Chapter 17: The Spark Before the Storm
The sky above the ruins burned with hues of deep crimson and fractured violet. The Earth had never fully recovered from the Moon’s destruction, and the atmospheric shifts cast eerie lights across the shattered landscape. Kai stood at the edge of the Keepers’ training grounds, his breath steady, his pulse like a war drum. His last trial had revealed a truth he wasn’t ready for—his instincts, his emotions, his need to change the past… they were all shackles.
If he wanted to stand against what was coming, against Ava, he had to unlearn everything.
The Keepers had given him a moment to rest, but rest was a luxury he couldn’t afford. He tightened his fists and took a step forward.
A familiar voice stopped him.
“You’re pushing yourself too hard.”
Kai turned to see Elyria, one of the few Keepers who spoke to him outside of training. She had an ethereal presence, her deep silver robes shifting as if they were woven from stardust.
Kai exhaled sharply. “Not hard enough.”
Elyria tilted her head. “You think rushing will bring you control? You saw what happened in the trial. You forced time to bend, and it broke.”
Kai met her gaze. “So I just do nothing? Let fate play out while Ava grows stronger?”
“She isn’t the only one with ambition,” Elyria murmured, stepping closer. “But raw power without purpose is self-destruction waiting to happen.”
Kai ran a hand through his hair, his mind restless. “Then tell me—how do I control this?” He clenched his fist, feeling the fragment in his arm pulse faintly. “Because right now, it feels like time is controlling me.”
Elyria studied him for a long moment before reaching into her sleeve. She pulled out a small, crystalline object—a sliver of a fragment, humming with latent energy.
“Then let’s see how far you’re willing to go.”
She tossed the fragment into the air.
And the world around them fractured.
Kai’s vision blurred. His feet left the ground as gravity itself ceased. The training grounds melted away, replaced by an infinite expanse of shifting lights and frozen echoes.
He was no longer in the physical world.
He was inside time itself.
The voices of the past murmured all around him. Whispers of people long gone, choices made and unmade, history unfolding in endless spirals. The weight of it all pressed down on him like an ocean, threatening to drown him.
Then, in the distance—
A figure stood among the echoes.
A man, clad in tattered remnants of an old astronaut suit. His visor was cracked, revealing eyes that shimmered like collapsing stars.
Kai’s breath caught in his throat.
He knew this man.
“Commander Ryland?” he whispered.
The figure turned. “You’re still trying to fight it, aren’t you?” His voice was heavy, weighted by something beyond time.
Kai swallowed. “What is this? You died when—”
“When the first wave hit,” Ryland interrupted, his voice neither warm nor cold. “And yet, here we are.”
Kai took a step closer, the void shifting beneath his feet. “Why are you here?”
Ryland exhaled slowly, the stars in his eyes flickering. “Because you still don’t understand what you’re becoming.”
Kai’s pulse quickened. “Then explain it to me.”
Ryland extended a hand. “Show me.”
And in the next instant—
Time collapsed around them.
Kai gasped as memories not his own flooded his mind. He saw glimpses of the Moon’s destruction from different angles, from different points in time. He saw the fragments crashing down, saw humanity’s last desperate moments, saw the rise of those touched by the celestial shards.
And in the middle of it all—
He saw Ava.
Not as she was now, but as a child. Alone, afraid, standing in the wreckage of her home as the sky burned above her. He felt her pain, her fury, her determination.
And then—
The vision shifted.
Ava wasn’t alone anymore.
A figure stood beside her, cloaked in darkness, their face obscured. Energy crackled around them, a force beyond the fragments, beyond time itself.
Ava knelt before them.
The figure placed a hand on her head.
And everything turned to black.
Kai ripped himself free from the vision, gasping as he stumbled back into the real world.
He collapsed to his knees, sweat dripping down his forehead.
Elyria stood over him, silent.
Kai’s breath came in short bursts. “That… that wasn’t just a test.” He looked up at her. “What the hell did I just see?”
Elyria’s expression was unreadable. “A glimpse of what’s coming.”
Kai clenched his fists. “That wasn’t just Ava, was it?”
Elyria hesitated. “No.”
A chill ran down Kai’s spine.
Then who—?
Before he could ask, a deafening explosion ripped through the horizon.
Miles away, deep within the ruins of an old research facility, Ava’s forces moved with calculated precision.
They had been planning this for weeks—tracking down a fragment hidden beneath the remains of the old world, a fragment unlike any other.
Ava strode ahead of her team, her second-in-command walking beside her.
“The security here is weak,” her lieutenant said, scanning the crumbling halls. “No resistance so far.”
Ava smirked. “That won’t last.”
They reached the vault.
Massive steel doors loomed before them, their surface etched with symbols long forgotten.
Ava raised her hand. The fragment embedded in her palm pulsed, distorting reality itself. The air rippled as time bent to her will.
The steel doors groaned.
Cracks spread across their surface like lightning veins.
With a final pulse, the doors shattered.
And inside, resting on an ancient pedestal, was a fragment unlike any she had ever seen.
Dark. Pulsing. Almost alive.
Ava stepped forward, her breath steady.
She reached out.
The second her fingers touched the fragment, a surge of energy ripped through the air.
A shockwave exploded outward, distorting time itself. The walls twisted, the lights flickered—reality screamed.
And for a brief moment, Ava saw something.
A vision.
A man, standing at the edge of time, watching.
His eyes burned with knowledge. With power.
And then, the vision vanished.
Ava exhaled sharply, gripping the fragment tighter.
No matter what was coming—@@novelbin@@
She would be ready.
Back at the Keepers’ compound, Kai forced himself to his feet.
He didn’t need an answer.
He didn’t need permission.
Ava had made her move.
Now, it was his turn.
He turned to Elyria. “Tell the Keepers to stay out of my way.”
And with that, he walked toward the battlefield.
Because ready or not—
The war had already begun.
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