For a while, Lucien and Eirene stood in the void beneath distant planets and silent moons.
Sound should not have traveled here.
There was no air to carry it. And yet, when Eirene spoke, her voice reached Lucien clearly.
"Congratulations too."
Lucien looked at her.
Eirene’s Stillbloom Moonbody glowed softly beneath the starlight.
She continued, "And thank you for helping ."
Lucien nodded.
"You chose yourself."
"You gave the chance to."
He wanted to say sothing. Then stopped.
There were too many questions.
Eirene noticed his silence, then, her smile softened.
"Are you curious?"
Lucien smiled back.
"Well, will you tell ?"
Eirene fell silent.
The motes around her slowed until they seed almost motionless. Then she looked toward the distant Big World, shining far away like a jewel beneath the dark.
"I cannot tell you everything for now."
Lucien did not interrupt.
"But as you saw earlier, you probably suspected it already."
She turned back to him.
"I have a past life."
Lucien closed his eyes for a mont.
Then nodded.
"You were the Eternal of Stillness."
Eirene’s lips pressed together.
She hesitated. Then nodded.
"Yes."
Lucien opened his eyes.
For a while, he said nothing.
Pieces quietly connected inside his mind.
Her familiarity with the Stillness Palace. Her connection to the Lunarians. Her strange reaction to the Stillness Ruin. The way the Lunareth Sect seed to treat certain matters around her with too much care.
Lucien exhaled softly.
"No wonder."
Eirene lowered her gaze.
"I am sorry for hiding it."
Lucien looked at her.
"Did you hide it because you wanted to betray us?"
"No."
"Did you hide it because telling us would bring danger?"
Eirene looked up.
"Yes."
"Then I understand enough for now."
Eirene stared at him.
Lucien smiled faintly.
"I said enough. Not everything."
That made her laugh softly.
The sound was quiet, relieved, and more like the Eirene he knew.
She shook her head.
"Right now, I am simply Eirene. Nothing has changed."
Lucien nodded.
"That is what I was going to say."
Her eyes softened.
For a mont, the distance between past and present did not feel so heavy.
•••
Lucien’s curiosity returned soon after.
"Sister Eirene, can you tell what changed after eating the fruit?"
Eirene blinked.
"The fruit?"
Lucien paused.
"What I fed you was a Fruit from the Tree of Creation."
Eirene’s expression changed. Even after becoming Eternal, she still stared at him with a rare loss of composure.
Then, very slowly, she sighed.
"No wonder."
After a mont, Eirene looked inward.
"The greatest change is my constitution."
Lucien’s eyes sharpened.
Eirene raised one hand and looked at her own fingers. Silver-green radiance moved beneath her skin like moonlight passing through living petals.
"This body lets carry both Laws without tearing myself apart. Stillness and Equivalence no longer oppose each other as separate axes. They do not rge either. They coexist."
She paused.
Eirene looked at him.
"And my current form is the harmony of both lives."
"The Stillbloom Moonbody."
"Yes."
Then she smiled slightly.
"But I can still change."
Lucien’s brows lifted.
Eirene’s radiance shifted.
The moonlit petals faded.
The silver in her hair withdrew.
In a breath, she returned to her Floran form.
She looked like the Eirene Lootwell knew.
Then silver moonlight descended.
Her form changed again.
The green vanished into pale lunar brilliance. Her hair beca silver. Her aura turned quiet, distant, and ancient. The fragrance disappeared, replaced by a cold stillness that made even the void seem respectful.
The Lunarian form. The Eternal of Stillness.
Then both forms softened and overlapped.
Green and silver returned together.
Moonlit petals blood. The still fragrance spread again.
Lucien watched the entire process in silence.
Then he slowly said, "You beca three in one."
Eirene looked at him.
"That’s... another way to describe it."
Eirene’s lips curved.
Lucien laughed softly.
Then his gaze moved inward for a mont.
The Fruit of Creation had done this.
Lucien suddenly wondered what would happen if he ate one himself.
The thought appeared.
Then imdiately multiplied into many dangerous possibilities.
•••
Before returning, they completed the final act of becoming Eternals.
They hid their nas from the universe.
Lucien closed his eyes first.
He felt the place where the universe had recorded him.
A place in reality where the na Lucien now carried Eternal weight.
Creation gathered around that recognition.
Lucien did not erase it.
Instead, he created a sheath around it.
A layer of living possibilities.
To those who tried to look, his na would not appear as a fixed point. It would appear as roads branching in too many directions, each one true enough to mislead and incomplete enough to prevent capture.
The universe still knew him.
But others would not easily use that knowledge.
Eirene did the sa.
When both were finished, the void around them settled.
Lucien opened his eyes.
"Now we are truly Eternals."
Eirene smiled.
"Yes."
Lucien took out an Instant-Return Talisman.
Eirene also assud her Floran form again.
Lucien looked at her.
"You are hiding the other forms?"
"For now," she said. "There is no need to create confusion before I explain what must be explained."
"That sounds responsible."
"You should try it sotis."
Lucien stared at her.
Eirene smiled.
He shook his head and activated the talisman.
Return light wrapped around them.
The void vanished.
