The Shadow Queen Is Too Alluring—I Can't Handle This Anymore!
Chapter 89 – “The Smile Beyond the Rift”

Chapter 89: Chapter 89 – “The Smile Beyond the Rift”

The girl lowered her hand.

The glass throne behind her no longer pulsed—it shimmered quietly, like a lake undisturbed. Kael dropped to one knee, sweat dripping from his brow, blade falling from limp fingers. Lyra stood between them, her wings half-folded, breath shallow but steady.

For a moment, the silence felt final.As if the story had ended.As if peace had returned.

Then Lyra’s eyes were pulled skyward.

The rift—once sealed—had cracked again.

But not from chaos.

From something else.Something watching.

And there it was.

A smile.Shaped not by lips, but by space itself bending.An upward curve formed by inverted stars, floating where no stars should be.

Kael looked up and whispered, "...That’s not the First Shadow."

The girl—still glowing—nodded solemnly. "No. That’s the one who wrote the First Shadow’s name."

Lyra’s thoughts spun like leaves caught in a vortex.

She had survived death three times.Challenged her mother.Broken the throne.Forged a new one.

But this...This wasn’t a monster or a prophecy.This was something older than cause and effect.A presence that didn’t want power—it wanted the rules behind power.

I never asked to be part of this, Lyra thought. But maybe that’s why I made it this far.

She looked at the girl.

"Who is it?" she asked.

The child didn’t answer at first. Her glow dimmed slightly. She looked... older now. As if speaking the truth would age her.

Finally, she said:"It is the Author."

The sky bent again—not with force, but with intention.As if the laws of this world were being edited mid-breath.Words began to form in the clouds, ancient and radiant.

Not prophecies.Not curses.Paragraphs.

Lyra read them aloud, breath catching between syllables.

"When the third death births choice instead of silence,The one who walks the throne must write the new Chapter,Or be written by the next."

The throne beneath her feet pulsed violently.

It was no longer just a symbol.

It was now a pen.

A pen she had to hold—or become the next story someone else told.

Aelira crawled to her side, blood staining her tunic, eyes wide. "Lyra... what is that thing?"

Lyra stared at the sky, her voice hollow.

"It’s the one who decides if we get an ending."

Kael rose unsteadily.

His voice was rough, but clear. "If it’s the Author... can we speak to it? Can we make it stop?"

"No," said the girl.

"It doesn’t speak," Lyra said. "It observes."

Above them, the smile widened.

And then, the Author began to rewrite.

The sky fractured again—not from rift, but from revision.

Time looped.Aelira blinked and suddenly found herself five feet back.Kael looked down and saw his blade vanish—never written.A soldier who had died hours ago now stood alive... but hollow-eyed, as if his soul hadn’t been updated with the rest of him.

Lyra clutched her head. "It’s editing reality."

This wasn’t power.It was narrative authority.

And she realized something terrifying:

Even the throne can’t stop a hand that writes from above.

She turned to the child. "Why show us this now?"

The girl looked sad. "Because the Author is curious. You didn’t follow the script. You changed the ending. Now... it wants to know how far you’ll go."

Lyra’s fingers curled into fists.

"I’ll go until it stops watching."

The smile began to shift.It folded... curved... inverted.And then, from the curve of stars—

A hand emerged.

Not a metaphor. Not a projection.

A literal, ink-black hand, five fingers open wide, descending from the page of the sky.

It reached toward the glass throne.

Lyra stepped between it and the child.

And said, "No more rewrites."

The hand paused.

And then—

It tapped the air above Lyra’s head.

A single word appeared in light.

Lyra didn’t blink.Didn’t breathe.Didn’t move.

Above her, the ink-black hand remained suspended in the sky like a god’s puppet limb—long, elegant fingers curved in mid-air, still glowing with the word it had written:

"Continue."

Behind her, the girl—the living shard of the throne—stepped back slowly.

"It’s begun," she whispered.

Kael, now barely standing, stared upward. "What... what does that mean?"

Lyra turned her head slightly. Her eyes were glowing again, but this time not from magic.

From something sharper.

Realization.

"It means we’re no longer characters," she said. "We’re drafts."

The hand twitched once—And Aelira vanished.

Gone.

Not exploded. Not blood. Not scream.Just... erased.

As if someone had backspaced her from the scene.

Lyra’s chest hollowed instantly, a scream building—but unable to escape.There was no body. No trace. No name even.

Only silence.

Not death.Not defeat.Just deletion.

The worst kind of loss wasn’t losing someone you loved.It was knowing they’d been written out, and you couldn’t even remember what their voice sounded like.

Kael dropped to his knees. "She was right here! I saw her! I—"

"She didn’t follow the script," the girl said softly.

Lyra turned on her. "You knew this would happen?"

"She wasn’t... important enough to preserve," the child replied. Her voice cracked.

And just like that, Lyra’s grief became rage.

"I don’t care what Author watches. This is my story now."

The world pulsed like a book page being turned.Mountains flickered in and out of existence.The sky bled words.Every blade of grass briefly transformed into ink before snapping back into green.

The Author wasn’t writing the world anymore—it was editing it in real-time.

Mid-dialogue.Mid-feeling.Mid-fate.

Lyra stepped back toward the glass throne, which now flickered like a glitching hologram.The pen-shaped armrest was vibrating.

She understood.

It wasn’t just a throne.

It was an interface.

A way to fight back.

She grabbed the hilt—penform or bladeform, she wasn’t sure—and scrawled one word into the air:

"Restore."

A crackle of golden code burst from the ground, slicing through the fog.

But Aelira didn’t return.

Only her shadow.

The Author’s hand recoiled—slightly.A ripple of unreadable text streaked across the sky like lightning made from alien grammar.

Kael rose. His expression was wild now. "We can rewrite too."

Lyra turned. "No. I can."

He stepped closer. "You’re not the only one who sat the throne. The Author watched me too."

"No," Lyra growled, "It used you. It watches me."

And with that, she stabbed the glass-pen-blade into the ground.

The world fractured.

Aelira’s laugh.

It was faint—but real.

Lyra dropped to her knees, pressing her palm into the dirt. A shiver of memory pulsed through her—Not quite bringing Aelira back,but stitching the memory of her into the scene again.

This is what it means to resist being written.Not to win.But to remember.

"You can’t unwrite love," Lyra whispered.

The sky above flickered.

The Author’s smile... paused.

Black lines skittered across the ground—like spider legs, racing toward Lyra’s feet.Words began to form on the air around her:

Lyra screamed. She fell. She broke.

"No," she hissed. "New draft."

She stood tall and rewrote her own scene—out loud:

"Lyra stood. She stared back at the Author. She began to climb."

Kael watched in horror and awe as Lyra began ascending mid-air—stepping on sentences like stairs.

"I’m coming to the next page," she growled.

Above her, the rift transformed into a blank page—white, infinite, waiting.

The Author’s hand stopped.

Then... it extended a quill.

Lyra’s pen-blade flared in her hand.

And then the first words of the next Chapter appeared, glowing in the sky:

"The Queen Who Rewrote Her Ending."

And Lyra—without fear—stepped into the Author’s realm.

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