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The Sound of Waiting
The first thing Elena noticed about silence was that it had weight. It sat beside her at dinner tables. Slept beside her in expensive beds. Followed her through hallways larger than most people’s apartments. Silence had become so familiar that sometimes she wondered if it was the third person in her marriage. Tonight, it sat across from her again. The dining table stretched long beneath the chandelier light, polished black marble reflecting the untouched food between them. The chef had prepared Adrian’s favorite meal after Elena reminded the staff three separate times this morning. Not because she thought he would thank her. But because loving him had become muscle memory. Across from her, Adrian Laurent scrolled through his phone with the detached expression of a man who belonged more to the world than to himself. His dark suit was still perfectly pressed despite the late hour, silver cufflinks glinting beneath the lights. He had arrived home twenty-three minutes ago. He had not looked at her once. “Elena.” His voice finally cut through the silence, low and calm. Her heart reacted embarrassingly fast anyway. “Yes?” “Tomorrow night. There’s a charity banquet.” His eyes remained on the phone. “You’ll attend with me.” Not would you like to. Not can you. Just expectation. Elena lowered her fork carefully. “Of course.” A small nod. Nothing more. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, rain slid slowly across the city skyline. The storm blurred the lights into something softer, lonelier. She used to love rainy nights before marrying Adrian. Now they only reminded her how cold beautiful things could feel. “You barely touched your food,” she said quietly after a while. “I ate earlier.” The answer landed gently, but it still hurt. She had spent all afternoon preparing for a dinner he never planned to share. Again. A strange thing about heartbreak, Elena thought, was that it rarely arrived dramatically. People imagined shattered glasses and screaming arguments. But real heartbreak was quieter than that. It was remembering somebody’s favorite wine while they forgot you existed in the same room. Adrian finally placed his phone down. For one dangerous second, hope lifted inside her. Then. “Claire will be at tomorrow’s event.” The hope disappeared so quickly it almost embarrassed her. Claire Holloway. Beautiful. Brilliant. Untouchable. The woman the entire city once expected Adrian Laurent to marry. The woman he almost did. Elena forced her fingers to relax beneath the table. “I see.” “She recently returned from London. Investors are interested in partnering with her company.” Business. Everything with Adrian eventually became business. Yet Elena knew him well enough to notice the slight shift in his expression whenever Claire’s name appeared. It was subtle. Almost invisible. But after seven years of loving someone, even their silence became readable. “You don’t have to look worried,” Adrian said suddenly. She blinked. “I’m not worried.” “You’re overthinking again.” The words were not cruel. That was the problem. Cruelty would have been easier to survive. Adrian never shouted. Never hit walls. Never lost control. He simply made her feel invisible with terrifying consistency. As though her emotions were small inconveniences he hoped would eventually quiet themselves. Elena smiled softly anyway. “I understand.” And she did. That was the tragedy. She always understood. The rain grew heavier outside. Somewhere deep inside the apartment, a clock chimed eleven. Adrian stood from the table first. “I have an early meeting.” Her chest tightened instinctively. “Will you be home tomorrow before the banquet?” “I’m not sure.” Of course. He adjusted his watch before finally looking at her properly for the first time that night. Elena hated herself for how much that single glance still affected her. “You should sleep earlier,” he said. “You look tired lately.” Then he walked away. Just like that. The conversation ended. The silence returned to finish dinner with her. Elena remained seated long after his footsteps disappeared upstairs. The candles burned lower between untouched plates while rain whispered against the windows. She could not remember the last time Adrian stayed at the table willingly. Or the last time she stopped waiting for him to. A bitter laugh almost escaped her throat. Seven years. Seven years of adjusting herself around another person’s absence. She had learned how to speak softer because Adrian disliked loud voices after work. Learned which ties he preferred without asking. Learned how to read his moods before he entered rooms. She had learned him so completely that somewhere along the way, she stopped learning herself. Her phone vibrated suddenly. A message from her younger sister. Are you still awake? Elena stared at the screen before replying. Yes. Three dots appeared instantly. Did he forget again? Elena’s eyes drifted toward the untouched dinner across from her. She typed slowly. He’s busy. The reply came almost immediately. You always say that. Elena locked the phone without answering. Because what else was there to say? Love made people defensive about their suffering. Especially women who had invested too many years into believing patience would eventually become devotion. Upstairs, she could hear faint movement from Adrian’s office. He would work until two or three in the morning again. Sometimes she wondered if he hid inside work because ambition consumed him. or because being near her exhausted him. That thought stayed with her as she cleaned the table herself despite the staff still being awake downstairs. She needed movement. Something to quiet the ache spreading beneath her ribs. By the time Elena finally entered their bedroom, Adrian was already seated near the window with his laptop open. The city lights outlined the sharp angles of his face, turning him into something distant and unreal. Beautiful things often looked untouchable at night. “You’re still awake,” she murmured. “Hm.” She changed quietly into silk sleepwear before sliding beneath the covers. The king-sized bed suddenly felt too large again. Adrian typed another email. And another. Minutes passed. Then softly, before courage disappeared. “Adrian?” His fingers paused on the keyboard. “What is it?” Elena swallowed carefully. Tomorrow was their wedding anniversary. Seven years. For a moment, she wondered if he remembered. If somewhere beneath the cold discipline and endless meetings, he