The air was thick with the stench of blood, a sickly sweet odor that clung to the back of the throat and made it hard to breathe. The once-vibrant field of flowers was now a grotesque battleground, their petals stained with crimson and trampled underfoot by the desperate, the dying, and the damned. The sky, a nightmarish canvas of bloody red, was adorned with countless eyes, their unblinking gaze piercing through the veil of reality, observing the chaos below with a sinister curiosity. Instead of stars, these eyes seemed to pulse in time with the anguished screams that echoed across the field, a symphony of terror and despair.
High above, the massive form of Invidia dominated the sky, a blasphemous whale that seemed to defy nature itself. Its seven crimson eyes glowed with malevolent intent, scanning the battlefield with a hunger that went beyond mere sustenance. The three eyes on each side of its grotesque head twitched and rolled, while the largest eye in the center remained fixed, unblinking, its gaze cold and calculating. The halo of thorns that circled its head radiated an aura of despair, the sharp points glinting in the dim light like the teeth of a predator.
Invidia's body was a mass of gray, rotting flesh, covered in patches of moss that clung to it like a disease. The six fins that jutted out from its sides sliced through the air with lethal grace, each movement sending ripples of power that distorted the already unstable subspace. The entire environment was a product of this twisted subspace artifact, once a haven for those who sought refuge from the horrors of the world, but now corrupted by the madness that Invidia spread like a plague.
As the monster hovered ominously, thorny balls rained down from the sky, each impact sending shockwaves through the ground and crushing those unfortunate enough to be caught beneath them. The screams that followed were cut short, replaced by the sickening crunch of bone and the wet squelch of flesh being pulverized.
But the true horror was not in the destruction wrought by Invidia’s physical form—it was in the effect of its Authority of Madness. The monster's scream, a sound that seemed to come from the very bowels of hell, pierced the minds of all who heard it. Awakened humans convulsed, their bodies twisting and contorting as the madness consumed them. Meta-humans and the unawakened fared no better, their once proud powers turned against them, warping their bodies into grotesque abominations that barely resembled their former selves.
The field, once a place of beauty, had become a nightmare of writhing, howling creatures, their forms distorted by the madness that gripped them. The air was filled with the cacophony of their tormented cries, a sound that burrowed into the mind and gnawed at the soul.
Wallace stood frozen, his heart a heavy drumbeat in his chest, each thud echoing with the weight of a past he couldn't escape. The illusionary corpse of Emma lay before him, her lifeless eyes staring up into the void, piercing through the veneer of his sanity. The surrounding blackness was suffocating, a tangible force pressing down on his mind, trapping him in the dark recesses of his worst memories. Each breath he took felt like a futile grasp for air, drowning in the inky black sea of his thoughts.
Iris, peering cautiously through the doorway, saw the haunting scene unfold. The pitch-black room swallowed the light, and there, amidst the shadows, sat Wallace, tears streaming down his face, paralyzed by a grief so profound it rooted him in place. The eerie melody of a music box began to fill the room, its tune both sweet and sinister. Calum, his expression unreadable, methodically cranked the handle of the artifact, Lullaby. The melody, deceptively gentle, held a dark power, its notes weaving into Wallace's mind, seizing upon his deepest traumas.
The first cruel twist of Lullaby’s power took hold: the music latched onto a buried memory, twisting it, amplifying it until it consumed him entirely. Wallace was no longer in the room, no longer conscious of Iris, or Calum, or the present. He was back in the nightmare of the Invidia raid, the day his world shattered.
In his mind, the scene replayed with agonizing clarity. Sofia stood before him, her sword gleaming with intent, ready to strike him down. Wallace, his body trembling, choked out the words that had haunted him ever since, “I’m sorry, Emma. Forgive me for this.” His arm lifted as if on its own, fingers curled in the familiar shape of a gun, and with a motion so ingrained in him, he fired, at Emma.
Reality and illusion blurred, the lines between past and present erasing as Wallace relived the horror of that moment. Calum and Sofia watched, horror dawning on their faces as the truth of Emma's death unraveled before them. The shock was palpable, a silence hanging heavy in the air as they processed what they were witnessing. They had known the story of Emma's death, the official report that she had been a tragic casualty in the chaos of the raid. But they had never imagined that it was Wallace—Wallace who had pulled the trigger, Wallace who had ended her life.
“We need to capture him alive. Nikolai will want to hear this,” Calum's voice was cold, and authoritative, cutting through the tension like a blade.
But Iris, ever determined, refused to let Wallace drown in the torment of his own mind. “Charles, we need to help him,” she commanded, urgency lacing her voice. “Use your telekinesis to take away her weapon. I’m going to try to get rid of the illusion.”
