Raen dreamt of chains.
Not the heavy iron kind, but chains of names. Words knotted into loops, dragging across unseen skies, linking one fate to another. His name—Raen Valor—was bound to them, stitched into their loops like a flaw in a grand tapestry.
He reached out to sever them—
And the dream shattered.
---
Waking in the Threadrift was never gradual. You didn't rise; you returned. One moment a prisoner of memory, the next a weapon in a world without rules.
Solace was already awake, eyes dimly glowing.
Keir lay nearby, arms and legs splayed like a man crucified by sleep. He snored with theatrical intensity.
Ashveil stood watch again, antlers humming low.
Raen rubbed his face. "I hate this place."
"Then you belong here," Ashveil replied.
"Comforting."
"Truth often isn't."
Raen sighed and stood. The Threadrift pulsed around him, as if awaiting his decision. Or daring him to make one.
---
They moved quickly. The path had changed again—what was once a bridge of screams was now a garden of bleeding glass. Each petal they stepped over whispered something lost.
Raen didn't listen. Not this time.
"Do you know where we're going?" Keir asked, blinking blearily.
"No."
"Oh, good. We're definitely not going to die then."
Ashveil turned his head slightly. "You won't die. You'll be rewritten."
"That's not better!" Keir snapped. "That's actually worse!"
Raen remained silent. His grip on his blade had not loosened since waking.
There was a scent in the air—iron, rot, and purpose.
He recognized it.
A Remnant was close.
---
They found it crouched inside a hollow dome of ribcage-like stone. It looked like a man, at first—until it looked back.
No eyes. Just a mask of porcelain with a stitched smile.
Its body flickered between forms: sometimes old, sometimes young, sometimes female, sometimes beast.
Raen felt his name stir in his chest.
"Another Godmarked?" Keir asked, already drawing his blade.
"No," Raen muttered. "Worse. This one remembers me."
The creature tilted its head, like it had just recognized him too.
And it laughed.
Not with sound, but with pressure—waves of mocking resonance.
Raen stepped forward.
It stepped back.
Solace snarled softly.
Ashveil readied his stance.
"I don't know what you are," Raen said, "but if you know my name—then I'm the reason you'll die."
The creature's body twisted. Bones broke out, shaping into jagged blades. Its laughter grew louder.
Then it charged.
---
It moved like a thought—immediate, jarring.
Raen blocked the first strike, barely. Sparks flew. The creature's blade-arm skidded off his sword, slicing a gash into the bleeding stone behind him.
Ashveil lunged, antlers crashing into the Remnant's side, but the creature absorbed the blow, bending like water.
Solace shimmered into motion, casting false images around them—illusions of fire, of a dozen Raens.
But the Remnant ignored the trickery and went straight for the real one.
Raen ducked a slash, rolled, and slashed upward.
Metal met bone. The Remnant's mask cracked slightly.
"Not so smug now, huh?"
The creature howled.
Its voice shattered illusions. Solace staggered.
Keir leapt in, hurling a dagger—but the Remnant caught it with its ribs, swallowed it, and reshaped the stolen metal into a clawed foot.
"Okay, that's cheating!" Keir shouted.
Raen gritted his teeth. "It's feeding on me. My presence. My story."
"Then silence it," Ashveil growled.
Raen nodded.
He closed his eyes.
And whispered: "Ashveil, bind it. Solace, haunt it."
The beasts obeyed.
Ashveil struck from above, slamming his ember-antlers into the Remnant's shoulders, pinning it. Solace slithered into its ears, whispering names.
The creature screamed.
Raen ran forward, blade drawn.
In one motion, he cut through the mask—through the twisted face beneath.
And through the name carved into its heart.
---
It didn't die.
It unwound.
Like thread burned too fast.
It collapsed, not as a corpse, but as regret. A memory that never should've worn flesh.
The air sighed.
Ashveil limped back. Solace returned to Raen's shoulder, curling quietly.
Keir sat down, panting. "That was the worst wake-up call I've ever had."
Raen didn't answer.
He stood there, eyes fixed on the space where the Remnant had fallen.
It had whispered something to him, just before dissolving.
Not in words, but in understanding.
"You're not the only one who remembers what you buried."
---
Later, Keir passed Raen a fruit he'd stolen from a vine that may or may not have been real.
Raen took a bite anyway.
It tasted like fire and peaches.
"So," Keir said, staring at the now-empty clearing, "that thing was drawn to you?"
Raen nodded. "They always are."
"You think it'll happen again?"
"Definitely."
"Cool. Just checking. I'm gonna start writing my will in a language no one can read."
Raen smirked. "I thought you already did that."
"No, that was my poetry journal. Entirely different kind of horror."
Ashveil grunted.
Even Solace looked vaguely insulted.
---
That night, Raen didn't dream of chains.
He dreamt of roots.
And something beneath them—gnawing.
---
[LORD APPENDIX – Remnants]
Remnants are distortions of memory and power that persist in the Threadrift. Unlike Beasts of Echo or Godmarked humans, they are born from undealt truths. They wear masks, change shapes, and seek out names that resonate with their origin.
Raen's connection to them is not coincidental.
Some whisper that he was the first Remnant, before he chose a body to wear.
To be continued...