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Kill My Other Half

Sylvester_Sly
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In the fractured kingdom of Veyra, no one is born whole. Every soul is split at birth, and I entered the world with the proof carved into my skin: a scar over my heart and a prophecy burned onto my ribs. It foretold that if I ever killed my missing half, our two fractured pieces would become one complete soul within me, granting me power to challenge the gods themselves. For twenty-three years, I believed my other half was the enemy, the ruthless general known as the Kalakatas, whom I was destined to hunt and destroy. Then I finally faced him on a bridge littered with the dead. And I understood everything. The scar on my chest blazed with fire, mirrored perfectly on his. We are not enemies. We are one soul, torn apart. To kill him is to become whole, but at the cost of wiping him from existence forever. The prophecy says the victor must then choose: sacrifice our united soul to save the world, or let the world be consumed. He looked at me, not with hatred, but with a weary smile. "So you're the half that got the conscience." My dagger was at his throat in an instant. "And you're the half that got the death wish." Now, we are bound together, fugitives from the very kingdoms we served. Every accidental touch is a dangerous pull, threatening to complete the merge and end one of us. We are racing against armies and fanatical priests to find a way to break a destiny we never asked for. But the most terrifying truth is dawning on us: this prophecy was written in the victor's blood, from a future where this has already happened. One of us won, and forced this cycle to repeat. To save the world, we must do the impossible. We must defy fate itself and answer the one question that could break us: Which half of a single soul deserves to live?
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Chapter 1 - Kill My Other Half

Chapter One

Frost cracked under my boots as I stepped onto the bridge. The air was thick with the smell of blood and cold iron. Around me, the dead lay frozen in their final moments, a boy's hand still clutching a banner, a soldier's face locked in a silent scream. I pulled my cloak tighter and moved forward, my dagger a cold, familiar weight against my forearm.

Twenty-three years of this has taught me one thing: noise gets you killed. Silence keeps you hunting.

I was halfway across when I saw him.

A man pushed himself up from the carnage, moving slowly, like the world was too heavy to bear. Shredded chainmail hung from his shoulders, and dark hair was plastered to a gash on his forehead. When his eyes met mine, everything stopped.

A searing pain shot through the scar over my heart.

His tunic was torn open, and there it was a mirror of my own, a jagged white line running from his collarbone down his chest. A mark that shouldn't exist on anyone else.

I couldn't breathe.

He saw my recognition. His hand drifted to his own scar, then fell away.

"Name," he said, his voice raw.

I tightened my grip on the dagger. "You first."

A dry, broken laugh escaped him. "Rhen ir'Kalakatas." He wiped blood from his mouth. "Commander of nothing, now."

The Ash Wolf. The man I was sent to kill. The Crown's bounty was heavy in my mind. One quick cut, and it would be over.

I stepped closer. The frost splintered beneath my feet.

He didn't flinch. His eyes were tired, but sharp. "The scar's new?" he asked, nodding toward my chest.

I didn't answer. My throat was too tight for words.

He unbuckled his ruined sword belt and let it fall. His empty hands came up, palms open. "Go on, then. Do it. The Crown pays well."

My arm moved on instinct. The dagger flashed to his throat, its edge resting against his pulse. A thin line of blood welled up.

His heartbeat thudded against the steel, steady. Unafraid.

And my scar burned—a white-hot brand pressed deep into my soul.

He didn't look away. "You feel that, too."

It wasn't a question.

I pressed the blade harder. Blood warmed my knuckles.

"Do it," he whispered. "One of us becomes whole. Isn't that how the prophecy goes?"

My hand trembled. The dagger should have already done its work. But it didn't move.

He leaned into the blade until it bit deeper. "Do it."

I couldn't.

Something snapped into place between us an invisible cord, pulling taut. His breath caught. He felt it, too.

We were frozen there, on a bridge of the dead, while the wind screamed around us.

The pounding of boots broke the spell. My squad, finally catching up. Crossbows clicked into place.

"Target acquired! Stand clear, Wren!"

Rhen's eyes flickered past my shoulder. I still hadn't moved the blade.

His voice was low, for my ears only. "If they lose those bolts, we both die here. Incomplete. Your choice, half-of-me."

The cord between us pulled tighter, painful, intimate.

I made my choice.

I spun, slashed the nearest crossbow string, and kicked the next man back. Shouts erupted. In the chaos, I grabbed Rhen's wrist. His skin burned against mine like ice and fire. I dragged him over the side of the bridge.

We hit the frozen riverbank and ran.

Behind us, my captain screamed my name like a curse.

Ahead, the forest waited

, dark and deep. And we ran toward it, two halves of a single broken soul.