Charles, always one to resist, grumbled in annoyance. “You order me around too much, but fine, I’ll help,” he conceded, though the gravity of the situation tempered his usual sarcasm.
As they moved to intervene, the room seemed to pulse with the dark energy of Lullaby, the artifact's power feeding off Wallace’s torment, amplifying the nightmare that held him captive. At that moment, the fragile barrier between Wallace's mind and the twisted reality of the subspace artifact began to crack, and it was uncertain whether he would emerge from this ordeal whole, or lost forever to the madness.
A crimson aura erupted from Sofia’s Glacier’s Edge, crackling with raw energy as the weapon was violently torn from her grasp, hovering midair for a moment before being flung aside. The force of the telekinetic pull left Sofia momentarily stunned, her arm throbbing from the sudden loss of her weapon. Iris, standing at the center of the room, her eyes blazing with intensity, felt a strange pressure building within her. A faint, yet ominous, red ring glowed around her iris, signaling the onset of something far beyond her control.
The surrounding room warped, the walls seeming to breathe as illusionary screams reverberated in her mind, echoes of madness that clawed at her sanity. The raving voices, familiar yet distant, were the same ones she had heard from the red book, a book that had become an anchor to a power she barely understood. The words it had whispered to her, though once forgotten, now surfaced with a burning clarity, On… September… 13th… use… the… red… book. Each word etched itself into her consciousness, searing into her memory with a fiery intensity that left no room for doubt. Her body moved as if guided by an unseen force, her actions no longer her own, but dictated by the relentless command echoing in her mind.
As if in a trance, Iris’s flames began to morph, their searing heat shifting into the delicate form of butterflies, each one shimmering with an ethereal red light. The transformation was seamless, almost beautiful, but there was an underlying terror in the precision of it all, a fear that she was no longer the master of her own power. The butterflies condensed, forming the red book. Its cover, pulsating with energy, materialized in her hands, the weight of it heavy with the promise of untold consequences.
The pages of the book flipped with a life of their own, the ancient and incomprehensible script racing past her eyes until it settled on a single image. A butterfly, its wings spread wide, surrounded by cryptic symbols that seemed to pulse with life. Though the writing was indecipherable, something deep within Iris’s soul resonated with it, an ancient knowledge that guided her hands, and compelled her to act. The butterflies, now fully formed, began to spread out across the room, their delicate wings brushing against the lingering shadows of the illusion. Everywhere they touched, the oppressive veil of Calum's ability started to lift, the nightmare slowly dissolving into nothingness.
But the battle was far from over. Though the illusion began to fade, the artifact’s dark influence still lingered, its power diminished but not broken. Wallace’s torment had been momentarily alleviated, but the echoes of his nightmare still haunted the air, a reminder that the artifact's hold had not been entirely severed.
As the last vestiges of the illusion peeled away, Iris felt a single tear roll down her cheek. The enormity of what she had just done crashed down on her with brutal force. She had used the red book, a relic that her future self had warned her never to touch, its power both immense and insidious. It had given her exactly what she needed to break the hold of the illusion, to save Wallace from the depths of his despair. But the cost of that power was still unknown, a debt that she feared would come due when she least expected it.
Iris stood there, the room now eerily quiet, the air thick with the tension of what had just transpired. She knew, deep in her heart, that she had crossed a line, a line that could never be uncrossed. The red book’s power had saved them, but it had also marked her, bound her to a fate she had tried so desperately to avoid. The consequences of her actions were still shrouded in mystery, but one thing was certain, nothing would ever be the same again.
“Snap out of it! We’re not done yet!” Charles's voice cut through the lingering haze in Iris's mind like a knife, the sharp clap of his hands jolting her back to the present. His usually sardonic tone was edged with urgency, his eyes locked onto hers with a fierce intensity. The force of his words and the abruptness of the sound broke through the fog of her thoughts, dragging her back from the precipice of despair.
Iris blinked, her vision clearing as reality snapped back into focus. “Y-you’re right, sorry,” she stammered, though the sadness clung to her expression like a shadow. The weight of what she had just done still pressed heavily on her, but there was no time to dwell on it. Not now.
Calum, however, was far less forgiving. “What the hell are you doing here? It seems our intel was slightly off, and this complicates things,” he barked, his voice dripping with irritation. His gaze flicked to Sofia, who was still reeling from the unexpected turn of events. “Sofia, pick up your damn weapon! I’d understand if it was Wallace, but did you really let a child throw your weapon out of your hand?”
