Adam stood at the center of what remained.
He looked around once, then laughed under his breath.
"Never thought a street king would end up wiping out things that would make most of the gods I grew up reading about look like jokes," he said. "Life's funny like that."
He stretched his neck, relaxed, like the fight had been nothing more than a workout.
Then something twisted in front of him.
A portal took shape. Not dramatic. Not loud. Just there. It flickered, tightened, and stabilized.
A being burst out of it at full speed.
It didn't stop.
It ran.
Circles around the citadel. Around Adam. Around everything. Faster than light, faster than causality, faster than anything most worlds would even register.
To Adam, it looked like jogging.
The being finally stopped, hands on its knees, clearly annoyed.
"Where are they when I actually need them?" it muttered. "I gave them the locations of concepts, they spared me, now I need backup and nobody shows up."
Adam tilted his head.
Interesting.
"So," Adam said calmly, "you're a snitch."
The being jolted and spun around, scanning wildly.
"Who said that?"
Silence.
Adam sighed.
"I said it. I'm right in front of you, dimwit."
The being turned again and finally saw him.
Just a man.
No aura. No pressure. No glow. No presence.
Nothing.
Which was exactly why the being didn't relax.
Nobody ordinary stood at the heart of a ruined Umbral Citadel and lived.
It straightened slowly.
"What's a snitch," it asked, "and who are you?"
Adam's smile widened, sharp but lazy.
"I really hate that question," he said. "Let's skip the part where you ask me who I am and get to the part where you tell me who you are."
The being studied him carefully.
"You don't look like a concept," it said. "You don't feel like one either."
Adam chuckled. "Yeah. That's the problem most people run into right before they die."
The being took a step back.
"You heard what I said earlier?" it asked cautiously.
"Enough," Adam replied. "You sold out other concepts to stay alive. Then you ran back here looking for help when things went sideways."
He looked the being up and down.
"I don't like traitors," Adam said. "But snitches? I really don't like snitches."
The being swallowed.
"I did what I had to do," it said. "They would've erased me."
"And now?" Adam asked.
"They promised protection."
Adam laughed softly.
"Let me guess," he said. "They didn't show."
The being clenched its fists.
Adam stepped closer. No rush. No threat in his movement. That made it worse.
"One rule where I come from," Adam said. "You betray once, you never stop betraying. People like you always run when things get hard."
He leaned in slightly.
"And people like me? I make examples."
The being tensed, ready to bolt.
Adam smiled wider.
"Go on," he said. "Run."
The being paused.
Then he let out a slow breath.
"I'm Bolt," he said. "I'm a Velari."
Adam didn't react.
"My world was under attack," Bolt continued. "When it happened, something inside me snapped. I awakened as a concept. Motion. Speed. Call it whatever you want. I saved my world. Every invader. Gone."
He clenched his fists.
"Then the Night Regalia came. Not to help. Not to talk. They came for my head. Said a newborn concept running free was dangerous. I didn't stand a chance against all of them. So I made a deal."
Adam looked at him, expression flat.
"I helped them," Bolt said quietly. "Tracked other concepts. Found awakenings before they stabilized. In return, they let me live. Let me go home. Let me protect my people."
He lifted his head.
"But now something worse is coming. Something even they feared. My world is burning again and I can't stop it alone. I need help. I need allies."
Adam stared at him for a long moment.
Then he laughed. Not loud. Not amused. Just tired.
"The Regalia are dead," Adam said. "All of them. I killed them."
Bolt froze.
"You were weak," Adam went on. "If you weren't, you would've found allies instead of selling out others. Your world wouldn't be under siege right now. You chose survival over backbone. That's on you."
He turned around.
Bolt's heart dropped.
Adam took a step away.
Bolt panicked.
He moved.
Or tried to.
He vanished and reappeared in front of Adam in a flash that should've broken causality.
"These beings aren't trash," Bolt said fast. "They're not like the Regalia. They're above us. I've seen records in this place. Even the Regalia treated them like untouchables. I can't sit back and let my people die."
Adam didn't stop walking.
"That's your problem," he said. "Not mine."
He passed Bolt.
"I don't work with snitches," Adam continued. "I should've erased you the moment you opened your mouth. I didn't because I don't care enough. Go back. Die protecting what you love. At least that way you won't be remembered as a rat."
Bolt turned again.
He tried to move.
Nothing happened.
No step. No blink. No vibration.
The concept of motion was gone.
Not suppressed.
Gone.
Bolt's eyes widened.
He tried again.
Nothing.
He tried to think fast.
Nothing.
His heart raced but his body didn't respond.
Adam stopped.
Didn't turn.
Bolt swallowed hard.
"What… are you?" he whispered.
He felt it then.
Not pressure.
Not fear.
Absence.
As if the idea of speed had never existed around Adam to begin with.
Bolt realized something terrifying.
This wasn't someone stronger than him.
This was someone who existed before his concept ever mattered.
Someone who didn't need to chase.
Someone who didn't need motion.
Someone who could decide that movement itself was optional.
Bolt's throat went dry.
"You're not just a concept," he said quietly. "You're not even… in the same category."
Adam finally turned his head slightly.
Just enough for Bolt to see his eye.
"You figured that out late," Adam said.
Bolt couldn't move.
Couldn't run.
Couldn't escape.
And for the first time since he awakened as Speed, he understood what it meant to be truly helpless.
