Chapter 38: The War of Original Noahs
The System could not stop.
Lines of broken text scrolled endlessly across Noah’s vision, overlapping, colliding, repeating themselves in patterns that made no sense.
[Ding!]
Identity Conflict Unresolved.
Searching...
Searching...
Searching...
Match Found. freewebnøvel.com
Match Found.
Match Found.
Each time the words "Match Found" appeared, a new number flickered beside it, climbing higher and higher with no sign of slowing down.
One.
Two.
Five.
Eleven.
Twenty-three.
Forty.
The numbers kept rising, faster now, as if the System itself had given up trying to understand and had simply started counting for the sake of counting.
Noah stared at the rising count, his mind refusing to process what it meant.
Forty versions of himself.
Forty lives, forty deaths, forty stories, all collapsing into this single point in existence.
"What is happening to the System?" he asked, though he wasn’t sure if he was asking the Observer, the Devourer, or himself.
No one answered immediately.
The First Prisoner simply stood there, watching the chaos unfold with the calm patience of someone who had clearly seen this exact moment before, more times than it cared to remember.
"It’s trying to make sense of something that was never meant to make sense," the First Prisoner said, almost lazily, as if discussing a minor inconvenience rather than the unraveling of reality itself.
"The System was built on the assumption that there could only be one of you," it continued. "One origin. One source. One Noah."
It tilted its head slightly, the motion almost playful despite the weight pressing down on everything around them.
"That assumption was wrong from the very beginning."
The End finally moved.
It wasn’t much, just a slight shift of his shoulders, but after the stillness of the past few minutes, even that small motion felt enormous, as if the air itself resisted it.
"You’re lying," The End said, his voice hoarse, scraped raw from something more than just speaking.
The First Prisoner turned toward him, the smile never leaving its face.
"Am I?"
"There has only ever been one Noah," The End continued, though his voice lacked the certainty it usually carried, cracking slightly on the last word. "I have watched over every version of this timeline. I would know."
"Would you?"
The First Prisoner’s voice dropped, becoming quieter, almost gentle, which somehow made it more unsettling than when it had been loud.
"Tell me, End. How many timelines have you actually watched from the beginning?"
The End did not answer.
"How many of them did you arrive partway through, already shaped, already in motion, with no memory of how they started?"
Still, The End said nothing, his jaw tightening, his eyes flicking briefly toward Noah before returning to the First Prisoner.
"That’s what I thought."
The First Prisoner straightened, its massive frame casting a shadow that seemed to swallow the light around it without actually moving, the darkness pooling outward like ink spreading through water.
"You were placed into this story partway through, End. Just like everyone else."
"Including him."
It pointed at Noah again, the gesture slow, deliberate, almost ceremonial, as if marking him for something neither of them could undo.
Noah felt his pulse quicken, his own heartbeat suddenly the loudest thing in his world.
Inside his mind, the Devourer had gone completely silent, no longer urging him to run, simply watching, waiting, as if even it wanted to hear what came next.
"You think you are the protagonist of this story," the First Prisoner said, addressing Noah directly now, its ancient eyes locking onto his with terrible focus. "You think your journey, your struggles, your victories, all of it led somewhere meaningful." freewebnoveℓ.com
"And maybe it did."
"But not in the way you believe."
The crack behind the First Prisoner pulsed, the edges widening slightly with each word it spoke, as if its voice alone was enough to tear reality further apart, the void beyond growing darker, hungrier.
"There were others before you," it said. "Other Noahs. Other versions of this exact story, told and retold, each one ending differently."
"Some of them won."
"Most of them didn’t."
"And every single one of them believed, right up until the end, that they were the original."
The words hit Noah like physical blows, each one landing with more force than the last, each one striking somewhere deeper than the one before.
He wanted to deny it.
He wanted to scream that it wasn’t true, that his memories, his choices, his pain, all of it was real, all of it mattered, that none of it could simply be erased by the words of a stranger wearing his face.
