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Chapter 7 - CHAPTER 7 "Someone Else's Writing"

CHAPTER 7

"Someone Else's Writing"

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My brother's name was Hiroshi.

Is. His name is Hiroshi. I keep catching myself using

the wrong tense for people from my world, which is a

problem I hadn't anticipated and don't know how to solve.

He was alive when I died — twenty-six years old, working

at an architecture firm, sending me one text every two

weeks that said some variation of "still breathing over

there?" because we were both bad at staying in touch and

had developed a system for acknowledging that without

making it a whole conversation.

He had never read my novel.

I had never let him. Not because I didn't trust him —

I did, more than most people — but because showing

someone a half-finished thing feels like showing them a

half-finished version of yourself. I had always told him

I'd share it when it was done.

It was never done.

And now he was standing in the middle of a frozen market

square in a world I had invented, and I had no idea how

he had gotten here, and the system was telling me his

origin was unknown, and I was standing ten feet away from

him not moving because some part of me had decided that

not moving was the responsible choice while I worked out

what was happening.

"Kakeru," Sora said quietly.

"I know," I said.

"You've been standing there for a while."

"I know that too."

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I walked toward him slowly.

The frozen city was deeply quiet around us — that total

specific silence of stopped things, which is different

from the silence of empty things. Every frozen person

was a presence. The woman in the doorway with her half-

raised hand. The men with the suspended crate between

them. The child mid-run with pure uncomplicated joy on

her face, interrupted at its best moment.

Hiroshi stood in the center of the square with his bag

over his shoulder and his head turned slightly left. He

was wearing clothes that weren't quite right for this

world — not dramatically wrong, nothing that would have

looked out of place from a distance, but close up the

fabric was wrong. The stitching was wrong. The small

details that a world develops over centuries of its own

history were absent.

He had been placed here. Not grown here.

I reached out and touched his arm.

The resistance hit me immediately.

Not physical — my hand didn't stop, didn't meet a

barrier. But something pushed back at the level of

intention. Like trying to edit a document you don't have

permission to open. A quiet, absolute refusal that had

no interest in explaining itself.

I pulled my hand back.

The system appeared.

════════════════════════════════════════════

ANOMALY ANALYSIS — COMPLETE

════════════════════════════════════════════

Character : Hiroshi Mori

Origin : External. Non-native.

Author : Not you.

════════════════════════════════════════════

SECONDARY NARRATOR DETECTED.

This world contains a second

active writing presence.

Identity : Unknown.

════════════════════════════════════════════

NOTE: You cannot edit, move, or

interact with characters written

by another narrator without their

permission or their absence.

════════════════════════════════════════════

I read it twice.

Then I read the second line again.

This world contains a second active writing presence.

Rei appeared at my shoulder. She had read it over my arm

without asking — which was very Rei — and she was quiet

for a moment after.

"A second narrator," she said.

"Yes."

"Someone else who can write in this world."

"Apparently."

She looked at Hiroshi's frozen face. Then at the system

notification. Then at me, with an expression that was

doing a lot of careful thinking very quickly.

"Kael," she said.

I had been thinking the same thing and not wanting to

say it yet, as though not saying it might give me a few

more seconds before it became a problem I had to deal with.

"Maybe," I said.

"Not maybe." She turned to look back at the road behind

us — toward the tree we had passed, invisible from here

but present in both our minds. "He wrote two words on

that tree. We assumed it was a knife." She looked at me.

"What if it wasn't? What if he wrote them the same way

you write things — with intention, and the world followed?"

I thought about Kael in Vel'Shara. His gold eyes. The

eyes I had written as silver.

He had rewritten them himself.

I had assumed it was a metaphor — a symbol of his

resistance, his self-determination. Something the world

had allowed because he was the villain and villains had

narrative gravity.

But what if it was literal.

What if he had picked up a pen and written the change

himself.

"He's had three years," I said slowly. "Three years in

an incomplete world with no author. Three years to figure

out how things worked. To find the edges of what was

possible." I looked at Hiroshi. "And at some point he

figured out he could write."

Sora had come to stand on my other side. He was looking

at Hiroshi with his head slightly tilted, the expression

he had when he was working something out and hadn't

finished yet.

"So he wrote your brother into the world," Sora said.

"Why? What does that accomplish?"

Nobody answered. Because the honest answer was that we

didn't know, and the possible answers were all

uncomfortable.

----------------------------------------------------------------

I took out the book.

It felt like the right instinct — reaching for the only

tool I actually understood. I opened it to the current

page, uncapped the pen, and tried to write Hiroshi.

Not move him. Not edit him. Just write a sentence about

him. Something simple.

Hiroshi Mori stood in the market square of Carath and—

The pen stopped.

Not ran out of ink. Not slipped. Stopped, the way a door

stops when it is locked — flat, absolute, with the

quality of something that has decided not to cooperate

and is not interested in discussing it.

I tried again.

The man in the center of the square was—

Same result.

I lowered the pen.

"I can't write him," I said. "He belongs to someone

else's text. I can't touch him without permission. Or

the other narrator stepping back."

