[Lichtreich | The Tower Without Windows ]
Silence.
But not the kind that brings peace.
In the crooked shadow of the tower—his tower—silence meant something else entirely. It was the kind of silence that swallowed worlds. Not a hum, not a flicker, not even the whisper of Reishi crawling across polished stone. Not even the page of a book dared turn in its own spine.
And yet inside the tower, everything was moving.
A dome of spiraling shelves stacked beyond the eye’s reach surrounded him. Hundreds of thousands of books—some blank, others bleeding black ink—crowded the space around Lukas von Lafette. Ancient notepads filled with looping scrawl in languages that no longer existed, spiraling glyphs rotating mid-air, ghostly scrolls flickering through states of materiality. Rows of flickering screens displayed runes that translated and un-translated themselves into forgotten dialects.
And in the middle of it all sat Lukas, statuesque… unmoving… dead to the world.
Or so it seemed.
His red hair—matted and overgrown—hung like moss over his gaunt, pallid face. His limbs, wrapped loosely in the heavy folds of his long coat, lay suspended off the floor as if held by invisible strings. The heels of his polished shoes hovered inches above the marble ground, which was polished so perfectly that not even dust dared rest on it. The same marbled stone where his Reiatsu refused to settle, where even sound had stopped visiting.
But inside his mind?
Screams.
Hundreds. Thousands. Voices from infinite versions of himself clawed through the edges of his mind like teeth scraping bone. Each one murmured truths, lies, fragments of war, peace, betrayal, and divine revelation. Some laughed. Others sobbed. Some begged for silence.
And some whispered:
“You have already failed him.”
“He wonders why you have not come.”
“He wonders what use a broken archivist has in a new empire.”
He twitched.
Just once.
Then—
SLAM.
His eyelids shot open… only they had rolled into the back of his skull. The whites of his eyes shimmered with crawling black script that bled like oil into the sockets. A scream rattled in his lungs but never left his throat—only a dry, ragged exhale escaped, splitting the silence like glass cracking under frost.
The Reiatsu in the tower shifted—gently at first, then violently. Books dropped from their shelves without touching the ground. Screens blanked out. Paper curled and burned from the edges inward. But Lukas simply... breathed. For the first time in what could have been years.
And he whispered, as if answering something no one else could hear:
“Yes... I hear you, Adonai. I have always heard you.”
Then he stood.
The immense weight of his presence returned to the world as the scripts in his eyes melted into something legible. Words—commands—spelled out his next action across his iris.
“Observation.”
He vanished.
[Moments Later — Below Silbren, Torture Chambers of Josef von Toska]
No sound heralded his arrival—not even the sound of Shadow.
And yet… he was there.
A dark figure stood at the far end of the chamber, unmoving, unflickering, unnoticed at first—just another part of the wall, it seemed. But when the Shinigami’s soul twitched, the prisoners across the chamber began sobbing again. One curled into fetal posture. Another began muttering prayers to a god that didn’t exist. Even Josef’s instruments—those so carefully placed—shivered in place, as if struck by the breath of an ancient tomb cracking open.
Lukas had stepped into Josef’s realm.
His boots made no sound. His breath didn’t fog the air. And still, the moment he arrived, the room somehow became quieter… like it was trying to hide.
Gisela’s dramatic whining still echoed off the red-slicked walls—but as she turned, she would see him.
Standing in full view, coat frayed at the edges, silver eyes glinting like cracked porcelain, face half-buried under unkempt red curls, stood Lukas von Lafette.
He did not bow. He did not speak.
He only raised one hand—two fingers gently lifted—and pointed at the Shinigami’s chest, as if measuring the soul’s remaining weight. Not out of malice. But calculation.
He tilted his head, face slack with distant, inhuman calm.
“This one dreamed of becoming a captain.”
His voice was soft. Slow. Monotone—but echoing across too many realities at once. His words sounded as though a dozen overlapping Lukas’s were all speaking at the same time.
“He would have, in another life. Before the boy in the forest cried. Before the shadow took him.”
He looked to Josef now.
Eyes sharp. Insane. Infinite.