Sofia, her face flushed with embarrassment, quickly bent to retrieve Glacier’s Edge. The cold steel felt heavier in her grip now, weighed down by her own lapse in focus. “I’m sorry, I didn’t expect them to be here,” she murmured, her voice tinged with regret. She had been caught off guard, a mistake that could cost them dearly.
Calum’s irritation was palpable, but he wasted no more time on chastising his comrades. The situation was spiraling out of control, and he knew they couldn’t afford any more mistakes. He resumed cranking the handle of the music box with renewed determination, the eerie melody winding toward its final, deadly notes. Wallace, though still trapped in the throes of Lullaby’s power, showed signs of stirring. His eyes flickered, his body trembling slightly, as if caught between two worlds. He wasn’t fully lost in the nightmare, at least, not yet. One decisive blow could be enough to snap him out of it, to break the artifact’s hold before it was too late.
“Hold them off! Once the music is done, Wallace will die,” Calum ordered, his voice a cold command that brooked no argument. The urgency in his tone underscored the dire stakes, they were running out of time. The room seemed to hum with tension, the air thick with the impending climax of the music box’s curse. The melody grew more insistent, each note winding tighter around Wallace’s mind, dragging him closer to the abyss.
The room crackled with tension as the confrontation reached its boiling point. Sofia, her eyes narrowed with steely resolve, gripped Glacier’s Edge tightly. The blade shimmered with a crystalline sheen, frost creeping along its edge as her cryokinesis flared to life. The temperature in the room plummeted, visible wisps of cold air swirling around her like a blizzard held in check. Each step she took left a trail of ice, the floor beneath her feet freezing solid as she advanced.
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Iris, standing opposite her, felt the biting chill seep into her bones, but she fought it off, igniting the flames within her. The heat radiating from her was palpable, clashing against the cold in a battle of elemental forces. Flames danced across her skin, licking at the air as she prepared to meet Sofia head-on.
Charles, hovering behind Iris, kept his focus sharp. His telekinesis thrummed beneath the surface, invisible yet powerful, ready to be unleashed at a moment's notice. He was the wild card in this fight, his abilities capable of turning the tide with a mere thought.
Sofia struck first, slashing Glacier’s Edge through the air. A sharp crescent of ice shot forward, aiming to encase Iris in a block of solid frost. Iris countered with a wave of her hand, sending a torrent of flames to meet the oncoming ice. The two forces collided in an explosion of steam, the room briefly obscured by the hissing cloud.
Out of the mist, Sofia charged, her sword a blur of icy blue as she closed the distance. Iris parried with a pillar of fire, the searing heat forcing Sofia to sidestep. But Sofia was relentless, slashing downward with her blade. The tip of Glacier’s Edge grazed the ground, freezing the floor beneath Iris’s feet and causing her to slip momentarily.
Before Sofia could capitalize on the opening, Charles intervened. With a flick of his wrist, he sent a telekinetic blast toward Sofia, aiming to knock her off balance. Sofia, sensing the incoming attack, spun gracefully, using her momentum to deflect the telekinetic force with a quick upward slice of her sword. The surrounding air rippled with the clash of energies, but she remained unfazed, her focus unbroken.
Seeing Sofia momentarily distracted by Charles’s assault, Iris seized the opportunity. She conjured a cluster of fireballs in her hands, each one burning brighter than the last. With a powerful thrust, she launched them at Sofia, the fiery orbs streaking through the air like comets. Sofia reacted instinctively, raising Glacier’s Edge to block the onslaught. The fireballs exploded on impact, flames cascading around her but unable to penetrate the shield of ice that her sword provided.
As the flames died down, Sofia smirked, confident in her defense. But Iris wasn’t done. Using the cover of the smoke and embers, she darted to the side, her flames condensed into a spear as she threw it towards Sofia, as she barely managed to parry it.
Sofia barely had time to recover when Iris sprang her surprise. With a sudden burst of speed, Iris closed the distance between them, her hand glowing with intense heat. But instead of striking Sofia, she spun around and hurled a fireball past her, straight at Wallace.
Sofia’s eyes widened in shock as she realized Iris’s true target. The fireball slammed into Wallace’s back, the heat searing through the remnants of Lullaby’s influence. Wallace gasped, his eyes snapping open as the fiery impact jolted him back to reality, the nightmare that had held him captive shattered in an instant.
As the final haunting notes of the music box faded into silence, the air in the room grew thick with an ominous presence. From the darkness surrounding Lullaby, a grotesque shape began to emerge, the very fabric of reality warping and twisting around it. The creature that crawled forth was a manifestation of nightmares given flesh, a monstrosity born from the deepest fears and twisted by the malevolent power of the artifact.
