Chapter 87: Nemesis Dragon
The instruction did not make the moment easier.
If anything, it made it worse.
Because looking at something as it is allows the mind to anchor itself to form, to shape, to limits that define what can and cannot be. Looking at something as it is becoming removes that safety. It forces you to accept motion without knowing the destination, to observe change without the comfort of conclusion.
I did not look away.
The shadows continued to gather, thickening around the figure not like darkness spreading, but like layers folding inward, compressing reality into something denser, something more precise. The lantern light dimmed, not extinguished, but overpowered, reduced to a faint glow that could no longer define the edges of the room.
The figure remained where they stood.
But they were no longer entirely there.
Their outline blurred at the edges, not violently, not erratically, but steadily, as though something beneath their surface was pressing outward, reshaping the boundary between what they were and what they would become.
Umbra pulsed sharply.
Through the bond—
Unstable.
Not like before.
Not like me.
The distinction echoed again, more insistent this time.
I focused.
Not on the surface.
Not on the human shape.
On the movement beneath.
At first, it was subtle.
A distortion in the way light bent around them.
A slight delay between motion and perception.
Then it grew clearer.
There were layers.
Not physical layers.
Conceptual ones.
The human form.
The fracture beneath.
And something else—
Deeper.
Held back.
Contained.
But not fully.
I exhaled slowly.
"You are not just integrating," I said.
The figure’s voice came from within the distortion now, slightly altered, carrying a faint echo beneath it.
"No."
"You are holding something back."
"Yes."
Nyx shifted beside me, her posture tense, her eyes narrowed as she tried to follow what she could not fully see.
"What is happening?" she asked.
I did not take my eyes off the figure.
"They are not just becoming unstable," I said. "They are containing the instability."
The figure’s head tilted slightly.
"Correct."
Nyx exhaled sharply. "That sounds worse."
"It is more controlled," I said.
"For now."
There it was again.
That phrase.
That inevitability.
The shadows thickened further, and for a moment, the human outline vanished completely.
In its place—
Something else.
Not a shape.
Not a creature.
A presence.
Compressed.
Layered.
Straining.
Umbra pulsed violently.
Through the bond—
Danger.
Real.
Immediate.
I stepped forward.
Just one step.
The Veilbind Chain reacted instantly, the silver markings along my arm flaring faintly, not in resistance, but in response, as if recognizing the nature of what stood before us.
The presence shifted.
Not outward.
Inward.
Like it noticed the chain.
Like it understood it.
The human form returned.
Not fully stable.
But enough.
The figure exhaled slowly, as if regaining control.
"You see it," they said.
"Yes."
Nyx glanced at me. "You are both talking like this is normal."
"It is not," I said. "But it is clear."
"That is not better."
I ignored that.
Because the pattern was forming.
"This is not just a fracture-born that adapted," I said. "This is something that stopped halfway."
The figure nodded slightly.
"Yes."
"Why?"
Silence followed.
Longer this time.
Then—
"Because if it completes..."
They did not finish the sentence.
They did not need to.
I already understood.
It would not remain contained.
It would not remain human.
It would become something else entirely.
Something like what we had seen beyond the fractures.
Something that did not belong within the world as it currently existed.
Nyx crossed her arms tightly. "So the solution was to trap it in between."
"Yes."
"And hope that holds."
"Yes."
"That is not a solution," she said.
"It is a delay."
That word again.
Everything was a delay.
Everything was temporary.
I exhaled slowly.
"And now the delay is ending."
"Yes."
Umbra pulsed again.
Through the bond—
Time.
Running.
I frowned slightly.
"You can feel that."
Umbra flickered.
Yes.
The figure’s gaze shifted briefly toward it.
"You are both connected to the same threshold," they said.
"Not the same way," I replied.
"No," they agreed. "Not the same way."
That mattered.
A lot.
Because it meant there was a difference.
A critical one.
I stepped closer again.
The pressure increased immediately, pressing against my thoughts, my perception, like something was testing the limits of what I could hold.
"You said you were waiting for someone to decide what happens next," I said.
"Yes."
"What are the options?"
The figure did not answer immediately.
Then—
"Reinforcement."
