
Kael's POV
The Binding Ceremony took place every morning, the first light falling on the crystal spire of the Grand Cathedral tinting the world in golds and promise. I was lined up with forty-seven other kids, all seven years old like me, us all shivering with anticipation. Families intoned prayers to the Seven Gods, the voices blending into a prayerful hymn that filled the sacred hall. I remember thinking how beautiful everything was that morning. The stained glass windows depicted heroes of legend, warriors who had slain dragons, sages who had shattered plagues, kings who had united nations. They had all walked in their Script just as they should have, and they had all been rewarded with eternal glory. Today, I was to learn what glory was mine. My father stood behind me, his calloused blacksmith hands on my shoulders. He'd spoken little on the way here, but I'd caught him smiling at me a few times. Pride, I told myself. He was proud of me, proud of whatever destiny the gods had written for his son. "Kael Ardent," he'd said to me that morning when he dressed me in my ceremonial white robes, "no matter what Script you are given, always remember that I love you. Whether you are destined to be a great hero or a humble farmer, you are my son first." I'd laughed at that. "What if I'm supposed to be a bad guy, Father?" He'd laughed also, ruffling my dark hair. "Then you'll be the most honorable bad guy ever." His laughter would echo inside my head for years. High Priest Aurelius stood before the altar, the golden robes shining with Scriptlines infused into them, the magical threads that tied him to his destiny as the Voice of Fate. He was very old, yet his voice carried the divine right of power as he called each child forward separately. "Mira Ashford," he announced. A small white-haired girl appeared on the raised platform. The priest placed his hand across her brow, and energy charged the air. Light burst from his hand, forming words in the ancient tongue that hung in the air like blazing text. "The Script of the Silent Blade," Aurelius said. "You will be the greatest assassin of your time, protector of kings, death in the shadows." The audience whispered its agreement. Mira's parents wept tears of joy. She would be important, respected, remembered. Individual by individual, my other children discovered their futures. Theron Blackwood was handed the Script of the Unbreakable Shield, destined to guard a future queen. Elena Moonshadow would be a successful merchant, her Script assuring prosperity and power. Even those children who received plain Scripts, farmers and craftsmen and scholars, descended from the dais with grins on their faces because they had certainty, they had purpose, they had a role in the grand design. Then my turn came. "Kael Ardent." I moved forward on someone else's legs. The cathedral felt impossibly huge, every eye upon me, every breath held in anticipation. I mounted the three stairs to the dais and knelt before High Priest Aurelius as is the custom. His firm, gentle hand rested against my forehead. I shut my eyes and waited for the light, for the words, for the destiny that would dictate every moment of my life left. Nothing. I sensed Aurelius's hand trembling slightly against mine. The humming energy that had accompanied every other child's Binding was absent. The air stagnated, vacant, out of place. "Try," the priest muttered. He shoved again, putting more of his divine energy into the connection. "Try it again." Nothing. Time passed. I kept my eyes shut, refusing to give in to the panic spreading among the crowd, refusing to listen to the cold seeping into my heart. I caught the sound of my father's shocked gasp behind me. "Not possible," Aurelius gasped, but in the cathedral's ideal acoustics, all heard. "There is nothing. No Script. No thread. No destiny at all." I opened my eyes at that point and witnessed the fear on his face. It was the expression one gives to a corpse rising, something that doesn't exist. "I don't understand," I mouthed softly. "What does it mean?" Aurelius stepped back from me like I was contagious with the plague. His voice, when he did speak, was icy and authoritative. "It means that you are an Error of Fate, child. The first one in a thousand years. You do not belong in the divine plan." The cathedral erupted. Kids were pulled from my arms by their parents. There were gasps of horror turned screams of fear became shouts of rage. A prayer candle was thrown at me, shattering on the ground and smearing holy wax everywhere. "Abomination!" "The gods have forsaken him!" "Take him out! He'll bring us all evil!" I remained frozen there, as the world I knew for seven years collapsed around me. My father fought his way through the crowd, colorless face set, and enveloped me in his arms. "We're leaving," he stated bluntly. "Now." As he picked me up from the cathedral, I looked back once again. Forty-seven children had seen their futures that morning. I had discovered I had none.Latest Chapter
Chapter 31: The Church's Return
Commander Thane arrived at the Academy six weeks into the term, bringing news of another corruption outbreak requiring my deployment.I was summoned to Headmaster Valen's office to receive a briefing, Aldric insisting on accompanying me despite this being Church business rather than Academy matter. The office was impressive, walls lined with portraits of legendary heroes who'd graduated from the Academy, their Scripts manifesting as subtle glows around painted figures.Thane stood beside the Headmaster's desk, his expression carrying the clinical focus I'd learned to associate with deployment orders. "Error. Good. We have a situation that requires immediate response.""What kind of situation?" I asked, the void already anticipating what came next."Corruption outbreak in the eastern mining districts. Not as extensive as Millbrook but concentrated in a small area, approximately twelve confirmed cases of Script inversion. Standard containment isn't working, and the corruption is spreadi
