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Chapter 6 - Chapter 6: The Hours the World Forgets

I slept very little.

Not from insomnia.

Not from fear.

But because I had found something better than rest:

the silence between the system's ticks.

---

There are moments the world doesn't register.

Fragments so small that not even the narrators, the lesser gods, or the tainted moons seem to notice them.

I hunted them.

They were slivers of time with no owner.

Little gaps in the code where I could move without leaving a trace.

That's where I trained.

That's where I experimented.

That's where I learned to bend reality without breaking it.

---

I discovered I could "postpone" wounds.

Not heal them. That would be magic.

Just... convince the world they hadn't happened yet.

A broken arm became a pending debt.

Pain got filed like an unopened notification.

But everything had a cost.

And the cost was that every postponed wound returned.

All at once. At the worst possible time.

I called it: Causality Compensation.

And still, I kept doing it. Because it meant that I, a mere extra, could negotiate with the rules.

---

One day, I stopped hearing the other slaves.

Not because they hated me —though they probably did— but because I could no longer understand them.

Their complaints sounded like glitches.

Their prayers like miswritten commands.

I had become a spectator in a badly acted play.

And I was terrified by how much I was starting to resemble the system I despised.

---

I began talking to myself.

Whispering. Sometimes in dreams.

Not to my current self.

But to the versions I saw in future timelines.

One of them told me to cut out my tongue before I learned to speak to the system.

Another said I should get caught and "re-scripted" as an NPC, just to spy from within.

All of them insane.

All of them me.

---

But in the middle of that madness, something new appeared:

a question the system couldn't answer.

Every time I thought it, the shadows twitched.

The air blinked.

And reality stuttered as if trying to render a scene that didn't exist.

The question was simple:

> "What if this world isn't being played… but written as we live it?"

---

The possibility burned through my mind.

Because if it was true, then every step I took —every glitch, every anomalous choice— wasn't breaking the script.

I was writing it.

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