•••
They appeared inside Lootwell’s instant-teleportation chamber.
The familiar hum of arrays greeted them.
Lucien sighed.
If his calculations were correct, they had been gone for more than three months.
Before Lucien could say anything, he sensed soone waiting beyond the chamber.
His expression changed.
Alanthuriel.
The Abyssal Arch-Lord stood beyond the chamber doors.
Lucien stepped out with Eirene.
Alanthuriel looked at both of them.
His gaze paused briefly on Eirene.
Sothing unreadable passed through his eyes.
Then he looked at Lucien.
Lucien turned toward Eirene.
"Sister Eirene, can you help take care of the paperwork first? I will follow after speaking with Senior."
Eirene glanced at Alanthuriel.
She bowed slightly.
"Senior."
Alanthuriel gave a faint nod.
Eirene looked at Lucien once more.
Then she left.
Lucien watched their interaction quietly.
There must have been so connection between them in the past. After all, Alanthuriel had also been in the Stillness Prison where the ancient beasts were caged.
Of course, it was also possible that Alanthuriel had asked to be sealed there himself, using imprisonnt as a way to avoid being detected by Oblivion and the others.
Only after Eirene’s footsteps faded did Alanthuriel speak.
"Then let us speak sowhere quieter."
•••
They moved to the top of the Stillness Palace.
The palace had not changed.
And yet Lucien felt it differently now.
Its stillness recognized him.
He had left as a Celestial.
He had returned as an Eternal.
Alanthuriel stood beside him and looked down at Lootwell.
"It is good that you reached Eternal already," Alanthuriel said. "The universe has finally recognized you."
Lucien looked at him.
"Is that a good thing, Senior Alan?"
Alanthuriel was silent for a mont.
Then nodded.
"Before this, you were powerful, but you were not fully recorded as an Eternal authority. To beings like the Abyssal Arch-Lords, that made you easier to interfere with."
Lucien’s gaze sharpened.
Oblivion had killed him once before.
The mory had not faded.
Alanthuriel looked toward the sky.
"Now that the universe has recorded you, they cannot do as they please so easily. Killing you is no longer rely killing a person. It is interfering with a recognized Eternal authority anchored in the current universe."
Lucien absorbed that.
Then slowly smiled.
"That is very good news."
"It is."
For once, Lucien allowed himself to feel relief.
Abyssal beings being restricted from interfering with him directly was not a small matter. It did not make him safe, but it gave him breathing room.
Then Alanthuriel spoke again.
"Do not be too relieved. The tilines will not remain locked forever. When the Abyss unlocks them, those restrictions may change. No one knows what will happen when that pressure returns."
Lucien looked at him.
"Senior Alan."
Alanthuriel glanced at him.
"Is the main tiline really that bad?"
The question had been in Lucien’s heart for a long ti.
"If the Abyss has been so desperate to create a better one, does that an this tiline cannot face what is coming?"
Alanthuriel did not answer imdiately.
The silence stretched.
Then he said, "I can only tell you a little."
Lucien waited.
"There are many universes beyond this one."
Lucien froze.
Alanthuriel’s voice remained calm.
"The Abyss can sohow peek beyond. Not freely. But enough."
Lucien’s fingers slowly curled.
"And?"
Alanthuriel’s gaze deepened.
"Many universes have already fallen."
The words landed without thunder. That made them worse.
Lucien did not speak. His sense of scale failed for a mont.
He had already seen small worlds, dead gray planes, abyssal entities, Primordial Incarnations, the Black Mass, the Origin Core, and the Tree of Creation.
Even so, this was different.
A universe falling was not tragedy.
It was a number too large for grief to carry properly.
Alanthuriel continued.
"This universe’s main tiline has many variables now. Many fates have changed. Many roads have split from what they once were. It has beco unpredictable."
His gaze turned to Lucien.
"Especially you."
Lucien slowly looked at him.
"?"
"You are a living paradox."
Sothing cold touched Lucien’s spine.
"What does that an?"
Alanthuriel shook his head.
"You will understand in the future."
Lucien’s eyes narrowed.
Alanthuriel looked at him.
"I can only say this. While the other Arch-Lords were obsessed with creating the best tiline, I was the only one who continued watching the main tiline. I watched you."
Lucien remained still.
Alanthuriel’s next words ca softer.
"And your past."
Then he paused.
"Or perhaps I should call it your future."
Lucien’s thoughts stopped.
That made no sense.
Or perhaps it made too much sense in a way his mind refused to arrange.
His past. His future. A living paradox.
Lucien wanted to ask a dozen questions.
But one rose above the rest.
"Has the Abyss ever succeeded in creating the best tiline?"
The palace grew quiet.
Alanthuriel fell into a long silence.
Long enough that Lucien knew he did not want to answer.
Then the Arch-Lord sighed.
"Yes. Close enough."
Alanthuriel looked toward the sky.
"And in that tiline..."
He paused.
Then looked back at Lucien.
"There is no you."
Lucien froze completely.
A future good enough for the Abyss to call success.
And he did not exist in it.
The words did not simply confuse him.
They struck sothing deeper.
If the best tiline had no Lucien...
Then what was he?
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