air behind it splitting as the weapon carved reality apart.
I met the first impact with a raw snarl, blade raised, green thread-light flaring as I parried a blast of pink waves. The pulse cracked through the chamber, slamming into me like a hammer, filling my chest with a memory not mine—the warmth of a voice, the touch of a hand, the ache of a goodbye I hadn't said. My breath shuddered as I pushed forward, driving my blade low to cut the wave in two, shattering the pulse before it could collapse around me.
To my left, Konrad locked swords with the violet-eyed figure. His golden blade met the flickering glaive, and time snapped in a vicious ripple. The air around their clash twisted backward, then lurched forward again, the force of each blow landing half a moment before the swing connected. Konrad gritted his teeth, muscles taut, golden thread-light wrapping his arms like chains to keep him grounded as the pressure tried to pull him apart.
Erich darted to my right, twin daggers flashing as he tangled with the maroon-eyed figure. Their shadows spiraled together in a deadly dance, his blades slashing into the thick mass of the shadow creature, only for the shadows blade to swing back, its movements mimicking his with perfect, terrifying precision. Every cut Erich landed, the shadow answered with a mirrored strike, a copy made of pure fury and darkness.
We were thrown into chaos.
There was no rhythm, no order—only survival.
I blinked sideways as a blast of pink tore through the floor beside me, the impact cratering the ground, fracturing the tiles into a hundred jagged shards. I ducked low, sliding under the violet glaive as it swept overhead, feeling the air split, the passage of time rippling unnaturally around my shoulders. I spun, bringing my blade up to meet the maroon shadow, only to have its massive blade crash down on mine with the weight of a collapsing world, the shock driving me back several paces, knees buckling.
Konrad let out a strained yell, golden sword flashing as he forced the glaive back, the sheer force of the blow carving trenches in the stone beneath his feet. Erich darted between both, a flash of blue and gold, his daggers slicing deep into the maroon figure's side, only to have its shadow flicker, split, and lash back, the shadow blade multiplying mid-air, one real, one mirrored, both cutting toward him with lethal speed.
The chamber itself groaned under the weight of the fight.
The walls twisted, folding inward, then expanding, flickering between their present, past, and future states. Cracks raced up the columns, only to heal, then explode. Reality bending under the combined pressure of our clash. The floor fractured, the ceiling warped, light bleeding from the seems of the room as time stuttered and pulsed.
Every blow, every step, every breath—came at a cost.
The pink-eyed creature unleashed another burst of resonance, its hands pulsing with pink thread-light, the blasts smashing into the ground, sending shockwaves through the air. I raised my blade, channeling the last of my thread-light to deflect the incoming strike, my arms shaking violently as the impact pushed me to my knees.
The violet-eyed figure spun its glaive, sweeping wide, splitting the air with unnatural precision. Konrad caught the strike on his blade, but the clash twisted time itself, sending both of them staggering as moments collided out of order, their movements rippling backward, then surging forward again in bursts of overlapping seconds.
I felt my pulse falter.
Each impact brought a surge of emotion crashing into my thread—the soft warmth of the pink figure's pulse, the disorienting, fractured timing of the violet's glaive, the cold, relentless grief embedded in every swing of the maroon's shadow blade. My vision blurred as I swung again, green thread-light sputtering, breath tearing from my lungs in ragged bursts.
Konrad stumbled, his golden light flickering weakly, boots sliding across the fractured ground. Erich gritted his teeth, blood trailing from a cut along his jaw, his daggers moving faster, sharper, but even his speed began to falter under the relentless weight of the mirrored strikes.
The room pulsed, the air growing heavier, thicker, pulling at my limbs with every step.
We fought. And fought. And fought.
And slowly, steadily, we began to unravel.
***
The moment the maroon-eyed figure surged forward, the air itself split.
I saw the massive shadow blade arc through space, its edge dragging thin tendrils of black that tore the light apart, and I knew. I knew it would hit me before I could even move, knew that my blade was raised too late, that my feet were too slow. But none of that mattered when the impact came.
I felt it. I felt everything.
The blade slammed cleanly through my left shoulder, slicing downard in a diagonal line toward my right hip. First came the skin—a flash of searing heat, a screaming line of pain as flesh peeled open beneath the force. Then the muscle— the sharp, tearing snap of fibers splitting, a brutal grinding as the blade dove deeper, carving through sinew, raking against bone. My ribs cracked, my chest lurched, a rush of iron flooded my mouth as the breath was crushed from my lungs. The world tilted, sound drowned out by a high, ringing pulse, a flash of raw agony blooming in my chest.
And then—
The pain slipped away.
It was sudden, unnatural, like the world was being peeled backward, threads pulled away from my body and rewoven elsewhere. The bone aligned, the burning ache vanishing—like smoke, my skin knit itself. My chest heaved as I stared down at myself, hands trembling, eyes wide, feeling no wound, no blood—
Across the room, Konrad collapsed.
