The sky rumbled like a wounded beast.
mory-light oozed from the widening tear, dripping down in slow, shimring streams that evaporated before touching the ground. The air crackled with static—each spark carrying whispers of a hundred stolen identities.
Then the shape behind the tear pressed closer.
Damon froze, breath catching in his throat.
It wasn’t a creature.
It wasn’t even one thing.
It was a shifting mass of forms—limbs appearing then vanishing, faces sliding like liquid across a colossal, amorphous body. Each face scread silently, mouths opening into blurs of distorted mory.
Lira forced herself upright in his arms, trembling.
“That’s not the Maelstrom anymore,” she whispered. “It’s what the Maelstrom... beca.”
Shadow snarled, fur standing on end. Ember crouched low, teeth bared, but even they seed unsure if the thing in the sky could truly be fought.
The massive, shifting entity pushed harder against the tear, widening it with a sickening rip.
Damon felt pressure in his head, mories flickering.
A childhood mont.
A warm fire.
Blood on concrete.
Lira’s hand in his.
The mories warred for space.
“Damon...” Lira clutched his sleeve, breath shaking. “It’s pulling identities just by existing. If it fully crosses, everything... everyone... will dissolve.”
“How do we stop sothing that doesn’t even know what it is?” he whispered.
She closed her eyes, teeth clenched. “It doesn’t have an identity of its own. It’s pure hunger. We need to anchor it—force it into one form.”
He stared at her. “Anchor it? Like you anchored the Core?”
“This is bigger,” she whispered. “And I’m... not stable.”
Her voice flickered between tones.
Damon cupped her face. “Then I’ll anchor you.”
Lira’s eyes softened, shining with fractured blue light. “You can’t hold together and fight that.”
“We don’t fight it,” Damon said. “We redirect it.”
“How?” she breathed.
Above them, the colossal mory-horror lunged again, its surface writhing with a thousand half-ford shapes.
Damon looked at Lira—glowing, unstable, but still herself beneath the chaos.
“You said it’s pure hunger,” he said. “Give it sothing to anchor to. Sothing stronger than broken mories.”
Lira blinked. “But it would latch onto whatever we give it.”
“Then we choose sothing harmless.”
Shadow barked sharply, as if he understood.
Ember nudged Damon’s hand.
Lira followed their gaze. “The wolves?”
Damon shook his head.
“No. Not them.”
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small object—an old, battered photograph. The only thing he had carried since the outbreak began. The faces were faded, nearly unrecognizable, but the emotion was clear.
His family.
A mory he had already made peace with losing.
Lira’s eyes widened. “Damon... if we offer it a stable identity—”
“It will take it,” he finished. “And stop taking everything else.”
The tear widened again with a shrill, tearing sound.
The creature pushed halfway through.
Damon stood, lifting the photo toward the sky.
“HEY!” he shouted, pouring everything into his voice. “You want identity?! TAKE THIS!”
The creature paused.
Every face on its surface snapped toward him.
The air vibrated.
Lira reached for his hand. “Damon, once it anchors—there’s no undoing it.”
He swallowed, voice shaking.
“I know.”
The Maelstrom lunged.
A tendril of pure mory shot downward, racing toward Damon—
And Lira scread.
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