Chapter 30: The Breaking Point
Sera's training session proved more revealing than I'd anticipated, though not in ways she intended. We met in a private practice ring at dusk, when most students were at dinner and observation would be minimal. She arrived wearing combat practice gear, her Unbreakable Will Script marks glowing faintly on her arms, radiating the kind of confidence that came from knowing destiny favored you absolutely. "I expect professional instruction," she said immediately, not bothering with pleasantries. "No holding back because I'm nobility or female or Script blessed. If I'm paying for your time with official requisition, I expect full value." "You'll get exactly what you need, which isn't necessarily what you want." I selected practice weapons, tossing her a standard blade. "Your problem is that Unbreakable Will makes you rigid. You believe your destiny means you can't be broken, so you don't learn to bend. When someone applies enough pressure in unexpected ways, you shatter instead of flexin
Chapter 29: The Forbidden Partnership
News of my sparring effectiveness spread through the first year class over the following weeks, bringing steady requests from students struggling with their Script development.Garrett returned regularly, his Rising Flame Script finally manifesting properly after learning to trust instinct over overthinking. Others followed, students whose destinies required combat competence but whose natural abilities lagged behind Script promises. I worked with them methodically, identifying problems, providing unconventional opposition, helping them develop techniques their Script enhanced instructors couldn't teach.The irony wasn't lost on me. The Error with no destiny was helping the blessed develop theirs, the void assisting fate itself became stronger. But each session also let me study Scripts up close, understand their patterns and structures, feeding knowledge to the hunger growing inside me.I was careful never to pull at their Scripts, never to let the void reach out during sparring sess
Chapter 28: The Consumption Experiment
The knowledge from Scholar Davos's journal consumed my thoughts for days after discovering it, the void humming with possibilities I'd never considered before.I could absorb corruption because corruption was broken destiny, inverted Scripts that had nowhere else to go. But what about intact Scripts? What about the pure fate energy radiating from every blessed student walking through the Academy? Could I pull that in too, consume destinies themselves rather than just their corrupted remnants?The hunger grew stronger daily, the void stretching toward Script bearers with intensity I struggled to suppress. During combat practice, during weapons maintenance, during sparring sessions, I felt it reaching toward the fate energy surrounding me, wanting to test whether Elara's techniques could be replicated.I needed to experiment, but carefully, secretly, in ways that wouldn't immediately alert Professor Thrain or other security focused faculty. The Academy's Script bearers were too valuable
Chapter 27: The Library's Secret
A month into the Academy term, I discovered the restricted section of the library entirely by accident.I'd been sent to retrieve a reference manual Professor Marcus needed for his advanced combat theory class, one of the few errands that took me into academic spaces normally forbidden to attached personnel. The library was massive, five stories of books and scrolls and ancient texts preserved through Script enhanced methods. Students filled the reading areas, studying their destinies and the heroes who'd fulfilled theirs before.I found the manual quickly but took a wrong turn returning, ending up in a hallway I didn't recognize. The architecture changed here, older stone instead of newer construction, dim lighting suggesting these sections saw little traffic. Curiosity, one of the few emotions the void hadn't completely consumed, pulled me deeper.At the hallway's end stood a door marked with Script wards and a sign reading "Restricted Section, Faculty Authorization Required." The w
Chapter 26: The Night-time Visitor
Three weeks into the Academy term, Mira appeared at my window in the dead of night.I woke to the soft scraping of her knife against the lock, a sound so quiet anyone without my constant void enhanced awareness would have missed it completely. She slipped through the window like shadow made flesh, her Script of Silent Blade developing rapidly, turning her into the assassin destiny demanded she become."You shouldn't be here," I said without sitting up, voice flat in the darkness. "If you're caught in attached personnel quarters after hours, you'll face disciplinary action.""Good thing I won't be caught then." She sat on the edge of my narrow bed, close enough that I could see her face in the moonlight streaming through the window. "I came to see if there's anything left of you worth saving, or if the void finally won completely.""The void won the moment I absorbed corruption from forty seven people at Millbrook. This is just delayed recognition of that victory." I sat up, studying h
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