Chapter 1580: Story 1580: Storm of Undoing - Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition - NovelsTime

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Chapter 1580: Story 1580: Storm of Undoing

Author: Sir Faraz
updatedAt: 2025-09-16

CHAPTER 1580: STORY 1580: STORM OF UNDOING

The rupture did not burst outward—it collapsed inward, a storm folding upon itself. The heart of the Unborn split into rivers of raw silence and jagged sound, each current lashing across the hollow like blades. The cavern was no longer a place but a tearing—walls dissolving, floor unraveling, air collapsing into weightless void.

Kael roared against the pull, planting his cracked blade into the ground as though it could anchor reality itself. Sparks of broken light sprayed from the weapon, each spark a fragment of all the voices he had lost. His body trembled, scars glowing with fire. “Hold—together!” he bellowed, though the wind tried to rip the words from his mouth.

Elara wrapped herself around the boy, his glow flickering violently. The storm clawed at him more fiercely than the others, as if the Unborn recognized him as the keystone of their defiance. She whispered, her words nearly stolen: “You don’t carry us—you are us. Don’t let it take you.” His chant cracked further, splintering into wild bursts of light that turned shards of the storm back against themselves.

The widow’s nails tore as she clawed grooves into the stone, anchoring herself in blood. Her throat was raw, incapable of sound, yet her silence became weight. She pressed her body flat, trembling, mouthing a single word over and over—stay. Her blood-slick hands held tighter than chains.

The scarred woman slammed her spear down even as it snapped in half. She clutched the jagged stump and drove it into her own thigh, the pain raw enough to bind her to flesh when the storm tried to dissolve her shape. Her laughter broke into coughs of blood, but her eyes burned with fire. “I am not yours to unmake.”

The farmer set his drum before him, shielding it with his body as if it were a child. His hands struck desperately, not rhythm but fragments—slips, falters, missed beats. Each mistake echoed louder than perfection ever had, scattering pieces of the storm as though error itself were a weapon.

The Unborn’s voice tore through the chaos, cracking like collapsing stone:

“You cling to fracture. You bind yourselves with wounds. But unmaking is wholeness. To end is to be pure again.”

Kael dragged himself upright, his blade flaring one last time. “Then we’ll never be pure.” He slashed upward, carving the storm itself. His scars split open, blood painting the air, yet the wound in the storm did not close—it widened.

The boy screamed, not words, not chant, but pure fracture—raw syllables of light. Elara’s arms shook as she held him tighter, shielding him even as his glow seared her skin. The scream fused with Kael’s strike, the farmer’s stumbles, the widow’s silence, the scarred woman’s pain.

Together, their brokenness collided with the storm.

The cavern convulsed. The storm fractured upon itself, devouring its own essence. Light and silence imploded, collapsing the heart in a single shuddering gasp.

And then—

The survivors fell into stillness.

The storm was gone. The heart was gone.

But so was the cavern.

They floated in a space with no walls, no sky, no ground—only the echo of what had been undone.

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