A pause.
"Severance."
Another pause.
"Or completion."
The words settled heavily into the room.
Nyx let out a quiet, incredulous breath. "Those all sound bad."
"They are," the figure said.
I considered each one carefully.
"Reinforcement," I said. "You stay like this. Contained. Delaying the outcome."
"Yes."
"Severance," I continued. "You are cut off from whatever you are connected to."
"Yes."
"And completion..."
The figure’s gaze held mine.
"I become what I am becoming."
Umbra pulsed sharply.
Through the bond—
No.
Strong.
Definite.
I exhaled slowly.
"That is not an option."
The figure tilted their head slightly.
"It is the most natural outcome."
"It is the most destructive outcome."
"Yes."
Nyx stepped forward. "Then we are not doing that."
The figure did not respond to her.
Their attention remained on me.
"Reinforcement will not hold indefinitely," they said.
"I know."
"Severance will destabilize the connection."
"I know."
"And you still have to choose."
I closed my eyes for a brief moment.
Not to avoid the decision.
To focus.
Because this—
This was not just about this person.
This was about the pattern.
About the fractures.
About what happened when things were cut.
Or bound.
Or allowed to complete.
I opened my eyes again.
Umbra hovered close.
Stable.
Anchored.
Different.
I looked at the figure.
At the instability beneath them.
At the thing they were holding back.
And then—
"I need to understand the connection first," I said.
Nyx sighed softly. "Of course you do."
The figure nodded.
"That is acceptable."
The shadows shifted again.
Not violently.
Not dangerously.
But enough that I knew what came next would not be simple.
"Then look," they said.
And this time—
I did not just observe.
I reached.
Not with my hand.
Not with the chain.
With perception.
With the same instinct that had allowed me to bind Umbra.
The same instinct that had bent fractures.
The connection formed instantly.
And the moment it did— ƒгeeweɓn૦vel.com
Everything changed.
I felt it.
Not just the instability.
Not just the pressure.
The source.
Something vast.
Distant.
Connected through the fractures like veins through reality itself.
And the figure—
Was the point where it touched this world.
I inhaled sharply.
The connection snapped back immediately, the Veilbind Chain flaring as if pulling me away from something too deep.
I staggered.
Nyx caught me instantly. "Loki!"
"I am fine," I said, though my voice was tighter than before.
The figure watched me carefully.
"You saw it."
"Yes."
"And now you understand."
I exhaled slowly.
"Yes."
Nyx looked between us. "Explain."
I straightened.
Steady.
Focused.
"This is not just a person losing control," I said.
"Then what is it?"
I looked at the figure.
Then at Umbra.
Then back at Nyx.
"This is a connection point," I said. "Between our world... and whatever lies beyond the fractures."
Silence followed. fгeewёbnoѵel.cσm
Then Nyx said quietly—
"That is worse."
Nyx’s words lingered in the air longer than they should have.
Not because they were dramatic, but because they were accurate in a way that left no room for denial. Worse did not begin to cover it. A fracture-born was a consequence. This was a gateway.
I steadied myself fully, forcing the lingering echo of that connection out of the forefront of my thoughts. The Veilbind Chain dimmed slightly along my arm, but it did not return to how it had been before. It felt... aware now. Not of the figure alone, but of what lay beyond them.
Umbra hovered close, its presence firm, grounded, a quiet contrast to the instability in front of us. Through the bond, I felt something important.
Not fear.
Clarity.
It understood the difference too.
The figure watched both of us, their expression unchanged, but the strain beneath it was more visible now. The shadows around them twitched faintly, like something testing the edges of a boundary it could not yet break.
"You see why delay is failing," they said.
"Yes," I replied.
Nyx stepped forward again, her voice tighter now. "Then we stop the connection. That is the answer."
I shook my head slightly.
"It is not that simple."
"Then make it simple," she snapped.
I looked at the figure again.
"At what cost?"
Nyx didn’t answer immediately.
Because she understood the question now.
The figure did.
"Severance will save the town," they said quietly. "But it will not end the connection. It will move it."
The room stilled.
I exhaled.
"So we are not choosing whether it spreads."
A pause.
"Only where."