First Image:
The page showed them—younger, but not young—standing barefoot in a field of swaying golden grass. Dawn light stretched their shadows long across the earth.
Behind them, a man stood with folded arms, his smile softer than Towan had ever seen on any living face. His eyes carried the weight of a hundred battles, the skin beneath them bruised with exhaustion. But the pride there was unmistakable. It radiated off the page like heat.
“…Master?” The na left Towan’s lips before he could question it. He didn’t rember this mont. But his body did.
his stance in the image was the sa as the one he had used earlier—only there, in that snapshot of a forgotten life, it was perfect. No hesitation. No imbalance. Just flow and purpose. Just the kind of effortless precision that ca from being exactly where you were ant to be.
Elliot’s breath hitched beside him.
Second Image:
The mory shifted.
A group, frozen in ti but not untouched by it. Three figures, their edges blurred as if the book itself struggled to hold them fully.
Nas surfaced like bubbles breaking through ice:
Eryndar. Tall, broad-shouldered, a shattered helt cradled under his arm like a relic.
Rhys. Arm slung around Kade’s neck, caught mid-laugh, his teeth bared in a grin that didn’t match the blood streaking his temple.
Kade. Youngest of them all, his face smudged with dirt and his knuckles split—but his eyes alight, unbroken.
Behind them lood a fortress of jagged obsidian, its spires clawing at a sky the color of a fresh bruise. A place that felt wrong in the way only dreams could—familiar and alien all at once.
The kind of place you only escape once.
The kind of place that never leaves you.
A case of theft: this story is not rightfully on Amazon; if you spot it, report the violation.
Third Image:
The page dissolved, then reford—
—Two girls stood on a balcony suspended among the clouds, their silhouettes backlit by a dawn that painted the sky in hues of molten gold and violet.
Sylra.Alira.
Older. Harder. Their youth sanded away by ti and sothing sharper. Crisp uniforms clung to their fras, adorned with insignia the brothers didn’t recognize—a stylized sun split by a blade.
But their eyes were unmistakable.
Sylra’s grin was still there, though tempered now, her fingers raised in a lazy wave—toward the viewer. Toward them. Her other arm was slung around Alira’s shoulders, pulling her close.
Alira’s smile was smaller, quieter, but no less bright. The kind of smile that had learned to survive.
The image shivered, its edges fraying like old film. For a heartbeat, the balcony flickered—replaced by a fractured glimpse of a dim cell, of chains, of Sylra’s face contorted in a scream—
—then it snapped back, pristine.
Towan’s fingers dug into the page. "...That’s her, right? The girl who got corrupted?"
Elliot leaned closer, his shadow falling across the book. "I think so. But older." His thumb hovered over Alira’s face. "And the other one… I don’t know."
A beat.
The page turned itself—slowly, deliberately—as if guided by an unseen hand.
Towan’s breath locked in his chest.
"That's… us."
The words barely made it past his lips. On the page, two figures stood back-to-back, silhouetted against a burning horizon—older, harder, their weapons gleaming with the sa impossible silver as the chamber’s glyphs. One bore Towan’s sharp jawline, but etched with scars he didn’t rember earning. The other had Elliot’s exact stance, but honed to lethal precision.
Elliot’s fingers trembled near the parchnt. "That’s not this world."
Before they could react—
—the pages exploded into motion.
A hurricane of mories ripped past, too fast to comprehend. Faces. Battles. A thousand sunsets over cities that shouldn’t exist. A hand reaching through the dark. A voice screaming a na they almost recognized—
—then the book slamd shut.
The impact echoed like a gunshot. Darkness swallowed the chamber for one suspended heartbeat.
When the light returned, the book lay inert in their hands.
Blank.
Every. Single. Page.
Towan’s grip tightened, his knuckles bleached white. "...What the hell was that?"
Elliot stared at the empty cover, his voice hollow. "They looked like us. But older. Stronger." A pause, heavy with implication. "Like we were already... finished."
Sowhere in the monastery’s bones, sothing laughed.
Kaen didn’t move.
He stood by the doorway that hadn’t existed monts before, his face half-lost in shadow.
"That wasn’t the book showing you its secrets." His voice was soft, almost mournful. "That was the book rembering you."
Then he stepped backward—not walking, but fading into the hallway’s gloom, his outline dissolving like ink in water.
His final words lingered, echoing from nowhere and everywhere at once:
"It’s hard to forget what’s been written in your bones."
The darkness swallowed him whole.
User Comments
0 comments from readers