But some part of him, some quiet, buried part he had never acknowledged before, recognized the truth in those words.
He had always felt it.
That faint, nagging sense that something about his journey followed a pattern too perfect to be coincidence.
The familiar betrayals.
The familiar allies.
The familiar enemies, appearing in slightly different forms, but always, somehow, the same.
"No," Noah said quietly, though even he wasn’t sure what he was denying anymore, the word escaping him more out of instinct than conviction.
The First Prisoner’s smile softened, just slightly, into something almost sympathetic, something that looked, for the first time, genuinely human.
"I said the same thing once," it admitted. "A very long time ago. Longer than you can imagine."
"And then I found out the truth, the way you’re about to."
It raised its hand again, and this time, instead of pointing, it simply opened its palm toward the crack behind it, the gesture almost an invitation.
The void beyond the crack rippled.
And then, slowly, something else began to step through.
Not one figure this time.
Several.
Noah’s breath caught as he watched silhouette after silhouette emerge from the darkness, each one taking shape, each one becoming clearer, each one a fragment of something he was only beginning to understand.
They all looked different.
Different builds, different ages, different scars, different lives written across their bodies in ways only experience could carve.
But their faces.
Their faces were all the same.
All of them were him.
"Allow me to introduce you," the First Prisoner said, gesturing toward the emerging figures with something close to amusement, though even that amusement seemed worn thin, "to the others."
The closest figure stepped forward first.
He looked younger than Noah, barely more than a teenager, his eyes wide with the kind of innocence Noah hadn’t felt in years.
But his hands were stained, deep red marks soaked into his skin as if he had spent his entire life unable to wash them clean, no matter how hard he tried.
"This one," the First Prisoner said, "tried to save everyone."
"Every single person in his timeline."
"He refused to let anyone die, no matter the cost, no matter what it required of him."
The figure’s eyes lifted, meeting Noah’s gaze for just a moment, and in that moment, Noah saw something break behind them, something fragile finally giving way after holding far too long.
"In the end," the First Prisoner continued, "he succeeded."
"For exactly eleven seconds."
"Then everyone he saved turned on each other, because he had never let any of them face the consequences of their own choices. He had carried every burden himself, until none of them remembered how to carry anything at all."
"By the time the eleven seconds ended, there was nothing left to save."
The figure lowered his head, his shoulders slumping, and faded back into the darkness without another word, his red-stained hands the last thing to disappear.
The second figure stepped forward next.
This one was older, far older than Noah, with hair completely white and eyes that looked like they had stopped reflecting light a long time ago, as if something inside him had simply burned out.
"This one," the First Prisoner said, "chose power over everything else."
"He sacrificed every relationship, every connection, every piece of himself that wasn’t useful for becoming stronger, believing that strength alone could solve every problem he would ever face."
"And he did become strong. Stronger than almost anyone in his timeline. Strong enough that nothing could touch him."
The older figure’s expression didn’t change at all, as if he had heard this exact summary of his life so many times that it no longer affected him, the words simply passing through him like wind through an empty room.
"By the time he realized strength alone meant nothing without anyone left to share it with, he had already outlived everyone he had ever known. Everyone he had ever loved. Everyone who had ever known his name before he became something unrecognizable."
"He spent the rest of his existence completely alone, in a world he had become too powerful to leave and too empty to want to stay in."
"Eventually, he simply stopped."
The figure didn’t fade away like the first one had.
He simply turned and walked back into the darkness on his own, disappearing without a sound, his footsteps somehow louder in their absence than they had ever been in their presence.
A third figure emerged.
This one looked almost exactly like Noah, down to the smallest details, the same posture, the same way of standing with his weight slightly favoring one side.
"This one," the First Prisoner said, its voice growing quieter, "got closest."
"Closest to what?" Noah heard himself ask, though part of him didn’t want to know the answer, didn’t want to hear it confirmed.
"Closest to ending this."