The monster towered over the room, its body a mass of shifting, shadowy tendrils that writhed and coiled like living serpents. Each tendril ended in a sharp, barbed tip, dripping with an inky substance that seemed to sizzle and evaporate as it touched the ground. Its form was ever-changing, a chaotic blend of shapes that refused to stay still, as if it were a living nightmare constantly reshaping itself.
At its core, the creature had a vaguely humanoid shape, though horribly distorted. Its skin was a sickly, mottled gray, stretched tight over bones that jutted out at unnatural angles. Its limbs were long and sinewy, ending in clawed hands that twitched with anticipation. The head was the most horrifying part, an oversized, elongated skull with no eyes, only deep, hollow sockets that seemed to draw in all light. Its mouth was a gaping maw filled with rows of jagged, uneven teeth, and from it issued a low, guttural growl that resonated with the very essence of dread.
As the creature fully materialized, it released a bone-chilling shriek, a sound that clawed at the mind and sent shivers down the spine. The scream was a call to those still caught in Lullaby's nightmare, a beacon to the monster's insatiable hunger. It fed on fear and despair, drawn to those who had been weakened by the artifact's curse. The surrounding air seemed to vibrate with its presence, an oppressive force that pressed down on the room like a tangible weight.
The creature moved with unnatural speed, its tendrils lashing out in every direction, searching for its prey. It was a predator born from the darkest corners of the mind, relentless and driven by a single purpose, to consume the fear-tainted souls of those still trapped in their nightmares.
The monstrous entity, sensing that the room was devoid of any suitable prey, let out a low, guttural snarl. Its tendrils, still twitching with unfulfilled hunger, recoiled back into the shadowy mass of its body. With a sickening squelch, it began to retract, slithering back toward the cursed music box from which it had emerged. As it vanished, the room's atmosphere shifted, leaving behind a cold, suffocating silence. Wallace, still reeling from the nightmare’s grip, watched in horrified awe, barely comprehending how close he had come to death. But there was no time for relief—another horror was about to unfold.
“Damn it, damn it, I won’t let it end like this!” Calum’s voice rang out, filled with a desperate, almost crazed determination. He grabbed Sofia by the neck, his grip tight and unyielding.
“What are you doing?!” Sofia screamed, panic rising in her voice as she struggled against him. But Calum’s resolve was unbreakable. From his pocket, he pulled out a syringe filled with a viscous black liquid. Without hesitation, he jammed the needle into Sofia’s neck, the syringe plunging deep into her flesh.
The injection site bubbled and frothed as the black liquid spread rapidly through her veins. Sofia’s screams turned into strangled gasps as her body convulsed, the transformation taking hold almost instantly. Wallace’s eyes widened in horror as he recognized the symptoms—the grotesque twisting of limbs, the unnatural bulging of muscles, the way her skin began to pale and crack like ice. It was madness, pure and unchecked, consuming her from the inside out.
“Please… kill me… I don’t want to be a monster…” Sofia’s voice, distorted by the transformation, echoed with the same haunting plea Wallace had heard once before. Emma’s voice. The words overlapped in his mind, pulling him back to that fateful day, the memory of Emma’s last moments before he was forced to end her suffering.
But Sofia’s transformation was happening at a terrifying pace. Her body elongated, bones cracking and reshaping beneath her icy skin. Her eyes, once vibrant with life, dulled to a lifeless blue, glazed over with a thin layer of frost. Her flesh took on a translucent, crystalline quality, and veins of ice spread out from the wound on her neck, crawling across her body like a spider’s web.
Glacier’s Edge, still clutched in her hand, began to fuse with her changing form. The blade, once an extension of her will, now became a part of her, embedding itself into her arm and extending outward as if it were a natural growth. The sword’s icy power merged with Sofia’s madness-infused body, transforming her arm into a grotesque weapon of frozen death. The blade itself elongated and warped, jagged shards of ice sprouting from her flesh, giving her the appearance of a monstrous, ice-covered titan.
Calum, seeing the horror he had unleashed, staggered back, fear finally breaking through his resolve. He turned and fled, leaving Sofia to her fate, her form continuing to twist and mutate in his wake.
Sofia’s mouth opened, but instead of words, a guttural roar escaped her lips—a sound of pure agony and rage, of humanity lost. Her body was no longer her own; she had become a creature of the cold, an embodiment of the madness that had been forced upon her.