“You will keep him from death for thirty-three more days. There is something he must dream before he is allowed to forget.”
And then his gaze slowly rose—locking eyes with Gisela.
That same unnatural silence followed him even as he moved. But the moment he looked at her… her own reflection twisted subtly in the blood-slicked floor beneath them. Her mirror self smiled back—with too many teeth.
Lukas smiled then. Not at her—but at the image in the floor.
"What dirty little secrets was he hiding from us?"
“Lady Estelle. You’ve changed the ending again.”
A pause.
“Delightful.”
"I'd love to meet one of these Captains. The art we could make together..."
Josef’s musing barely faded before a whisper not spoken aloud seemed to linger in the space behind him.
"I see it too."
The Librarian's coat dragged softly across the floor as he moved now—not with fluidity, but like something being guided. He walked as if each movement was dictated by strings, pulled taut from a dozen unseen hands. His head twitched slightly to the side—then again—then froze. When he spoke again, it was not to anyone present.
Lukas now stood besides Josef.
He regarded the Shinigami’s twisted, broken figure with those sharp crystal blue eyes eyes—eyes that gleamed with a depthless madness, though his face remained eerily neutral.
"This one held loyalty... even past the threshold of pain. Even beyond rational self-interest. It is not fear that holds his tongue. It is faith.”
He tilted his head again—almost as if listening to something behind Josef’s shoulder.
Then:
“I like him.”
The statement was wrong in its simplicity. There was no warmth in it. No kindness. No empathy. Just the mechanical judgment of something deeply detached from morality or camaraderie.
Lukas now reached out—not to the Shinigami—but toward the air in front of him. His fingertips twitched and suddenly the space itself cracked—like parchment tearing, revealing a single blank page suspended in the air.
From the page, black glyphs began to bleed—some Quincy, some ancient runes, some that no tongue could pronounce. And as the page filled, Lukas exhaled.
“He dreams of the child. Of not being able to protect him.”
Lukas now turned his gaze to Gisela. His eyes narrowed—not out of irritation, but calculation.
“You guessed correctly. But only because six hundred seventy-two versions of you have asked him the same question.”
A beat. Then a faint, sickening smile.
“Only twelve were lying.”
The page folded in on itself and vanished.
Lukas blinked once. His posture shifted, a pulse of clarity briefly surfacing from the madness behind his eyes.
“His soul is not yet fractured. Not deeply. A worthy vessel.”
A pause. Then he looked to Josef, and for the first time, spoke to him with genuine directness.
“When you are finished… seal the pieces. Not all wounds should close. But some should not bleed freely.”
His voice was hushed and cool, like a needle dragged across worn vinyl—coated in reverence, lacking warmth.
A dry, lifeless chuckle rasped from his throat—
as though a page in his mind turned too quickly and cut him.
He adjusted his glasses, and the glint of blue behind the lens was swallowed whole.
And then—
He paced.
Like a ghost granted no peace, Lukas wandered the periphery of the chamber. His footfalls made no sound, yet the air warped subtly where he passed, pages unseen rustling, runes twisting faintly, whispering to no one.
His fingers danced in the air beside him as though caressing invisible strings—threads of fate or perhaps outlines of an idea forming.
He passed behind Josef.
Behind the chair.
Behind the bloodstained altar.
Always circling, never still.
And then his murmuring began—fractured sentences, incomplete questions, logic held together with spiritual glue and obsession:
“A captain's memories... grafted into a lesser soul—possible?”
“He knows pain now. That’s one language. Can he learn others?”
“A mimic, perhaps... or no... something less precise, more useful.”
He turned toward Gisela briefly, his expression unreadable.
“Did you taste him, Gisela? What flavor was his fear?”
It wasn’t a question meant to be answered. Just another line in a spiraling thesis only he could write.
Eventually, Lukas came to a stop.
He looked again at the Shinigami. This time, not with curiosity… but with investment.
“I’ll return when the ink has dried.”
And just like that, he vanished—
no flash, no sound—
as if the room had merely misremembered that he’d been there at all.
But something still lingered in the air.
Expectation.
Like a chapter waiting for its title.