Chapter 114 The Weight of a Universe
The first crack sounded like glass.
Not loud.
But impossibly sharp.
It was the kind of sound that didn’t belong in a universe made of stars and gravity. It cut through the air with a precision that made everything else feel fragile.
Mila felt it through Ethan before she even saw it.
A thin fracture of light spread across the silver axis running through his chest, splintering outward like lightning trapped inside a crystal. The glow flickered once, then steadied, but the damage had already begun.
Ethan sucked in a breath.
The entire universe shuddered with him.
Far away, galaxies trembled in their spirals. Stars flickered like uncertain candles struggling against invisible wind. Entire clusters shifted slightly off orbit as the cosmic structure tied to Ethan’s body strained under impossible pressure.
Reality itself seemed to hesitate.
“Easy,” Mila whispered, tightening her grip on him.
Her fingers dug into his jacket as if sheer determination could keep the universe from breaking apart.
“Yeah,” Ethan rasped, forcing air back into his lungs. “That doesn’t seem like something that should crack.”
Another fracture split across the glowing axis.
It moved faster this time, branching like a web of lightning across the silver beam embedded through him.
Across the sky, thousands of reset lines attached to Ethan’s heart vibrated violently, humming with unstable energy.
Their sound was deep and resonant, like distant machinery grinding through space.
The Observer’s voice broke through the chaos.
“Anchor stability dropping!”
Mila didn’t look up.
Her eyes never left Ethan.
“How long?”
There was a pause.
Signals crackled.
Then.
“Seconds.”
Ethan laughed weakly, the sound barely more than a breath.
“Well, that’s encouraging.”
The light inside his chest flared again, blinding and raw. The axes running through him extended across space like beams of pure gravity, but now they trembled like overstrained cables stretched too tight.
Every reset line attached to him pulled harder.
Trying to complete the system reset.
Trying to collapse everything back into nothing.
And Ethan was the only thing stopping it.
He swayed.
Mila caught him before he could fall.
For a moment, the storm of cosmic forces faded from her awareness.
All she saw was him.
The same stubborn expression.
The same tired half-smile he always wore when things went wrong.
The same man who had stood beside her before any of this cosmic madness had begun.
“You look like you’re about to tell me bad news,” he said quietly.
Her throat tightened.
“I might be.”
He nodded slowly, as if he had expected nothing else.
“Figures.”
Another crack split through the silver axis.
Across the universe, a distant galaxy collapsed inward like a dying starfish curling into itself.
The Observer’s voice trembled through the connection.
“Anchor failure spreading.”
Mila felt it too.
The principles inside her were screaming now.
Recursion spun thousands of possible solutions in an instant.
Expansion tried to widen the universe, stretching space to relieve the pressure.
Genesis created stars faster than physics should allow.
Recovery attempted to repair the fractures forming inside Ethan’s cosmic structure.
None of it was enough.
Because the problem wasn’t the universe.
It was the anchor.
Ethan’s body wasn’t built to hold infinity.
He exhaled slowly, forcing himself to remain upright.
“Mila.”
She looked down at him immediately.
“If I explode,” he said carefully, “please tell me it’ll be quick.”
Her answer came instantly.
“You’re not exploding.”
“That sounded very confident for someone who didn’t actually answer the question.”
She didn’t smile.
Instead, she pressed her hand over the glowing fracture in his chest.
The silver light surged beneath her palm like a heartbeat.
“You’re not breaking,” she said softly.
“You’re transforming.”
He raised an eyebrow despite the pain twisting across his face.
“That feels suspiciously like a motivational speech.”
Another crack spread through the axis.
This one larger.
Across the sky, entire constellations flickered out for half a second before snapping back into existence like failing lights.
The Observer’s voice cut in sharply.
“Structural collapse accelerating!”
Mila ignored it.
Her mind was racing through something deeper than the principles.
Something older.
Something simpler.
When Ethan had absorbed the reset lines, they hadn’t erased him.
They had anchored to him.
Because he was stable.
Because he was human.
Because he chose.
The realization struck her like lightning.
“Ethan,” she whispered.
“Yeah?”
“You’re holding the universe together because you’re the center of its choices.”
He blinked slowly.
“That sentence was a lot.”
“The reset system is trying to remove uncertainty,” she said quickly. “But you are uncertain.”
“That sounds like an insult.”
“It’s why you work.”
Another tremor shook the cosmos.
The silver axes cracked again.
This time, Ethan cried out.
Mila grabbed his face with both hands.
“Look at me.”
He did.
Barely.
His eyes were filled with pain, but they were still focused on her.
“What do you feel right now?”
He grimaced.
“Like I’m being stretched across several billion light-years.”
“Besides that.”
He hesitated.
“You.”
Her breath caught.
“Good.”
She pressed her forehead against his.
The principles inside her exploded outward again, but this time they weren’t aimed at the universe.
They were aimed at him.
Recursion flowed into his mind, layering countless possibilities like reflections in mirrors.
Expansion widened his connection to space itself.
Genesis ignited sparks of new reality inside the cracks of the silver axes.
Recovery wrapped the fractures in stabilizing light.
Volition surged through him like electricity.
And continuity rose beneath them both like a rising tide.
Ethan gasped.
Suddenly, the weight didn’t feel external anymore.
It flowed through him.
Around him.
Like gravity recognizing its center.
Across the sky, the vibrating reset-lines slowed.
The cracks in the silver axes stopped spreading.
For one fragile moment.
The universe steadied.
The Observer whispered in disbelief.
“Anchor stabilizing…”
Ethan blinked.
“Wait.”
The light inside his chest flared brighter than ever before.
“Oh no.”
Mila pulled back slightly.
“What?”
The silver axes began expanding.
Not cracking.
Growing.
Stretching across space like roots through soil.
Across the cosmos, galaxies shifted position.
Stars realigned.
Reality reorganized itself around the expanding structure.
Ethan stared down at his glowing chest.
“Pretty sure anchors aren’t supposed to grow.”
Mila’s heart dropped.
Because she finally understood.
“You’re not an anchor anymore.”
The expanding axes burst outward across the universe like branches of light.
“You’re becoming the center.”
The reset lines attached to him began pulling tighter.
Drawing power.
Drawing structure.
Drawing everything.
Toward him.
Ethan looked up slowly.
“That sounds bad.”
Mila swallowed.
“It means the universe isn’t stabilizing around you.”
The silver axes erupted into blinding brilliance.
“It’s collapsing into you.”