Bronze light poured from his chest in violent bursts, his broad shoulders hunching forward as he absorbed the strike meant for me. His knees slammed to the ground, his sword driving into the cracked stone to keep him upright, bronze and golden thread-light lashing wildly across his arms, his face contorted in silent, unbearable pain. The maroon-eyed figure loomed before him, shadow blade raised again, its edges pulsing, feeding on the damage it had already claimed.
My heart slammed in my chest. I staggered forward, breath ragged, but Konrad raised one shaking hand, his jaw clenched, bronze eyes flicking up to me. "Stay back," he forced out, voice a raw whisper.
Around us, chaos surged. The pink-eyed figure swept in, pulses shuddering through the air, distorting the floor. The violet-eyed spun its glaive, carving rifts in space, splitting moments into shards. Erich dashed between them, daggers flashing, body blurred with speed as he carved desperate paths, buying seconds we didn't have.
But Konrad—Konrad was breaking.
His bronze light splintered, veins of cracked thread-light racing along his arms, across his chest, fracturing his very core. His breath hitched, his knees shook, his sword trembled under its weight. And still, his eyes stayed locked on me, fierce and unwavering.
He murmured something, voice trembling.
I couldn't hear him.
Then—
The blade came down.
Konrad's light flared in a binding, final surge, bronze and golden brilliance exploding outward like a star going supernova. The chamber shuddered, walls groaning, pillars splintering under the force. The blast slammed into me, throwing me backward, my body hitting the ground hard, ribs rattling from the shockwave. Erich skidded across the floor, one arm raised to shield his face, eyes wide with horror.
When the light dimmed, Konrad was gone.
His golden sword lay abandoned on the stone, its glow flickering faintly, then unraveling into nothing.
For a heartbeat, the world held its breath.
I pushed myself up slowly, trembling, my throat dry, eyes stinging with the weight of what we had just witnessed. Erich staggered—now beside me, his chest rising and falling in sharp bursts, his daggers lowered, shoulders rigid.
We froze.
But in that breath, in that pause, the fight waited for no one.
***
Just for a moment. Just long enough for the weight of Konrad's death to hollow out the air between us, to wrap cold fingers around my lungs and crush the breath from them. My feet stayed rooted to the cracked, blood-streaked stone, green thread-light flickering weakly along my arms. Beside me, Erich stood tense, daggers lowered just slightly, his chest rising and falling in sharp, rapid bursts. His eyes stayed locked on the empty space where Konrad had one stood—where his bronze light had flared and then been snuffed out.
The room pulsed. Time seemed to hold its breath. The creatures moved.
The maroon-eyed figure surged forward in a blur of collapsing shadow, its massive blade trailing arcs of black light that sliced clean through the broken air. I saw the strike before it hit, saw the dark edge carve a line across the space, tearing toward Erich. My breath caught, my muscles tensed, my hand jerked up in a panicked motion, calling the rewind instinctively—
But the blade was faster.
I watched, helpless, as the blade arched through Erich's neck with a chilling, perfect precision.
The sound it made was soft, almost gentle—a faint snap, the whisper of blue thread-light sputtering out. Erich's body froze, locked upright for a breathless instant, his daggers still raised, his sharp eyes wide with flickering shock. And then his knees buckled, his arms dropped, his daggers slipped from his fingers, clattering against the cracked stone. His head toppled, rolling, tumbling, landing near my feet with a heavy, final thud.
My breath hitched. My pulse roared in my ears.
I threw my arm out—instinctively, felt the surge of green thread-light rip through me, forcing the wind, pulling the world backward in a desperate rush. I felt the familiar shift, the world sliding away, the moments peeling back—
I intercepted the blade with my own. But it was not enough.
The pink-eyed figure surged forward at the same time. A soft pink pulse burst from its hands, tearing the air apart as it struck Erich square in the chest. His body convulsed, his heart rupturing in a spray of shredded blue light and blood. He collapsed hard, lifeless, daggers slipping from his fingers, his breath stolen in an instant.
Another scream tore up through me. Another rewind. Another desperate surge of green light pulling the timeline back, clawing at the moment, trying to fix it, trying to unravel the woven.
But then—
the space around me cracked.
The violet-eyed figure stood perfectly still, glaive raised, its head tilted slightly as if watching me from a place just outside reality.
The world snapped forward again.
I staggered, choking, my rewind failing to take hold, the moment slamming back into place with brutal finality. My eyes dropped, wild and disbelieving, and I saw it—Erich's severed head, resting at my feet, his body crumpled in a heap nearby, his thread severed, blue light faded into nothing.
I hadn't rewound.
