Dinner was a pocket of warmth in a cold world, a temporary truce with the weight of my own reality. We ate Alastor's infamous noodles, which lived up to their hazardous reputation, and for a precious few hours, the world shrank to the size of that terrace. We were just people, laughing as Kathyln expertly stole food from my bowl and Rachel dismantled her father's logic in a debate over magical ethics. It was dangerously easy to pretend this was all there was.
But the night had other obligations. As Rachel went to walk with her sister, Alastor caught my eye with a knowing look. I gave him a slight nod. It was time. I had come to the Northern Continent to consolidate allies and assess the readiness of its forces, but there was a personal pilgrimage I needed to make. One last visit to the oracle. One last attempt to glean a fragment of certainty from a woman who read the future like a book.
I left the comforting glow of the family wing behind. The transition was stark. The air grew colder, the modern architecture giving way to ancient, magic-saturated stone that seemed to drink the sound from the air. The humming of the estate's power core faded, replaced by a silence so profound it felt like a presence. I ascended the lone spiral staircase into the observatory, a dome of what looked like polished, living night.
Isolde was waiting. She stood in the center of the room, a solitary figure adrift in a sea of cosmic data. The ceiling wasn't glass; it was a perfect, real-time mirror of the heavens, stars and nebulae drifting slowly across its obsidian expanse. Shimmering charts of impossible constellations floated in the air like ghostly blueprints, their ethereal light catching the silver charms on her wrist. Ancient-looking instruments of brass and crystal stood like silent sentinels at the room's edge. The air itself thrummed, not with the estate's technological power, but with a primal, temporal energy that made the hairs on my arm stand up. She was not in a room; she was at the heart of a cosmic engine.
"Arthur," she said, her voice as calm and distant as the starlight around her. "I knew you would seek me out before you left."
"I had to," I replied, stepping into the circle of celestial light. It felt like crossing a threshold into another realm. "You told me there was something on the horizon. I'm here for the details. Whatever you've seen, I need to know."
She didn't answer immediately. Instead, she gestured to a massive, floating chart near her that depicted a snarl of interwoven golden threads—the fates of thousands, millions, all moving toward a single, dark point of convergence. "This is the coming war," she said. "I can see the movements of armies, the fates of nations, the deaths of heroes yet to fall. I can see the Demon King's strategy as it unfolds, a tapestry of shadow and blood."
"And my thread?" I asked, searching the complex diagram. "Where do I fit into it?"
Isolde finally turned to face me, and her eyes—the legendary Akasha's Eyes—were unnervingly blank. They held no vision, no path, no future. They held only a reflection of me.
"You don't," she said, her voice flat. "Your thread is gone. When I look for you in the tapestry of what is to come, there is nothing. A void. An empty space where a billion futures used to be."
The words hit me with a physical force. Disbelief warred with a cold, creeping dread. "That's not possible. Your Gift has never failed. It cannot fail."
"My Gift is not failing," she corrected, her tone clinical, as if describing a fascinating but terrifying paradox. "It is functioning perfectly. It reads from the Akashic Records, the source code of causality, the grand narrative of all that was, is, and will be. The Records are absolute. But you, Arthur, are no longer bound by their text. You are an anomaly the likes of which this world has never seen."
She moved closer, her gaze intense, analytical. "The power you wield, the one you call Grey… it is not a part of the system. It is something other. Something that exists outside of the narrative. When I use Akasha's Eyes to look at your path, I see a rip in the page of the universe. I see a storm of pure static where your story should be. It is a power that doesn't just operate within fate; it fundamentally surpasses it. It is the power to write, not to be written."
The scale of what she was saying was staggering. I wasn't just a wildcard; I was a different game entirely. All my life, I had fought against a destiny that seemed predetermined. Now, I was adrift in a sea of infinite possibility, with no map, no stars, no shore. It was a terrifying form of freedom.
"So you can't help me," I stated, the words tasting like ash. My most reliable source of strategic intelligence was gone.
"I cannot give you a prophecy," she said, her voice softening for the first time. "But I can give you an observation. For your entire life, your fate has been a raging river, every current charted. Now, you are the river itself. Everything you have accomplished these past months, every impossible victory… you achieved them while operating completely blind to fate. You are already doing what was thought to be impossible."
She met my gaze, and the detached Seer was gone, replaced by a woman making the ultimate gamble. "I have relied on certainty my entire existence, Arthur. Now, I am choosing to put my faith in the one absolute uncertainty this world has ever known. I am choosing to believe in you. Trust your instincts. They have proven more reliable than destiny itself. A man whose future cannot be read by Akasha is the only man who can truly rewrite it."
Her faith was a heavier burden than any prophecy. We stood in the profound silence of the observatory, the weight of her words settling over me. She had given me her professional counsel. It was time to return the favor.
"Thank you, Isolde," I said, my voice quiet but firm. "Now I have some advice for you."
She raised a single, questioning eyebrow.
"Go be a mother to your daughter," I stated plainly.
The effect was jarring. The ancient, all-seeing oracle shattered, and a broken woman stood in her place. The stoic mask crumbled, revealing a well of pain so deep it seemed to have no bottom. "I have forfeited that right," she whispered, her voice cracking. "I do not deserve her."
"I agree," I said, my voice unrelenting. "But she deserves a mother who tries."
"You don't understand what I did to her," she choked out, wrapping her arms around herself. "The visions… when they first came, I saw the end. Not just war, but utter annihilation. I saw Earth cracked open, swallowed by legions of demons. I saw everyone I knew, everyone I loved, burning. I saw Rachel… I saw her die a thousand different ways, each more horrific than the last."
Tears streamed down her face now, unchecked. "The trauma… it broke me. I was living in a nightmare, and I couldn't wake up. Every time I looked at my own child, I saw her corpse. I thought if I was cruel, if I pushed her away, if I forged her in ice and fear, she would be hard enough to survive the hell I saw coming. I became a monster to fight the monsters in my head." She shook her head, a gesture of profound self-loathing. "I destroyed her childhood because I was too weak to bear my own visions."
"You did," I affirmed, my tone softening slightly. "You can never undo that. You can't erase the scars you left on her heart. They are a part of her now, a part of your shared history. That truth is as fixed as any prophecy."
She flinched, expecting more condemnation.
"But the past is the only thing that's truly written, Isolde," I continued, walking toward her. "You taught me that. You can't change what you did, but you can stop letting it define what you will do. You can choose to stop being the monster. You can choose to try and build something new on the ruins of what you broke." I stopped a few feet from her. "You can't demand her love or her forgiveness. But you can start acting like someone who might, one day, be worthy of it."
I held her gaze for a final moment, letting the words settle in the space between us. Then, I turned my back on the Seer and her cosmic engine and walked out of the observatory.
Behind me, Isolde Creighton remained motionless, a lone figure left with nothing but the silent, wheeling stars and the impossible weight of a choice that no prophecy could make for her.
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