Chapter 1620: Story 1620: The Dawn That Wasn’t
There was light again—but it was wrong.
It didn’t burn. It didn’t warm. It simply existed, cold and still, draped across a landscape that had no sky. The ground shimmered like glass, cracked and endless, reflecting a sun that wasn’t there. Every reflection rippled slightly, as if remembering motion but no longer capable of it.
Zara awoke among those mirrors. Her breath fogged the air, though there was no wind. Her first thought was his name. “Damien...”
Her voice echoed, then folded back into silence, as if the world had swallowed it. She stood, unsteady, the remnants of the void clinging to her like ash. In every direction—horizonless emptiness, faintly shimmering, as though existence itself were waiting to decide what to become.
Then came the whisper.
Soft, distant, familiar. His voice.
“You shouldn’t have followed me.”
Zara spun around. His reflection moved in the cracked glass beneath her, but he wasn’t there. Only his image—fragmented, countless—staring up from the mirrored ground.
“Damien!” she cried. “Where are you? Please—”
“Here. Everywhere. The Hollow Sun collapsed into me. I thought I could contain it... but it contained me.”
The reflections began to ripple, his voice threading through each one. Faces appeared in the glass—his, the Keeper’s, the faceless souls of the abyss—all overlapping, merging, splitting apart.
Zara knelt, pressing a hand to the surface. “You said even hunger can die.”
“It can. But dying things still dream.”
The light above dimmed, flickering like a candle about to fade. From the cracks beneath her hand, black veins spread outward, thin as threads of ink. The ground trembled.
Zara whispered, “You’re breaking it again...”
“No,” Damien’s voice said softly. “It’s breaking me.”
She felt it then—a pulse beneath her feet, steady and massive, like a heart buried deep under the mirror-world. Each throb sent ripples through the glass. In the reflections, she saw moments flash like memories bleeding through: Damien holding her hand. The wyrm’s roar. The world before it fell.
Zara’s tears dropped to the surface, and where they landed, the glass healed. The cracks closed slightly, glowing faintly gold.
A silence followed—a silence that felt seen.
Then Damien spoke again, but his tone had changed—gentler, almost at peace.
“You still carry light that isn’t hollow. I can’t go back... but you can make forward.”
She shook her head violently. “Not without you.”
“With me. Through me.”
The mirrored world pulsed once more, brighter now. Beneath the surface, Damien’s reflection smiled—a weary, human smile. His eyes glowed not with abyssal fire, but something softer, truer.
“Zara... take what’s left of me, and build a dawn that remembers.”
The mirrors shattered—not violently, but like ice thawing. A surge of light lifted her upward, tearing through the void.
When she looked back one last time, Damien’s reflection faded into the brilliance.
And the world began to breathe again.