"Or the other narrator being gone," Rei said. Quiet.

Practical. Not a suggestion. Just completing the

logical set.

I looked at her.

"I'm not going to—"

"I know," she said. "I'm just listing the options."

Sora crouched down and looked at the frozen child nearby

— the one mid-run, arms out, joy on her face. He studied

her for a moment with the open attention he gave

everything.

"These ones you can write?" he asked.

"Yes. These are mine."

"Then write the next moment for the city," he said,

standing. "Unfreeze Carath. Let it start moving again.

And see what happens to him when the world around him

starts up and he's the only thing still stopped."

I looked at Hiroshi.

Then at the child.

Then I opened the book to the correct page and wrote

the next moment for Carath.

----------------------------------------------------------------

The city started like an engine catching.

The child's foot came down first. Then her arms found

their balance and she was running again, full-speed,

laughing at something I hadn't written and didn't need

to, because that was hers. The woman in the doorway

finished her wave and went back inside. The two men set

the crate down and exchanged a few words and went about

their afternoon.

The market square filled with sound — voices, movement,

the rhythm of a place that had been doing this for

decades and was simply continuing.

All around Hiroshi, the world moved.

Hiroshi did not.

He stood in the center of it, frozen, while Carath

flowed around him like water around a stone. People

passed him without seeming to see him. A cart rolled by

two feet from his shoulder and the driver didn't glance

his way. He existed in the moving world the way a word

exists on a page — present, but not participating.

"He's still stopped," Sora said.

"I see that."

"So whatever's holding him is separate from the city's

freeze. It's not the same mechanism."

"No," I said. "It's not."

I stood in front of my frozen brother and looked at his

face and tried to think clearly about a situation that

had very little in common with anything I had been asked

to think clearly about before.

Kael had written him here. Kael, who I had created as a

villain who wanted authorship destroyed, had taught

himself to write and had used that ability to bring my

brother into this world.

Why.

Not as a weapon — Hiroshi wasn't threatening anyone,

wasn't positioned to cause harm. Not exactly a hostage

either, because he was frozen, not imprisoned, not

suffering as far as I could see.

As leverage, maybe. As a reason.

Finish the novel, Kael had said. And I will let the

world have its ending.

What if Hiroshi was the rest of that sentence. What if

Hiroshi was the part Kael hadn't said yet.

I was still working through it when it happened.

Hiroshi's eyes opened.

Not the whole face — nothing else moved. Not a breath,

not a shift in posture, not a single muscle below the

neck. Just the eyes, opening with the slow deliberate

quality of something that required significant effort.

Dark eyes. My brother's eyes. Looking directly at me.

No confusion in them. No adjustment period, no blinking

away disorientation. He had been frozen, and now he was

looking at me, and he knew exactly who he was looking at.

The market moved around us. Nobody noticed.

I took one step toward him.

"Hiroshi," I said.

His mouth moved.

No sound came — the same way sound had failed that first

night at the door, a movement of lips that I was supposed

to read rather than hear. Two words, shaped carefully,

with the particular precision of someone who knows they

only have a moment and cannot afford to be misunderstood.

I watched his mouth.

I read the words.

Two of them. Simple. Certain. Delivered with the same

quiet energy as every text he had ever sent me — no

drama, no performance. Just the plain transfer of

important information between two people who trusted

each other across an impossible distance.

He is listening.

Then his eyes closed.

The market moved around him, indifferent and alive.

I stood very still.

Rei was beside me in a moment — not asking, just present,

which was what the situation required and she had

understood that before I did.

"What did he say?" she asked.

I looked at the space around us. At the people moving

through the market. At the doorways, the windows, the

rooftops. At all the places a person could stand if they

wanted to listen to a conversation without being seen.

"He said someone is listening to us," I said. As quietly

as I could manage. "Right now. Whoever wrote him here —

they're listening."

Sora didn't look around. Smart. He kept his eyes forward

and his voice very low.

"Kael," he said.

"Maybe," I said. "Or someone we haven't met yet."

A long pause.

The market went about its afternoon. A woman sold

something to a man who looked satisfied with the price.

A dog crossed the square with the focused purpose of a

dog who knows exactly where it is going. The child who

had been frozen mid-run disappeared around a corner,

still running, going wherever she had been going before

the world stopped.

"What do we do?" Sora asked.

I thought about it.

Then I closed the book, capped the pen, and said in a

completely normal voice — the voice of someone having

an unremarkable conversation in a market square:

"We find somewhere to sleep. We leave in the morning."

And then, quieter than quiet, barely breath:

"And we stop saying anything we don't want heard."

Sora nodded, slow and easy, like I had said something

about the weather.

Rei looked at Hiroshi one more time. At his closed eyes.

His frozen posture. His wrong stitching in a world that

didn't know him.

Then she turned and walked toward the edge of the market,

toward the inn that Carath had just remembered it had,

and we followed her.

Behind us, in the center of the square, my brother stood

in a world I had made.

Holding a message that someone else didn't want delivered.

And somewhere — in the walls, in the air, in the spaces

between written things — something listened, and waited,

and did not move.

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