The violet-eyed figure had twisted the space, manipulated the fabric of the moment, made me believe I had reversed time when I hadn't. It let me feel the rewind, let me think I had a chance to save Erich—only to slam my face—first into the truth.
A cold, merciless, final truth.
Erich was dead.
The ground tilted. My knees buckled slightly, the world swimming around the edges of my vision. My hands clenched hard around the hilt of my blade, the green glow at its edge sputtering weakly, pulsing in sharp, uneven flickers. My chest rose and fell in ragged gasps, every breath a jagged, painful tear.
Across the room, the three figures stood together, their glowing eyes fixed on me. The maroon-eyed shadow blade dripped faint trails of darkness, the violet-eyed glaive shimmered faintly with fractured space, and the pink-eyed hands pulsed softly, steadily, like a heartbeat waiting to strike.
I was alone.
Truly, completely alone.
My breath trembled. My heart pounded so loud it drowned out everything, every sound, every echo of Konrad's and Erich's loss, every crackle of thread-light in the air. I tightened my grip, forcing myself upright, feeling the ache in every limb, the grief sinking sharp claws into my spine.
We should not have frozen.
We should not have paused.
But the battlefield had no patience for grief.
And by the time I realized that, the moment had already slipped away.
***
I stood alone.
The room stretched wide and broken before me, a graveyard of cracked stone and drifting dust. The echoes of Konrad's bronze glow and Erich's blue shimmer had faded, swallowed by the suffocating dark. My fingers wrapped tighter around the hilt of my blade, its faint green glow flickering weakly, like a candle struggling against the wind. My chest heaved, lungs dragging in sharp, tearing gasps, every breath a reminder of the limits I'd already shattered.
But then—something stirred.
A flicker. A pulse. A thread of gold.
It coiled into the green thread at my core, weaving into it, threading through every inch of me, burning, igniting, pulling tighter, faster, hotter. My muscles clenched, tendons strained, nerves lit up like wildfire. My vision sharpened. My heart pounded like a war drum, hard and fast, shaking through my ribs, my arms, my legs. The long blade in my hands shivered, the light along its edge flaring brightly—then morphing.
I felt it shift.
The familiar length of the sword twisted under my grip, the single cutting edge splitting at the tip, folding outward, reshaping, reforging. My breath caught as the gold threads wrapped tighter, warping, reforging the weapon in the space of a heartbeat. The blade extended, curved, and split into two mirrored, honed edges, sharp along both sides, deadly in either direction.
A double-edged sword. Woven in flairing gold thread.
It pulsed with light, gold surging along its length, the balance perfect, the weight smooth, as if made for my hands, as if it had always been waiting inside the old blade, sealed, hidden, until this moment.
I raised it, feeling the crackle of energy dance across my skin, the golden thread burning through every fiber, doubling my speed, doubling my reflexes, doubling my strength. My muscles snapped taut, my movements became sharp, precise, blindingly fast.
The three figures moved.
I moved faster.
The maroon-eyed creature lunged, shadow blade cutting a brutal line through the air. I spun to meet it, my double-edged sword arcing outward, slicing deep into its side, the force of the blow sending a shockwave ripping through the space around us. The creature reeled, stumbling back, shadow spraying in a black, hissing mist.
The pink–eyed creature pulsed, waves of destabilized moments slamming toward me. I twisted sharply, my new weapon flashing, cutting through the warped air with vicious, exacting slashes, breaking apart the pulses, scattering them in bursts of fractured light.
The violet-eyed creature glaive swept low, precise and deadly, bending the air as it struck. I ducked, sliding under the swing, my weapon sweeping upward in a brutal, rising arc, knocking the weapon away, shoving the creature back with raw, crushing force.
I became a storm.
Every strike was a crack of lightning, every step a thunderclap, every swing of my sword a blur of burning gold, tearing into shadow, slicing through the silence, ripping the battlefield apart. My body blurred through space, faster, harder, stronger, instincts sharpened to a blade's edge, every muscle, every movement a burst of raw, merciless power.
But with every clash, I felt it.
My thread was unraveling.
My body strained, muscles tearing at the edges, bones shuddering under the force, nerves lit with fire, the golden thread squeezing tighter, choking the green beneath it. My chest burned, my breath came in jagged gasps, the taste of iron sharp on my tongue.
But I still fought.
The maroon-eyed creature slashed forward. I met it head-on, blade crossing blade, sparks screaming as I shoved it back. The violet-eyed glaive stabbed in. I twisted, countered, slammed my sowrd down in a savage strike that knocked it sideways. The pink-eyed pulse surged, exploding outward. I forced my way through, cutting, breaking, roaring as I tore a path through the storm.
My arms trembled. My legs weakened. The glow along my skin flickered, the green-gold light sputtering, thinning.
And yet—
I surged forward.
