LOGINThe Anniversary He Forgot
People always spoke about heartbreak like it arrived suddenly. Like storms. Like car crashes. Like dramatic endings. But standing alone in the middle of the ballroom while her husband smiled at another woman on their anniversary, Elena realized heartbreak was much quieter than that. It was gradual. Slow. The kind of pain that accumulated so gently you barely noticed it destroying you until one day you could no longer recognize yourself beneath it. Across the ballroom, Adrian Laurent stood beside Claire Holloway while investors and executives gathered around them naturally, pulled into Adrian’s orbit the way people always were. Power followed him effortlessly. So did attention. Elena watched Claire laugh softly at something he said. And then. something rare happened. Adrian smiled. Not fully. Not warmly. But enough. Enough to remind Elena that once upon a time, he used to smile like that around her too. Before marriage became routine. Before work became his true relationship. Before she slowly turned into background silence inside his life. “You okay?” Elena startled lightly. A familiar face stood beside her now holding two champagne glasses. Daniel Reed. One of Adrian’s oldest friends. Kind eyes. Sharp suits. Dangerous levels of perception. Too observant. Elena accepted the glass carefully. “Of course.” Daniel raised a brow slightly. “That answer usually means the opposite.” She forced a small smile. “You sound like my sister.” “Your sister sounds smart.” A quiet laugh escaped her before she could stop it. Daniel studied her for a second longer before lowering his voice. “You shouldn’t stand alone at events like this. The press notices things.” Notices things. Elena glanced briefly toward nearby photographers. Right. Appearances mattered. Especially for men like Adrian Laurent. “I’m fine,” she repeated gently. Daniel didn’t argue. That was one thing Elena appreciated about him. He noticed pain without forcing people to expose it. “You know,” he said after a moment, “most people in this room would kill for your life.” Elena looked around slowly. Crystal chandeliers. Champagne towers. Luxury dripping from every corner. Women in diamonds pretending happiness. Men in expensive suits pretending loyalty. She wondered how many lonely marriages existed beneath all the beauty. “Most people only see money,” she murmured quietly. Daniel’s expression shifted slightly. As though he understood more than she wanted him to. Before he could answer, movement near the ballroom entrance pulled attention again. More executives arriving. More cameras. More noise. And still. Adrian hadn’t looked at her once since entering the room. Not once. The realization settled heavily inside her chest. Daniel followed her gaze toward Adrian and Claire. His jaw tightened almost invisibly. “Elena.” “It’s okay.” “It doesn’t look okay.” Her fingers tightened slightly around the champagne glass. She hated pity. Especially because pity usually meant the truth had become visible. “I’m used to it,” she admitted softly before she could stop herself. The words surprised both of them. Daniel went quiet. And suddenly Elena regretted speaking at all. Because saying things aloud made them real. She looked away quickly. “Excuse me.” Before he could stop her, Elena slipped through the crowd toward one of the quieter balconies overlooking the city. Cold night air greeted her instantly. Finally. Silence. She rested both hands against the marble railing and closed her eyes briefly. Below, traffic lights glowed endlessly through wet streets while distant sirens echoed somewhere far beneath the skyscrapers. The city never stopped moving. Neither did loneliness. For several minutes, Elena simply breathed. In. Out. In. Out. Trying to steady the ache sitting beneath her ribs. She remembered her wedding day suddenly. Adrian had looked at her differently back then. Not lovingly exactly. but attentively. As though he saw her. That memory hurt more than neglect itself. Because it proved he was capable of seeing her once. A soft sound behind her interrupted the thought. “Elena.” She stiffened immediately. Adrian. Of course. She turned slowly. The city lights framed him in silver and shadow, expensive black suit perfectly fitted against broad shoulders. Even exhaustion couldn’t make him look anything less than devastating. “People are asking for you inside,” he said calmly. Not: Are you okay? Not: Why did you leave? Just obligation. Elena