Wallace, heart pounding in his chest, tightened his grip on his weapon. The echoes of Emma’s final plea still rang in his ears, but he knew what had to be done. There was no saving Sofia now—she had become a monster, and like Emma before her, she would have to be put down before she could cause more harm.
With grim determination, Wallace steeled himself for what was to come.
As Calum burst through the door, expecting to find the familiar corridor of the building, he was instead met with an entirely different scene—an expansive library that seemed to stretch endlessly in all directions. The air was thick with the scent of aged parchment and ink, a subtle reminder of the countless stories and secrets contained within the ancient tomes lining the towering shelves. Each bookshelf was intricately carved, the dark wood adorned with gold inlays that shimmered softly in the dim light.
The library was bathed in an ethereal glow, emanating from the countless butterflies that flitted through the air. These butterflies were unlike any Calum had ever seen—each one a different color, their wings iridescent and luminous. They moved gracefully, leaving trails of light in their wake, their delicate forms weaving through the shelves and around the towering stacks of books as if they were the very soul of the library itself. The glow they cast was calming yet otherworldly, casting long, flickering shadows that danced across the floor.
At the center of this vast, seemingly infinite space was a large, ornately carved desk. The wood was dark, polished to a mirror-like finish, and inlaid with intricate patterns that seemed to shift and change as the light hit them. Behind the desk sat a man, his presence both commanding and serene. It was Fate, the Bookkeeper. His gaze was unwavering, piercing through Calum with an intensity that made the air seem heavier, as if the very room was waiting in anticipation.
Fate’s appearance was as enigmatic as the library itself. His eyes were ancient, filled with the weight of countless lifetimes, yet they held a quiet, knowing calm. He did not speak, but his silence was powerful, carrying the weight of inevitability and the inescapable nature of destiny.
Calum, his breath quickening with panic, took a step back, his eyes darting around the room as he realized the trap he had unwittingly walked into. The butterflies, though beautiful, now seemed to encircle him, their glow intensifying as if they were attuned to his growing fear.
“Damn it, it’s you! Let me out of this place, Bookkeeper!” Calum yelled, his voice echoing through the vastness of the library. The desperation in his tone was palpable, but Fate remained unmoved, his expression unchanged.
The only response Calum received was the soft rustle of pages turning, as if the library itself was acknowledging his presence, the endless books whispering secrets that only the Bookkeeper could understand. The door behind Calum had vanished, leaving him with no escape, trapped in this labyrinth of knowledge and destiny.
“As it is written, so shall it end. Your story closes here, Calum,” Fate declared, his voice carrying an icy finality.
Calum’s eyes widened in terror and rage. “You bast—” he began to shout, but his words were cut off as a massive golden spear materialized from thin air and drove itself deep into his back. The impact was brutal, sending a jolt of pain through his entire body. Before he could react, another spear appeared, then another, each one embedding itself into his flesh with relentless precision. The golden spears seemed to flow out of nowhere, a ceaseless torrent of divine retribution.
Calum’s body was wracked with spasms as the spears continued to pierce him, the sheer number of them ensuring that his suffering was prolonged. Despite the agony, he was forced to remain conscious, unable to escape the torment that enveloped him. Each new spear seemed to multiply his pain, creating a horrifying symphony of suffering that echoed through the library’s grand expanse.
Fate approached slowly, his presence commanding and calm amidst the chaos. He walked with deliberate steps, his gaze locked on Calum’s with a chilling, impassive focus. The golden light from the spears cast shifting shadows across his face, highlighting the cold resolve in his eyes.
“Don’t worry,” Fate said, his tone devoid of sympathy. “I will add your entire organization to the obituary. Such is the destiny of anyone who dares to harm her.” His words were a final decree, sealing Calum’s fate with a cold inevitability.
As Fate turned and began to walk away, the spears that had impaled Calum began to dissolve. They transformed into delicate golden butterflies, their luminous wings fluttering softly as they ascended into the air. The ethereal creatures swirled around the library, their gentle flight a stark contrast to the brutality that had just transpired.
Calum’s body, now riddled with gaping wounds, slumped to the floor, the blood pooling beneath him in a dark, spreading the stain. The once pristine library floor was marred by the crimson flood, a grim reminder of the violence that had taken place.
Fate’s footsteps grew fainter as he moved away, his form gradually receding into the shadows of the vast library. The butterflies continued their ascent, their soft glow fading into the distant recesses of the room.
The library, now silent except for the faint rustling of the butterflies, was left with only the haunting remains of Calum’s final moments. As the last of the golden light disappeared, so too did the last vestiges of hope for those who would dare to challenge the Bookkeeper.