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Chapter 73 - The Page That Shouldn’t Exist

The applause didn't fade.It stretched on long after the thunder stopped, a sound with no source—like the world was clapping for a performance it didn't understand.

I didn't bow.Never trust applause from something that can erase you.

[ System Notice : Title Active — The Pen's Heir ][ Effect : Narrative awareness expanded beyond authorized scope ]

Great. I'd unlocked omniscient nausea.

Arjun's ember pulsed inside my ribs. They're still watching.

"I know."

Then stop giving them a show.

"Sorry," I said, "habit."

The city was too quiet.Every window faced me. Even the wind refused to move until I did.

When I reached the main square, I saw it: a sheet of paper lying on the cobblestones, perfectly clean despite the rain.No edges, no folds, just a flat whiteness that hummed faintly when I looked at it.

I should have ignored it.Of course I didn't.

The moment I stepped closer, the air thickened.The systemsystem glitched. Every notification blinked, then merged into one unreadable line:

[ ???????????????????????????????????????????????????? ]

Arjun hissed. That's not a page, Ishaan. That's an invitation.

"Same thing, really."

I knelt and touched the edge.It was colder than paper—colder than anything living.

Light burst outward, swallowing the square.For a heartbeat, there was no city, no sky, no me.Just text.

Not written—writing.

Sentences crawled across the air like veins, forming shapes that resembled rooms, doors, corridors.The world had turned into an unfinished manuscript, and I was standing between the lines.

[ Location : ??? — Unregistered Narrative Space ]

Arjun whispered, You're inside a page that isn't catalogued.

"Meaning?"

Meaning it shouldn't exist.

Figures.

I walked.The floor changed with each step—from stone to ink to nothing.Around me, fragments of half-written stories floated by—characters frozen mid-sentence, dialogue trailing into static.

One of them, a boy with eyes like blank pages, turned toward me."You're not supposed to read this," he said.

"Story of my life."

He opened his mouth to reply, but the words dissolved before they reached me.Then he did too.

The corridor ended at a door identical to the one that led to the god's study.Same shape, same silence.Except this one had a sign nailed to it:

DO NOT OPEN UNTIL CANCELLED.

Arjun groaned. We're not doing this again.

"Correction," I said, "we're doing it better."

I pushed.The door resisted, trembling under my hand as if afraid.Then it swung inward.

Beyond it lay darkness—not black, but the absence of story itself.

[ Warning : Entering Null Page — All narrative laws suspended ]

"Comforting," I murmured, and stepped through.

The world vanished.No ground, no air, no sound—only a dim pulse somewhere above me, like a heartbeat echoing through an empty library.

Then came the whisper.

You shouldn't have found this page, Ishaan Reed.

"Get in line."

Even the creator did not write here.

"Then who did?"

Silence.Then, slowly: You did.

Every hair on my neck rose.

[ System Notice : Author Identity Conflict Detected ][ User — Ishaan Reed ][ Original Author — Redacted ]

Arjun's ember flickered wildly. Ishaan, that's your name on both lines.

"Yeah," I said quietly. "That's the problem."

The void trembled around me like something was breathing beneath the text.Then the unseen voice spoke again, softer now, almost curious.

You tried to fix the story… by breaking it.

"Worked better than pretending it was perfect."

And now you've stepped onto the blank page—the one that even gods refused to write.

"Everyone needs a hobby."

[ System Notice : Narrative Identity Fusion 12% → 29% ]

The air rippled, and for a heartbeat I saw two shadows standing where I was—both mine.One breathing.One written.

They moved almost in sync. Almost.

Arjun hissed. If that counter hits a hundred, you stop being a character and start being a function.

"Then let's hope I don't finish the sentence."

The voice laughed faintly. You think this world was written for you to escape?

"Not escape," I said. "Edit."

And what happens when the editor deletes himself?

"I guess the story ends cleaner."

Silence.Then—light.It dripped from the void, pooling at my feet until it shaped itself into a mirror of ink.

Inside it, I saw every version of me I'd erased:the coward who ran, the cynic who watched, the dreamer who believed the script would hold.They stared back, mouths moving in unison:

You were never reading, Ishaan. You were remembering.

The mirror cracked.Fragments spun outward, carving new lines through the air—unwritten text flowing from each piece.It formed a phrase I'd seen once before, at the start of everything:

The story begins again.

[ System Notice : Recursive Loop Formation Detected ][ Attempting Containment... Failed. ]

Arjun's voice turned sharp. Ishaan! You need to break the feedback loop or we're going to relive the first chapter forever!

"I know."

Then do something!

"I am."

I drew the Inkblade. Its edge glowed faintly, silver at the core, gold along the fractures.

I pressed the blade into the mirror.The glass shrieked—ink and light spilling upward like reversed rain.

"I started this story once," I said, "and I can end it on my own terms."

The world convulsed.Every letter, every sound bent toward the sword, pulled into its reflection.

[ Title Effect Activated : The One Who Breaks the Script ]

The reflection shattered completely.Light surged outward, filling the void, rewriting the dark.

When it cleared, I was back outside—standing in the middle of the city square again.The paper was gone.The sky was steady.

And in my hand, a single new line burned into my skin:

The Page That Shouldn't Exist now belongs to you.

Arjun's voice was quiet. You realize you just claimed an illegal chapter, right?

"I prefer the term bonus content."

He laughed weakly. You're going to break the system again.

"Good," I said. "That's what I do."

The faint echo of applause rippled once more through the clouds.But this time, it wasn't distant.It was behind me.

I turned—and saw a dozen silhouettes watching from the edge of the world, their faces unreadable, eyes bright with script.

One of them tilted its head and whispered, almost fondly:

Welcome to the author's section.

The air tore open like a page being flipped.And the next line waited to be written.

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