looked back toward the skyline. “I needed air.” A pause followed. “You disappeared.” Something bitter almost rose inside her chest at the irony. Disappear? She had been disappearing for years. “You seemed busy,” she answered quietly. His gaze lingered on her profile. “Claire just returned after years overseas. Investors wanted introductions.” Business again. Always business. Elena nodded softly. “I understand.” Adrian studied her for another moment. “You’ve said that phrase three times tonight.” “What phrase?” “I understand.” The strange thing was. she genuinely did. That was what made loving him so exhausting. Understanding someone who never tried understanding you back. “Are you upset?” he asked finally. The question almost made her laugh. Not because it was funny. Because after years together, he still couldn’t recognize sadness unless it became visible enough to inconvenience him. Elena turned toward him slowly. Tonight, under the city lights, Adrian looked untouchable. Beautiful. Cold. The kind of man women ruined themselves loving. And she had. God, she had. “Today is our anniversary,” she said softly. Silence. Not immediate realization. Not guilt. Just silence. And in that silence. Elena got her answer. He forgot. Completely. She watched the exact moment Adrian understood. His expression shifted almost imperceptibly. A rare crack in composure. “Elena.” “It’s okay.” The words came too fast. Too practiced. Too automatic. She smiled gently because she didn’t know what else to do anymore. “I know you’re busy.” Something unreadable moved behind Adrian’s eyes then. Not quite guilt. But close enough to hurt. “I had meetings all week,” he said quietly, as though explaining facts could somehow repair emotional absence. Elena nodded again. Of course he had meetings. He always had meetings. She wondered if there would ever come a day when he ran out of reasons not to love her properly. “You should’ve reminded me,” Adrian added after a moment. And there it was. The final fracture. Small. Simple. Cruel without intending to be. Elena stared at him silently. Because somewhere deep inside her exhausted heart. something finally became tired. Not angry. Not dramatic. Just tired. Tired of carrying love alone. Tired of reminding someone to care. Tired of making excuses for emotional neglect dressed as responsibility. For the first time in years, she looked at Adrian Laurent and thought: I don’t think you realize how much you’re losing. The thought frightened her. Because it felt dangerously close to detachment. And detachment was the beginning of the end. “Elena.” His voice pulled her back. “Yes?” Adrian frowned slightly. “You’re quiet tonight.” A strange smile almost touched her lips. Quiet? She had always been quiet. The difference was. tonight, her silence no longer felt patient. It felt distant. “I’m just tired,” she answered. And for the first time since marrying him. that statement was true in a way Adrian could never fully understand. Inside the ballroom, music swelled louder. Laughter echoed. Glasses clinked. Life continued beautifully around them. But standing beneath the cold night sky beside the man she once believed would become her entire world. Elena felt something inside herself slowly beginning to let go.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
The Ascent of Kings The throne rose through a broken sky. Golden light tore through the darkness. The platform ascended higher than the Bastion itself. Higher than the floating castle. Higher than reality should allow. God. No. Fair. Absolutely not. Reasonable honestly. Then Thomas moved
The Last Ascent The sky was collapsing. Reality itself cracked like glass under pressure. BOOOOOOOOM! A massive section of the Bastion broke away and vanished into the void below. Thomas barely kept his footing. Cassian did the same. Eryx landed on a fractured platform beside them. All thre
The Fall of the Bastion "AT LAST." The voice echoed across the world. Not through the air. Not through the sky. Not through the Bastion. Through reality itself. Every living thing heard it. Every Crown reacted. Every soul trembled. God. No. Fair. Absolutely not. Reasonable honestly.
Three Heirs, One Key The sky shattered. BOOOOOOOOOOM! Reality cracked apart. The heavens split open. Red lightning exploded across the world. The gigantic hand finally broke through. Halfway. Its fingers stretched across the sky. Large enough to cover entire cities. God. No. Fair. Abso