still carried the date inside him too. Maybe that was foolish. Still. “Nothing,” she whispered. A pause. Then the sound of typing resumed. Elena turned toward the darkness, blinking slowly against the sudden burn in her eyes. Outside, rain continued falling over the city. Inside, the man she loved sat only a few feet away from her. And somehow, she had never felt lonelier in her life.Until the Last Light The heavens opened. Not with thunder. Not with lightning. With light. Pure. Ancient. Boundless. Golden rivers poured from the World Tree, flowing across the broken sky like living veins. Every branch stretched farther than before, reaching into places no human eyes had ever seen. The battlefield fell silent. Not because the fighting had ended. Because everyone felt it. The world itself had taken a breath. One last breath. Then Thomas floated at the center of it all. The weapon hovered above him. No longer waiting. No longer testing. It had accepted him completely. Golden flames danced around his body. They didn't burn. They embraced. Then the horror raised its head. Its body was no longer whole. Pieces of darkness drifted away from it continuously. Like ash carried by the wind. Yet it still stood. Still enormous. Still terrifying. Still dangerous. Then its countless eyes locked onto Thomas. Immediately. Then it spoke. Its voice no l
The Last Darkness Victory. They could almost touch it. Almost. The battlefield had changed. Not long ago— people had been running. Now they were advancing. Step by step. Shield by shield. Hope by hope. The impossible had happened. The horror was retreating. Actually retreating. Honestly? Fair. Very fair. Reasonable actually. Because every pulse from the World Tree weakened it further. Golden roots stretched across the broken sky. Their light wrapped around the First Door like chains forged before time itself. Every heartbeat of the tree pushed the darkness back. Every heartbeat brought dawn closer. Yet Thomas didn't smile. Not anymore. Because something inside him had become... quiet. Not peaceful. Empty. Then another memory disappeared. Softly. Without pain. Without warning. One second— he remembered learning to fish. The next— nothing. Gone. He frowned. Fishing? Why had that mattered? He couldn't remember. Then he blinked. Immediately. Beca
The Last Darkness Victory. They could almost touch it. Almost. The battlefield had changed. Not long ago— people had been running. Now they were advancing. Step by step. Shield by shield. Hope by hope. The impossible had happened. The horror was retreating. Actually retreating. Honestly? Fair. Very fair. Reasonable actually. Because every pulse from the World Tree weakened it further. Golden roots stretched across the broken sky. Their light wrapped around the First Door like chains forged before time itself. Every heartbeat of the tree pushed the darkness back. Every heartbeat brought dawn closer. Yet Thomas didn't smile. Not anymore. Because something inside him had become... quiet. Not peaceful. Empty. Then another memory disappeared. Softly. Without pain. Without warning. One second— he remembered learning to fish. The next— nothing. Gone. He frowned. Fishing? Why had that mattered? He couldn't remember. Then he blinked. Immediately. Beca
The Memory He Refused to Lose The darkness was dying. Everyone could see it now. The horror's enormous body continued breaking apart beneath the weapon's light. Chunks of darkness peeled away. Entire sections vanished into golden ash. The First Door trembled violently behind it. Cracking. Breaking. Failing. For the first time in ten thousand years— the monster was afraid. Actually afraid. Honestly? Fair. Very fair. Reasonable actually. Because Thomas wasn't stopping. He couldn't stop. Not anymore. The weapon burned brighter with every passing second. Golden fire surrounded him completely. The battlefield below could barely see his face. Only the silhouette remained. A lone figure standing against the end of the world. Then another memory vanished. Immediately. Thomas staggered. Just slightly. But it happened. Again. Then panic surged through him. Because this one mattered. This one really mattered. He knew it mattered. He could feel the hole it left
The Light That Refused to Die Thomas charged. Straight into the darkness. No hesitation. No fear. No turning back. Just forward. Always forward. Honestly? Fair. Very fair. Reasonable actually. Because there was nowhere else left to go. The horror's final attack consumed the sky. An ocean of darkness. An endless tide. A nightmare large enough to swallow worlds. It rushed toward him. Destroying everything in its path. Mountains dissolved. Clouds vanished. Entire sections of reality collapsed. Then Thomas raised the weapon. And for one brief moment— everything became still. The darkness stopped. The wind stopped. Even the broken sky seemed to pause. Waiting. Watching. Then the collision happened. BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM! The explosion tore through existence itself. The battlefield vanished. The mountains vanished. The ocean vanished. Nothing remained except light and darkness. Two forces. Two choices. Two futures. Fighting for the right to exi
The Boy Who Refused to Break The beam hit. And the world disappeared. BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOM! Light swallowed everything. The mountains. The armies. The sky. The horror. Gone. Nothing remained except gold. Endless gold. Brilliant gold. Blinding gold. For several seconds— nobody could see. Nobody could hear. Nobody could even think. Then the shockwave arrived. Late. Violent. Unstoppable. BOOOOOOOOOOM! The battlefield exploded outward. Soldiers were thrown from their feet. Trees vanished. Entire sections of mountain collapsed. The ocean itself rose into the air. Then silence followed. Heavy silence. Terrible silence. The kind that always comes after something world-changing. Then slowly— the light began fading. And everyone looked up. Immediately. Because there was only one question. One. Was he still there? Then Ava saw him first. A tiny figure suspended high above the battlefield. Still standing. Still alive. Thomas. Then relief swept through
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Voyage Into Darkness "We're going to the island." The words echoed through the lighthouse. Nobody argued. Nobody tried to stop Thomas. Because everyone knew. There was no other choice. Outside— the black monster continued forcing its way through the gate. Its second arm emerged completely.







