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Chapter 19 - The Febrile Echoes

The sensation of falling didn't end with a crash. It ended with the smell of old copper and the sharp, medicinal sting of mustard oil.

​ Elias opened his eyes to a world that was muted and grey. The vibrant, violent purples of the April sky were gone, replaced by a low, suffocating overcast that threatened snow but only delivered a biting, damp chill. He was lying on the cold cobblestones of a narrow alleyway—not the one behind The Pendulum, but one he recognized with a sickening jolt of familiarity. It was the alley where, in every cycle, the "Void" first felt the itch of the ink.

​ "Lyra?" he rasped, his voice sounding thin, stripped of the resonance of the Void-God.

​ There was no answer. Only the distant, rhythmic clanging of a blacksmith's hammer and the far-off chime of a clock tower. He looked at his wrist. It was pale. Empty. The silver scar that had bound him to her was gone, leaving only a faint, phantom warmth where her skin had pressed against his.

​ He scrambled to his feet, his heart hammering a frantic, uneven rhythm. The "April Paradox" had done more than reset the calendar; it had separated the Pen from the Ink. He was back in the beginning, but the beginning was wrong. The air felt heavy, like a lungful of dust, and the people he saw passing the mouth of the alley moved with a sluggish, mechanical indifference.

​ He checked the wall of a nearby bakery. A flyer, damp and peeling, bore the date:

​1 FEBRUARY.

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