The figure looked at Noah, and for the first time, Noah saw an expression he recognized immediately, because it was an expression he had worn himself, more than once, in moments he thought defined him.
Determination.
The same determination Noah carried with him into every battle, the belief that this time, finally, things would be different, that he would be the exception, the one who broke the pattern.
"He understood the truth before any of the others," the First Prisoner said. "He knew about me. He knew about the cycle. He pieced it together faster than any version before him, faster than I expected anyone ever could."
"And he tried to break it."
"How?" Noah asked, his voice tight.
The First Prisoner’s smile faded completely for the first time since it had emerged, something heavier settling over its expression.
"He came here," it said. "To this exact moment. To this exact conversation."
"He stood exactly where you are standing now, hearing exactly what you are hearing."
A pause, long and heavy.
"And then he attacked me."
The figure’s eyes never left Noah’s, and slowly, he raised one hand, revealing that it ended at the wrist, the rest simply gone, as if it had never existed at all, as if that part of him had been removed from the story itself.
"He got close enough to land one strike," the First Prisoner continued. "Just one. The fastest, strongest strike of his entire existence, everything he had built across an entire lifetime, condensed into a single moment."
"It cost him his entire arm. His entire future. Every version of himself that could have existed beyond this point, erased in an instant."
"And it didn’t even leave a mark on me."
The figure lowered his stump of an arm and, like the first, faded silently back into the darkness, his expression never changing, his determination somehow still intact even in defeat, which made it worse.
Noah felt sick.
A fourth figure stepped forward before the third had even fully disappeared.
This one was smaller, hunched, his eyes darting nervously between Noah and the First Prisoner, his hands constantly moving, fidgeting with nothing.
"This one," the First Prisoner said, "ran."
"He understood the truth almost immediately, faster even than the third. But unlike him, he didn’t try to fight."
"He turned and ran the moment he understood what I was."
The hunched figure’s eyes met Noah’s briefly, and in them, Noah saw something he recognized far too easily.
Fear.
The same fear he had felt earlier, the same instinct the Devourer had tried to warn him about.
"He ran for what felt like centuries," the First Prisoner continued. "Through timeline after timeline, hiding, surviving, always one step ahead."
"And for a while, it worked. He lived longer than almost any version before him. He grew old. He had a life, in a small, quiet corner of existence where nothing ever found him."
"But the cycle doesn’t end just because one person stops participating."
"Everything he ran from eventually caught up to everyone else instead."
"By the time he died, peacefully, in his sleep, surrounded by people who loved him, every other timeline had already collapsed."
"He was the last one standing in a story that had already ended without him."
The hunched figure lowered his eyes, and unlike the others, he didn’t fade away slowly.
He simply vanished, instantly, as if even his memory had decided he wasn’t worth holding onto any longer.
Noah looked at the crack, at the darkness beyond it, and understood, with sudden and horrifying clarity, that there were more.
Many more.
Endless versions of himself, each one having lived an entire life, made entire choices, fought entire battles, only to end up here, in this exact spot, facing this exact entity.
And all of them had failed.
Every single one.
"Why are you showing me this?" Noah asked, his voice barely steady, each word costing him more than the last.
The First Prisoner studied him for a long moment before answering, its ancient eyes searching Noah’s face for something.
"Because you deserve to understand what you’re part of," it said. "Better than any of them did."
"They all walked into this moment believing they were unique. Believing their story was the one that mattered, the one that would finally be different."
"I’m giving you the chance to walk in with your eyes open."
"Why?" Noah asked again, anger creeping into his voice now, sharp and sudden. "What does that change? If they all failed, if every single one of them ended up exactly the same, what difference does it make if I know about it beforehand?"
For the first time, something shifted in the First Prisoner’s expression, something Noah couldn’t quite place.
Not amusement.
Not cruelty.
Something closer to exhaustion, the kind of exhaustion that came not from physical strain, but from carrying the same weight for an unimaginable length of time.
