Chapter 995: Story 995: The Echoes Beneath the Roots
The battle outside the Gravebound Citadel left a crater in the night. Smoke curled around broken bodies, undead limbs twitched in the dirt, and silence returned too quickly. The Forsaken Girl stood at the center of it all, the Book smoldering in her hands. One page had been torn out—voluntarily.
"I changed the script," she whispered. "But something changed back."
The earth groaned.
Draven Cross limped forward, bloodied but alive. "Where's Mira?"
"She followed the roots," Zara answered, gesturing toward a fissure in the earth. A black hole had opened near the battlefield, tendrils of deathroot curling from it like veins. "She said there's something buried beneath the Citadel—something older than even the Rotting King."
Without hesitation, Draven jumped in. Elias Grimm followed with a flask of protective mist. Zara hesitated—but the howl from below left no time to think.
They descended into a forgotten underworld—The Rootvault—a sprawling web of tunnels, tree-flesh, and bone. Everything pulsed like a living heart. Eyes blinked in the walls. And at its core, Mira knelt beside something massive.
A woman-shaped entity, stone-pale and silent, was embedded in a cradle of roots—her lips stitched shut, her eyes sewn open, watching everything. Around her, dozens of torn pages from the Book floated midair, whispering stories that no longer belonged to this world.
"She's the first," Mira said softly. "The one who wrote the Original Verse. They buried her to stop it from being finished."
Elias shivered. "If she wakes, it rewrites reality. Again."
Suddenly, the earth shook. From above, an army of crawling dead began pouring in—twisted things with too many limbs and eyeless faces. They moved like water, slipping through cracks in the wood and stone.
The Hollow Man emerged from the shadows. "I warned you all. Words have weight."
Zara threw her last dagger into his chest—it passed through. He laughed, unbothered. "You think this ends with kings and ghouls? The real horror is the page turning."
The Forsaken Girl stepped forward, her torn page fluttering. She held it out toward the entombed entity.
And for the first time in centuries, the woman's eyes moved.
She wept ink.
The roots snapped. The world screamed.
From above, the Citadel collapsed inward, as if devoured by time itself. The Forsaken Girl screamed as the Book caught fire in her hands, but she did not drop it. Instead, she shouted one word—an ancient syllable never meant for mortal mouths.
Reality cracked like glass.
In a blinding flash, the Rootvault shattered.
And the survivors woke up in different places.
Alone.
The Book was gone.
But so was the barrier between the living and the dead.