Chapter 373 - 373: The Seed of Ending
Somewhere past Paradise.
Was a room that should not be.
A room the universe has agreed to pretend never existed… it was purple of internal haemorrhage stretched across light-years and of galaxies strangling themselves with their own arms until the spiral arms snap like brittle bone.
The purple that existed before light learned cowardice—when the void still sat in perfect dark.
Purple mist moved through the chamber like blood moving through veins that had long since forgotten warmth.
Thick. Slow. Deliberate.
It curled along walls of stone, pooling in the low places the way grief pools in the hollows. Rising and falling in rhythms that mocked every living pulse that ever dared exist—slow inhalations that took centuries.
And in the center—
A bed.
No. Calling it a bed was blasphemy spoken in a child’s voice.
It was a throne that had learned to recline. A four-poster leviathan carved from wood blacker than sin’s shadow—oak, perhaps, once; a forest, certainly, before something older pressed its mouth to the roots and whispered love that leaves permanent ligature marks.
Posts twisted skyward like the fingers of a drowning god reaching for a surface that no longer existed, splintered grain still weeping something too thick to be sap. Canopy curtains of silk so sheer it looked half-dissolved, the colour of blood that has dried for centuries.
On the bed.
A woman.
Stillness so absolute it felt violent.
Not sleeping—sleeping is temporary, hopeful, mortal. This was suspension. A held breath in lungs the size of nebulae.
Her form barely registered beneath purple mist sheets that moved like spilled oil—suggestions of curves, memory of hips, ghost of breasts rising and falling so slowly the motion seemed borrowed from geological time.
Hair fanned across pillows that had never known kindness, spread in deliberate chaos or chaotic deliberation; impossible to tell in a room where shadow had legal precedence over light and light had already pled guilty.
No age or features that could be catalogued by mortal eyes. She was presence wearing the silhouette of womanhood the way a guillotine wears the silhouette of justice—beautiful in the abstract, terminal in practice.
And above her chest—
Floating.
Defying gravity the way a verdict defies appeal.
A Seed.
Black.
Looking at it felt like staring directly into the concept of abyss and ending until your optic nerve realised it had committed treason against sanity and quietly resigned.
It was small. Deceptively small. No larger than a core—and just as capable of stopping every other heart in existence if it so chose.
Pulsing.
And it was leaking.
Darkness poured from the Seed in thick, deliberate ribbons—lazy helixes of absolute night that did not fall so much as descend with judicial intent.
Something heavier—liquid shadow with the consistency of tar left to cool for a billion years, with agency and appetite.
Each ribbon moved with terrible slowness, coiling downward in perfect spirals that seemed to bend light around them like a hand closing around a throat.
Where they touched the purple mist the mist recoiled—not fleeing, but shrinking back the way living tissue shrinks from acid. The darkness did not devour the mist. It simply existed more than the mist did, and the mist yielded space without argument.
The ribbons reached her skin and did not splash.
They merged.
Every ribbon found flesh and vanished—not sinking, not absorbed—consumed. Pores opened like mouths that had been starving since the first hydrogen atom decided to fuse. Veins rose to meet the dark the way roots rise to meet rain after a thousand-year drought—desperate, reverent, obscene in their hunger.
No ripple or resistance was witnessed.
Shadow met flesh and flesh said yes and the shadow was gone and her body breathed deeper, ribs lifting with a sound like tectonic plates shifting underwater.
The intake was tactile. You could feel it in your own chest if you stood too close—the slow, inexorable suction, the way her skin seemed to pull the darkness inward with the same quiet inevitability that a black hole pulls light.
Her pores dilated wider with each ribbon, tiny mouths stretching, drinking, the flesh around them flushing darker—not bruised, but fed. Veins beneath the surface swelled and darkened, mapping her body like rivers of ink rising to the surface of pale parchment.
Her breasts rose higher on the inhale, nipples tightening beneath the sheet as though the darkness itself had brushed them with cold fingers.
She was not being eaten.
She was feeding.
Dust on the floor had forgotten the shape of footprints. Candles in iron sconces had melted into weeping stalactites of wax—frozen cascades that looked, if you stared too long, like faces caught mid-scream, mouths stretched wide in silent howls, eyes hollowed out by centuries of witnessing.
As though even the wax had formed an opinion about the thing on the bed, and the opinion was dread.
The stones of the walls leaned inward. Subtle. Geologically impossible. Theologically inevitable.
The Seed pulsed harder—a heartbeat that could end solar systems—and another wave of darkness cascaded. Thicker. Faster. The ribbons came heavier now, less lazy, more purposeful—coiling like serpents that had finally scented warm blood.
The woman’s body arched—first true motion in what might have been geological epochs—spine bowing like a drawn longbow, fingers curling into sheets that rippled like black water disturbed by something enormous moving beneath.
Every pore drank. Every vein drank. Every cell drank. Her throat worked in slow, visible swallows even though no sound came out. A single bead of darkness slid down the valley between her breast, vanishing into her sternum like water into parched earth.
Not yet full.
Never yet full.
And in the doorway—
A silhouette.
Waiting.
No features or outline that could be called flesh or absence-of-flesh. Darkness wearing the suggestion of form—shoulders, hips, the long line of a throat—but edges that refused to resolve.
Except for the eyes.
Silver.
Two molten coins of quicksilver suspended where eyes should be—catching light that had no right to exist, reflecting nothing because nothing in the room was innocent enough to deserve a reflection.
They watched the Seed bleed its patient apocalypse into the woman’s body.
Watched the slow, exquisite construction of something that would make gods remember fear and monsters remember prayer when it finally opened its eyes.
The silver gaze did not blink.
Patient.
Certain.
The line between watcher and maker had dissolved epochs ago.
Then the silhouette turned.
And walked away.
The floor refused to admit anything had passed across it. Physics had long since stopped issuing permissions in this place. The silhouette did not so much move as recede—darkness folding back into darkness, edges softening until there was only doorway again, only mist, only the memory of silver eyes that had seen enough.
The purple mist swirled shut behind it like eyelids closing on an unfinished sentence.
On the bed, the woman continued to drink.
The Seed continued to bleed—ribbons thicker now, heavier, the pulse quickening like a heart that has decided it is tired of waiting.
The Seed pulsed once more—harder, hungrier, the rhythm no longer patient but eager.
The woman drank deeper—spine still bowed, fingers still curled, pores still open, veins still drinking.
And outside these walls the stupid, fragile, beautiful, doomed world kept turning—utterly blind to the fact that something in a room of purple and shadow and the memory of murdered stars was almost finished becoming.
Almost.
But soon.
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