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Chapter 173 - Chapter 173 Finally

After their tense confrontation with the Whisperers, a fragile peace settled over the now-healing city of Midgar.

The sky, once choked with black smoke, began to clear, revealing a faint, unfamiliar blue.

The whispers of the Lifestream, once a mournful chorus of the dying, now hummed with a quiet song of recovery.

Arthur, still reeling from the immense strain of Reality Blending, leaned heavily on Aerith as they walked through the streets.

Sephira, her eyes no longer filled with the cold fury of a god but with the gentle sorrow of a redeemed soul, walked beside them, a testament to Arthur's dangerous gamble.

The Whisperers, those silent guardians of a rigid timeline, had retreated for now.

But their presence, like a cold shadow, lingered.

Their unnerving silence spoke volumes.

They hadn't approved of Arthur's actions, and their acceptance felt temporary, a truce rather than a true resolution.

"They're not gone, are they?"

Aerith's voice was soft, barely a whisper.

She tightened her grip on Arthur's arm, offering a silent well of support.

"No,"

Arthur replied, his voice rough.

"They're just watching. Waiting for another chance to set things 'right.' They see Sephira as a paradox, something that shouldn't exist. And they see me the same way now."

Sephira looked down, her face clouded with guilt. She was no longer a reflection of Sephiroth.

She was herself and she had become weak.

"This is my fault. I'm a broken fragment. They'll never accept me."

"You are not a fragment,"

Arthur said firmly, stopping and turning to face her.

"You are whole now. And if they want to try and take you away, they'll have to go through me."

Suddenly, the air grew cold, a familiar chilling stillness that spoke of an unnatural presence.

The ground trembled, and the remaining debris on the street began to shift and dissolve, as if reality itself was being unmade.

Arthur pushed Aerith and Sephira behind him, his eyes scanning the horizon.

A swirling vortex of black mist, the same kind the Echo of Despair was born from, coalesced in the sky above the old Shinra Building.

"It's not just a few,"

Arthur said, his jaw tightening.

"They're sending everything. And they're not here for Sephira this time."

From the heart of the vortex, a colossal, ghostly form began to emerge.

It was a monstrous composite of all the Whisperers they had faced before, a towering, faceless titan made of wind and paradox.

Its multiple arms, each ending in a blade of temporal energy, descended, but they weren't aimed at Sephira.

They were aimed directly at Aerith.

"Aerith,"

The creature's voice was a chorus of a thousand whispers, a cold, unfeeling roar that shook the very ground.

"You are the true anomaly. Your continued existence is a deviation. The timeline must be corrected. You must be erased."

Arthur's heart pounded in his chest. He knew what this meant.

The timeline demanded that Aerith, the last of the Cetra, should die to fulfill a grim destiny.

Her survival, her very presence, was a defiance of a pre-determined fate.

He stepped in front of her, his stance firm, a desperate shield against an unyielding force of nature.

"No,"

Arthur said, his voice ringing with a newfound resolve.

"I won't let you touch her. Not ever."

The colossal Whisperer ignored him, its arms swinging down with terrifying speed.

Arthur drew his weapon, a simple, elegant sword that hummed with pure, cosmic energy.

He met the first blade with a clash of sparks, the force of the blow sending him skidding back, his feet carving deep furrows in the concrete.

Another blade followed, and then another, a relentless barrage that left him breathless and strained.

He fought with everything he had, dodging, parrying, and weaving through the temporal attacks.

But the Whisperer was an unfeeling machine, a force of nature that felt no pain, showed no exhaustion.

With every parry, a crack appeared in his blade.

With every near miss, a flash of white-hot pain seared through his body.

He was losing, and he knew it. His cosmic energy, once so vibrant and limitless, was being drained by the paradoxes the Whisperer created.

A powerful backhand from the creature sent him flying, slamming him into the side of a half-collapsed building.

The impact knocked the wind from his lungs and sent a jolt of pain through his ribs. He gritted his teeth, his vision blurring.

He could hear Aerith's desperate cries, her pleas for him to get up, to be safe.

He looked at her, truly looked at her.

Her face, etched with fear and worry, was a beacon of light in the growing storm of despair.

He saw her smile, the one that could light up a room. He saw her strength, her kindness, her unyielding hope. And in that moment, he realized why he was fighting.

He wasn't just fighting for her life; he was fighting for her right to exist, for the beauty of a world that had her in it.

He pushed himself to his feet, a fresh wave of determination flooding his veins.

He looked at the blade in his hand, now cracked and useless, a symbol of his current limitations.

This wasn't a fight he could win with his current power.

The Whisperer wasn't a physical opponent; it was an idea, an unyielding concept of a fixed timeline.

He had to fight an idea with a greater one.

He looked at the two sacred gears he carried, dormant within his being, a final, desperate option he had vowed never to use.

The Sword of the Infinity and Chaos and the Sword of the Dreams and Apocalypse.

Two blades that held the power of two of the most powerful dragons in all of existence—Ophis Ouroboros and Great Red.

These were not just weapons; they were anchors of pure reality, of creation and destruction, of time and its unmaking.

To wield them was to dance on the edge of utter chaos.

The consequences would be severe, but the alternative was a world without Aerith, a world he could not accept.

Taking a deep breath, he closed his eyes and reached inward, tapping into the hidden well of power.

He felt the two dormant souls stir, ancient and unimaginably powerful, a swirling tempest of creation and nothingness.

"I won't let you have her,"

He whispered, his voice gaining a new, otherworldly echo.

A blinding flash of light erupted from his body, and the shattered blade in his hand was replaced by a twin set of swords, one in each hand.

The first sword, the Sword of the Infinity and Chaos, was a blade of pure darkness shot through with silver veins of light, an almost black hole of pure existence that twisted and warped the air around it.

The second, the Sword of the Dreams and Apocalypse, was a blade of shimmering, impossible colors, a star-forged wonder that hummed with the sound of a thousand unheard symphonies.

He felt the power of the two dragons, a chaotic chorus of infinite possibility, flow through him.

His body thrummed with raw energy, his senses heightened to a degree that was almost painful.

He could see the temporal lines the Whisperer was made of, a complex weave of cause and effect that it was using to maintain its existence.

He wasn't just a person anymore; he was an anchor, a singularity of two opposing forces, a cosmic paradox that mirrored the very creature he was about to face.

The Whisperer stopped its relentless assault, its form rippling with what could only be described as a primal fear.

It wasn't a fear of him, but of the sacred gears he now held, a recognition of a power that could unmake not just a person, but an entire timeline.

"You would break reality to protect a single anomaly?"

The chorus of whispers asked, the sound now tinged with a horrifying, nascent confusion.

"She's not an anomaly,"

Arthur said, his voice now a calm, terrible echo of his true power.

"She's the most real thing I've ever known."

With that, he lunged forward, the two blades in his hands humming with a power that could erase mountains and rewrite stars.

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