One last time, my double-edged sword flashing in a final, desperate series of strikes, a wild, defiant storm of cuts, slashes, brutal impacts that rocked the room, tearing into the creatures, forcing them to recoil, forcing them to brace.
But the cost was heavy.
My knees buckled.
I collapsed hard to the ground, the sword slipping from my grip, clattering to the stone with a heavy, echoing sound. My chest heaved, my shoulders shook, sweat and blood pouring down my skin. My hands dug weakly at the ground, trembling, twitching, desperate to rise, desperate to keep going.
Before me, they stood.
Maroon. Violet. Pink.
Silent. Waiting. Watching.
My sword lay beside me, its glow flickering faintly, threads unraveling slowly into the dark.
I lowered my hand, breath shuddering, heart pounding wildly in my ears.
Deep inside, buried beneath the last threads of gold and green, I knew.
The end was here.
***
The shattered stone beneath me pressed sharp against my knees, jagged edges biting deep, sending dull, shuddering pain up through my legs. My thighs burned, every muscle trembling uncontrollably, barely able to hold my weight. My chest heaved, each breath a raw, ragged drag, sharp like glass slicing through my lungs. My shoulders slumped forward, heavy, the last reserves of strength leaching from my arms, from my hands, from the fingers trembling weakly against the cracked floor.
In those moments, all I could think of was what I was feeling.
The pulsing ache in my ribs, every crack and fracture groaning with each shallow breath. The sharp, searing pain radiating from old wounds, some reopened, some torn anew. The faint, flickering spark of thread-light in my veins, once vibrant, now thinning, sputtering, slipping away with every beat of my weakening heart. My skin burned, hypersensitive, the air itself scraping raw across its surface. My head throbbed, vision swimming in and out of focus, dark creeping at the edges, tunneling everything to the silent, waiting shapes in front of me.
Maroon. Violet. Pink.
They stood unmoving, faceless, their glowing eyes locked on me. The maroon-eyed blade shimmered faintly, its edge poised. The violet-eyed glaive rested with quiet patience. The pink-eyed pulses hummed softly, warping the air with a slow, cruel rhythm.
And beyond them, Arbiter sat.
She did not meet my gaze. Her eyes, cool and distant, stared somewhere past me, through me, as if she had already marked this moment as inevitable, already counted it finished.
My hands twitched weakly, fingers scraping lightly at the stone. My breath rasped between clenched teeth, chest rising and falling in uneven, strained bursts. My heart thudded unevenly, each beat a heavy, faltering hammerblow against my ribs, shaking through my spine, making my head swim. Sweat and blood traced sluggish trails down my arms, down my sides, every drop a dull, fading echo of the battle that had already slipped away from me.
I tried to lift my head.
My neck screamed, every muscle locking tight, every tendon pulled to the breaking point. My jaw clenched hard, the metallic taste of blood thick on my tongue. My eyes blurred, lashes sticking together with sweat, vision streaked with light and shadow. But I forced it, inch by inch, lifting my gaze until I met the maroon-eyed creature's hollow, glowing eyes.
It stepped forward.
The sound was soft, almost gentle. The faint scrape of its foot over the broken floor. But to me, it echoed like a mountain collapsing, a weight so heavy it crushed the breath from my chest, pressed me deeper into the stone, made every nerve in my body scream with the knowledge that this was the end.
I wasn't ready.
I wasn't done.
But it didn't care.
The maroon-eyed figure raised its blade, the massive shadow weapon lifting in a smooth, final motion. My eyes followed it, muscles locking, heart seizing as I felt the air tighten, the moment sharpened to a knife's edge.
I felt the cold rush of finality.
I felt the last flicker of green and gold thread-light coil weakly in my chest, sputtering like a dying spark, thread unraveling faster than I could hold them together. I felt the last tremors in my arms, the last weak curls of my fingers, the last scrape of breath tearing its way up my throat. My legs gave one final, violent shudder, knees slipping on the cracked stone, sending sharp flares of pain up through my hips—and spine.
And then—
The blade swing.
I felt the air split, the pressure collapse, the brutal, shattering impact of the cut. I felt my skin tear open, fibers splitting, muscles rupturing, bones shattering under the force. I felt the sharp snap of my thread breaking, the unraveling sudden, absolute, pulling the last of me apart.
My body crumbled forward, light peeling away from my skin, from my chest, from my hands, drifting upward in faint, flickering threads, fading like ash into the still air.
My hands twitched once, twice, then stilled.
My chest gave one final, rattling rise.
And then I collapsed.
Darkness rushed inward, folding over me, swallowing the room, the light, the breath, the last scattered fragments of thought.
Beyond the fading blur of my vision, I saw Arbiter slowly, deliberately, turn her head away.
The last thing I felt was the cold, sharp weight of finality sinking deep into my chest, anchoring me to the end.
The last thing I knew was that this thread, this path, this life, had reached its end.