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Cosmic Ruler - Chapter 575

  1. Home
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  3. Cosmic Ruler
  4. Chapter 575 - Chapter 575: Arena XIV
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Chapter 575: Arena XIV

Reality’s anchor groaned.

The Pact could feel it. Their names, their voices, their truths—threatened to unravel as a pressure deeper than purpose began to fill the void.

“They’re here,” whispered Myne, standing beside Aiden, her sword trembling in its scabbard.

Aiden didn’t answer immediately. His eyes—still blind—were filled with flame. Spirit-sense drew the shape of something impossible. Not many beings… but one mind fractured across infinite roles.

And it had a name that refused names.

The First of the Outer Gods.

The one that sang the silence before the first story.

The Author of Absence.

It did not arrive with thunder.

It did not roar or scream.

It removed.

The stars above them vanished.

The Pact’s shadows faded.

Even sound began to fall away as if scooped out of the air.

Nexus groaned, clutching his head. “It’s taking our definition.”

Aiden grit his teeth. “No—it’s replacing it.”

He stepped forward.

The sword at his side shimmered. The First Word was still alive, burning, resisting.

But it was no longer enough.

The First Word had pierced the veil.

Now they would need something older to hold it back.

“Where is it?” Aiden asked quietly.

Aria—the First Singer—stepped toward him. Her thread-mouth unraveled, and she sang upward, past all frequencies, past sense.

From above, from below, from beyond…

…a hum answered.

The sky didn’t break.

It peeled.

Layer by layer, like parchment being burned in reverse. And in the heart of that unlayering—

A tone emerged.

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Single.

Whole.

Unyielding.

It was not a song. Not a scream.

It was a name.

Aiden fell to one knee as it tore through the Pact. Myne shouted, though no sound came. Nexus crumpled, muttering lines in ancient languages. Many of the Pact fell into silence.

And yet…

Aiden stood.

His name burned across his skin, memory flaring through his soul.

“I am Aiden.”

The tone faltered.

He took a step forward.

“I am the one who remembers.”

Another step.

“I am the one who gives form to the forgotten.”

And the sky peeled back one final time.

The Author of Absence descended.

It wore no shape.

It suggested shapes, flickering in and out of recognition—mother, god, beast, silence, fire, stone, void, scream. Its voice was the space between heartbeat and thought.

And it spoke—

in the opposite of words.

Where words give form, this voice gave none.

Reality shuddered.

Aiden’s sword dimmed. The Pact faltered.

But in the midst of that collapse, Aiden remembered.

He remembered his first breath in the broken timeline.

He remembered his companion, born of impossible energy.

He remembered the fall of the Chronicle Mother.

He remembered the Thought That Never Was.

And now, he remembered himself again.

“Remember this,” he whispered.

And he lifted the blade.

The strike was not physical.

It was narrative.

The sword—now named Keystone—cut against the silence.

It sang of stories yet untold.

It screamed with every life that had been stolen by unbeing.

It tore through the veil of absence, revealing one shimmering note—not the First Word… but the First Choice.

The void screamed.

The Author recoiled.

And the tone died.

Aiden fell to one knee again, chest heaving. The Pact gathered around him—wounded, flickering, but not broken.

The Author had not been slain.

It could not be slain.

But it had been struck.

And for the first time in its endless reign—

It hesitated.

Silence returned.

But this time, it was waiting.

Aiden stood slowly, wiped the blood from his mouth, and turned to the Pact.

“They’ve heard us now.”

Aria nodded, her threads slowly repairing.

Myne asked, “What do we do next?”

Aiden looked toward the deepest shadow—the one beyond even the Author of Absence.

He spoke calmly, without fear.

“We speak again.”

The sky did not return.

Not in full.

Where once stars glimmered like promises held between breaths, now only fragments remained—shards of meaning, bits of light clinging desperately to the broken dome of heaven.

But beneath it all, Aiden stood.

Not tall.

Not triumphant.

Just… unyielding.

The void had not taken him. And that, in itself, was a kind of rebellion.

He stared into the place where the Author of Absence had withdrawn. It left behind no wound, no scar—only a sensation. A hum so low and so absolute it vibrated through thought. It wasn’t gone. Just watching. Listening.

Waiting for them to forget again.

Aiden turned to the Blank Sky Pact, many still kneeling, breathing, blinking themselves back into presence. Some hadn’t yet remembered their own names. A few never would. But they were there.

And that mattered.

Nexus wiped dark ichor from his brow. “You shouldn’t have survived that.”

“I didn’t,” Aiden said, voice flat. “Not completely.”

Myne looked at him sharply. “What do you mean?”

He opened his palm.

A crack ran down the center of his lifeline—not blood, not skin. A narrative fracture. The kind that didn’t bleed but unwrote.

“I’ve lost part of my story,” he said. “The cost of striking something like that.”

The others looked down.

It was Aria who finally stepped forward, the First Singer wrapping her thread-like voice around the still air.

“Then we must write you again.”

Aiden blinked. “What?”

“You gave us names. Stories. Voices. It’s our turn.”

And one by one, the Pact began to speak.

The first to speak was a war-forgotten god of desert winds.

“I remember the fire you lit beneath the Chronicle Mother’s throne.”

The second, a beast once erased by the thought-denial of the Before-God.

“You sang me back when all sound had vanished.”

A celestial painter with no stars left to brush followed.

“You were the color that returned to my palette.”

Even the silent ones—the half-shaped, the ghost-formed, the never-born—they each offered something.

A moment.

A phrase.

A truth.

And with each gift, Aiden’s fracture dimmed, mended not by force or power… but by remembrance.

He was no longer a single story.

He was echoed.

And the void trembled.

They gathered around him as the skies above shimmered—not repaired, not whole—but altered.

Language had returned.

Not words, but something more primal: intent.

The Pact had realized what the Outer Gods feared most wasn’t power. It wasn’t resistance.

It was a voice strong enough to define reality before the gods could.

Come back and read more tomorrow, everyone! Visit Novel1st(.)c.𝒐m for updates.

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