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Cosmic Ruler - Chapter 663

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  3. Cosmic Ruler
  4. Chapter 663 - Chapter 663: Ambiguity LIII
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Chapter 663: Ambiguity LIII
The wind changed.

Not in temperature, nor in scent—but in memory.

Jevan felt it first as he walked the ridge above the Vale. A moment of vertigo, a shiver along the edge of thought, as if something far older than breath had opened its eyes and remembered it once had lungs.

He turned toward the horizon—and saw nothing.

But in that nothing was a weight. Not a presence, not yet. A gaze.

It was watching them.

Watching her.

The girl stood by the reflection pool, now ringed with stones bearing the names of those newly remembered—Naru, Yren, Silent-Footfall, the Emberlord, and more. Dozens now. Hundreds, even. All learning to shape their own becoming.

She cupped water in her hands, watched it spill between her fingers, and whispered to the ripples:

“I know you’re there.”

The pool shivered.

The sky cracked.

But only softly.

No thunder. No rain. No voice.

Just acknowledgment.

The Firstborn had heard her.

And it was listening.

The Archivists had no name for it.

Elowen scoured the surviving Codices, the Fractured Lexicons, even the forbidden glyphs carved into the shattered bark of the Eldertrees. But nowhere—nowhere—was it written.

“That’s the point,” she told Jevan. “The Firstborn were not named. They were the silence from which all names came.”

Jevan frowned. “Then why now? Why her?”

Elowen didn’t answer at first.

Then, quietly: “Because she isn’t asking for the past to be restored. She’s making the future choose to remember. That’s not healing. That’s heresy.”

They gathered in the Root-Circle that night, the girl and her chosen.

The Vale was still, the air thick with unseen meaning.

And from the woods emerged a shape.

No footsteps. No scent. No declaration.

It simply was.

A figure that did not walk, but unfolded from shadow and silence.

Its form was indistinct—at once a child and a storm, a sentence never finished and a truth never told. Its skin shimmered with shifting lines, as if written in every tongue that had ever dared to begin.

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The Firstborn had arrived.

And it had not come to speak.

It had come to witness.

The girl rose.

She did not bow.

She did not tremble.

Instead, she opened her hands and spoke, not in defiance, but in offering.

“I am not here to take your place.”

The Firstborn did not move.

“I am not trying to overwrite what was.”

The lines of its form flickered.

“I only ask that what could have been be allowed to live.”

The Vale held its breath.

The wind died.

The pool turned to glass.

And then—

—a line of script appeared in the air between them.

One word.

Not carved.

Not spoken.

But meant.

“Why?”

The girl smiled.

Not sadly.

Not triumphantly.

But truly.

“Because I chose to.”

The Firstborn did not leave.

It did not attack.

It simply faded—

—not in fear, nor failure, but in permission.

As if it had waited eternity for someone to say that they could write without it.

And now, it would watch.

Not as a god.

But as a reader.

Jevan sat beside Elowen long after the Vale quieted again.

“She made it choose,” he said.

Elowen nodded. “Even the Firstborn aren’t immune to the pull of a well-told story.”

Jevan looked down at the girl now teaching a new Unnamed to laugh.

“And hers is just beginning.”

The Vale had no need for fire that night.

The light came from the stories themselves.

Each one a flicker in the air, a memory catching flame. The gathered sat in silence, not around a hearth, but a blank canvas—a field of untouched earth that pulsed faintly with narrative breath. The girl had named it the unwritten garden, and in it, nothing grew… yet.

But it would.

Because now, something had shifted.

The Firstborn had come.

And it had not destroyed.

It had listened.

Jevan wandered the edge of the encampment with his blade still sheathed. He hadn’t drawn it in three days, and it felt strange. Heavy, yes, but not in weight. In irrelevance.

His was a sword meant to unmake monsters.

And right now, the monsters were silent.

He didn’t trust it.

“Restlessness suits you,” came Elowen’s voice, half-mocking. She leaned against a gnarled root, her cloak of unstitched words dragging behind her like a wound that had forgotten how to scab.

“They’re still out there,” he said. “The Claimed. The Discarded. The Children of Dust. We’ve held them off, but this…” He motioned toward the Vale. “This isn’t war. It’s… pause.”

“That’s what peace looks like, Jevan,” she replied. “Awkward. Unsustainable. Fragile.”

“Wrong,” he muttered.

Elowen raised an eyebrow.

“It’s not peace,” Jevan said. “It’s expectation. And I don’t think we get to set the terms anymore.”

At the heart of the Vale, the girl sat alone with the Book.

Not the Book of What Was—that one had closed when Aiden died.

Not the Book of What Comes Next—that was still being written by the sky itself.

This was something stranger.

A Book Without Pages.

It bore no spine, no ink, no cover.

Only shape.

Only space.

It had appeared the moment the Firstborn vanished.

It had grown, slowly, every hour since.

And now it hovered before her like a mirror that refused to reflect.

She placed her hands upon it.

And the Book… shivered.

It wanted something.

Not obedience.

Not command.

But invitation.

“Come on,” she whispered. “You’re meant to be filled.”

A line burned across its surface.

A name.

Not hers.

But a name nonetheless.

And it was weeping.

Far away, across the torn skies of the north, something stirred in the ruins of the Atlas Gate.

A tower of impossible length, once the crown of the Unspoken Empire, now little more than jagged silhouette.

A figure walked its shattered halls.

Armored in bronze cracked by time.

Eyes hollowed by paradox.

But in their hand, a single scrap of paper.

Still warm.

Still glowing.

A name—flickering across it.

And as the wind howled through the dead citadel, the figure whispered—

“…she’s begun it.”

Back in the Vale, the girl stood.

The Book Without Pages hovered beside her.

And she turned toward Jevan, who approached warily, as if the Book might suddenly explode into wings and teeth.

“She’s calling them,” he said.

“She’s hearing them,” she corrected.

“Who?”

“All the ones who never got to finish their first page.”

He looked at her then.

Really looked.

And for a moment, he didn’t see the girl who had once asked why fate began without her.

He saw an author.

Not of words.

But of allowance.

“Will it hold?” he asked.

The girl didn’t answer.

Because she didn’t know.

But she did say this:

“If it doesn’t, then someone else will begin again. That’s how stories work.”

Above them, the stars were not stars.

They were fragments of forgotten prologues, catching fire once more.

The Book Without Pages opened.

And the first word—one never written, never spoken—finally fell into place.

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

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