Chapter 284: Time Disruption
The knock still echoed when the fissure changed.
Not in size. Not in light. In sequence.
Arden Gate's loops—Kito climbing, Maren scolding, the baker half-singing—broke their rhythm for the briefest breath. Lio felt the square almost steady, the way a drunk finds balance on a rail. He thought maybe the door inside him had bought another moment.
Then time cracked.
It didn't stop. It didn't race forward. It didn't rewind. It folded, and the fold snapped shut like careless paper.
The town started repeating.
"Get down from there, Kito!" Maren's voice rang.
The boy laughed. "I never fall!"
The baker cursed at his oven and hummed off-key.
The ribbon tied itself.
Five minutes of living, tangled and small, played out exactly the same. Maren's scolding, Kito's laugh, the baker's half-song—every pause, every gesture, every mistake repeated like a broken reel.
Then the five minutes snapped shut again.
And started over.
"Get down from there, Kito!"
The boy laughed.
The baker cursed.
The ribbon tied.
Over and over.
Lio staggered. His claws scraped the ground. "No…"
The loops pressed against his skull like nails driven wrong. He slashed at the air, roaring, but the roar only carried into the fold and came back on the same rhythm. He tried to shout Maren's name, but his voice erased itself and reappeared at the start of the cycle.
Time was no longer his ally. It had been hijacked.
The three shadows above exhaled. Not cold. Not hollow. Not stillness.
Loop.
They were practicing. Not attacking. Testing.
Learning how to edit sequence.
Far from the fissure, Zara Okafor slammed both palms into the fractured table of the Consensus Room.
"They're bending time now!" she cried. Her voice cracked with terror and awe. "Not cause. Not effect. They've started rewriting sequence itself!"
Chairman Voss leaned forward, sweat dripping down his brow. "Define it."
"They're pulling out five minutes," Zara said breathlessly. "Cutting it clean, repeating it endlessly. Like a paragraph torn from a book and read again and again."
General Morrison snarled. "Then burn the page! Hit the zone with a dimensional pulse!"
"No," Zara said sharply. "That would only widen the loop! Energy enters, and when it resets, it enters again. You'd feed it endlessly."
The glass woman among the Eleven whispered, shards of her body trembling, "If they learn to hold entire regions in recursive time, we cannot win. We will choke on repetition."
Lio tore through another wave of duplicates. But this time, their movements matched the loop. Their strikes repeated, same angles, same feints, same blows. Every time he broke one, the fight rewound five minutes, and they came again.
His body bled. His arms shook. He killed the same double three times, four times, five—until the rage inside him roared louder than the reset.
"Stop!" he bellowed. His claws dug trenches into the square. "Stop playing with me!"
The second pulse inside him purred. It liked this trap. Fighting forever, eating forever. A beast with no ending.
"No," Lio growled. "Not forever."
He closed his eyes. He pushed thought again, through the silence spark. He sent the state of frustration. The burn of doing the same strike, the same mistake, the same insult. The fury of chewing a meal already gone to ash.
The three shadows paused. The loop skipped like a scratched record. Kito blinked twice instead of once. Maren scolded in the same words but shifted her foot differently. The baker hummed half a note higher.
They were answering. Not fixing. Matching.
Testing.
"Damn you," Lio spat. "You're learning faster."
In the chamber of Eleven, the fire-knuckled one slammed his fist on the water floor, sparks scattering. "They practice through him. They mirror. Every projection he throws, they adapt."
The storm-haired one's voice rumbled like distant thunder. "Then he must project something they cannot loop."
"Like what?" Morrison's voice thundered across realms.
Zara's eyes burned with desperate light. "Not endings. Not beginnings. Change. Something they can't trap because it thrives on being different."
Lio staggered, chest heaving. His claws dripped. His spark trembled. The loop tried to crush him, pressing five minutes into his skin until his bones rattled.
He reached for his silence again. He thought of Reed's flicker, warning him: Don't kill them, or you erase yourselves. He thought of Arden Gate, tied to his ribs. He thought of the boy laughing, the woman scolding, the baker singing badly.
And he thought of all of it being the same.
Forever.
"No," he whispered.
He projected something else.
Not death. Not dying. Not fury.
Change.
The state of a leaf turning red. Of a scar healing crooked. Of a child's voice breaking into adulthood. Of bread that burns one morning and rises golden the next. He poured it out like rain that refused to fall the same way twice.
The fissure shuddered.
The loop snapped once. Twice.
Kito missed his step and landed different. Maren scolded with one word shorter. The baker forgot to hum, then remembered a new tune.
The cycle tried to reset. It broke, crooked, messy.
The three shadows warped. Their exhale trembled. They tried to breathe loop again, but change ate the edges.
One of them bent the wrong way, like a shadow learning to limp.
Zara gasped in the Consensus Room. "He did it. He broke their loop. He forced them to taste difference."
"But it's not enough," Voss said grimly.
And he was right.
The fissure widened, and time snapped harder. The town convulsed. Five minutes stretched, warped, then slammed closed again. People screamed silently as their own bodies pulled them back into motions they no longer wanted.
The Narrativeless had learned something new.
They weren't just looping five minutes anymore.
They were editing them.
Kito laughed and fell differently each time. Maren's words shifted, her face twisting in ways she had never chosen. The baker's song cracked into a scream that folded back into a song.
Lio's heart dropped. "They're rewriting."
The duplicates lunged. He met them with claws, fists, fireless rage. Each kill fed him. Each kill bled him. The hunger inside cheered the infinite repetition.
He clenched his jaw. "No."
He thought of Arden again. He thought of the name he had made into a roof. He thought of change as a tool, not a curse.
He opened his spark wide and projected once more.
I refuse to repeat.
The fissure shrieked. The square tore open wider.
And from the widening, a new presence stirred. Not a shadow. Not a duplicate. Not an Originless echo.
A fourth Narrativeless stepped through.
But this one carried not before or stillness or loop.
It exhaled time itself, raw and unwritten.
The square bent. The sky folded. Arden Gate convulsed, trapped between one loop and the next.
And Lio, on his knees, claws dug deep, felt the truth hammer his chest:
The fight was no longer about walls, or names, or doors.
It was about time itself.