"Because I’m tired," it said simply, the words landing with more honesty than anything else it had said so far.
"I have stood here, in this exact place, for longer than you can comprehend. I have watched version after version of myself walk through that crack, make the same choices, ask the same questions, and end the same way."
"I have given this same speech more times than I can count. I have shown this same gallery of failures to more versions of myself than exist names for."
"I am not asking you to fight me."
"I am asking you to choose."
Behind Noah, The End finally found his voice again, stepping forward despite the obvious effort it took, his presence still trembling at the edges.
"Choose what?" he demanded.
The First Prisoner’s gaze shifted to him, almost gently, the intensity easing slightly.
"Whether this story continues," it said, "or whether it finally ends."
The crack pulsed again, wider this time, and Noah felt the pressure around him intensify, the System’s stability counter dropping further, the numbers no longer falling steadily but plummeting.
8%
5%
3%
"The cycle has run its course more times than even I can count," the First Prisoner said. "Each time, a new Noah is placed at the beginning, with no memory of what came before, and the story plays out again, with small variations, small differences, but always ending the same way."
"Trapped. Repeated. Forgotten."
"I was the first to realize what was happening. The first version of Noah to live long enough, and remember enough, to see the pattern for what it was."
"And I have been trying to stop it ever since."
It gestured toward the crack behind it, toward the darkness filled with countless versions of Noah, each one a failed attempt, each one a life lived and lost for nothing, each one a name that would never be spoken again.
"Every one of them tried to fight me, because they assumed I was the enemy. Because that’s what the story trains every Noah to do. Find the threat. Defeat the threat. Move forward."
"None of them stopped to ask what I actually wanted."
The Devourer stirred inside Noah’s mind, its presence shifting from fear into something more cautious, more thoughtful, as if it too were reconsidering everything it thought it understood.
"What do you want?" Noah asked quietly, the anger draining out of his voice, replaced by something heavier.
The First Prisoner’s eyes met his, and for just a moment, the ancient hatred Noah had felt radiating from it earlier seemed to fade, replaced by something far more human.
Something tired.
Something that, despite everything, still hoped.
"I want someone to finally choose to end it," it said. "Not by fighting me. Not by destroying me."
"By choosing not to continue."
Behind them, the Observer slowly rose to his feet, his earlier composure beginning to return, though his expression remained grave, his eyes flicking nervously between Noah and the First Prisoner.
"If the cycle ends," the Observer said carefully, each word measured, "what happens to everything that currently exists? Every world, every life, every timeline that is currently running?"
The First Prisoner turned toward him, and for the first time, something almost like respect flickered across its face.
"That depends," it said, "on what Noah decides."
It looked back at Noah, and this time, there was no smile at all.
Just a question, hanging in the air between them, heavier than anything Noah had faced before, heavier than any enemy, any battle, any sacrifice.
The status window flickered one last time, the falling numbers freezing in place.
1%
Noah looked past the First Prisoner, into the darkness beyond the crack, where countless versions of himself waited, silent, watching, each one having stood exactly where he stood now.
He thought of the boy with the red-stained hands.
He thought of the old man who had outlived everyone he loved.
He thought of the one who had given everything for a single strike that meant nothing.
He thought of the one who had run, and lived, and still lost everything anyway.
And then he looked at the First Prisoner, at his own face staring back at him across centuries of suffering, and finally understood the true weight of the question being asked.
"So," the First Prisoner said quietly, its voice barely above a whisper now. "What will it be?"
"Will you fight, like all the others before you?"
"Will you run, like the one who thought he was clever?"
"Will you sacrifice everything for a single strike that changes nothing?"
It leaned forward, the chains on its body shifting with a sound like distant bells, ancient and mournful.
"Or will you finally listen?"
Silence fell.
Not the silence of despair this time.
Not the silence of fear.
The silence of a choice, finally placed in someone’s hands, waiting to be made, with the weight of every failed attempt before it pressing down on a single, trembling decision.