Infinity Blade Redemption -brandon Sanderson- -epub- Mobi- Pdf- 15 -
For a long moment, the only sound was the distant chime of the respawn timer, ready to yank him back to the beginning.
Brandon Sanderson
…or is it? The cycle will resume in: 14… 13… 12…
He read on. Page 15 described a ritual. Not of combat, but of release . To shatter the Infinity Blade not on an enemy’s neck, but on the ground. To refuse to absorb the QIP. To let the last Deathless live. For a long moment, the only sound was
As he read, the world around him pixelated at the edges. The arena became a page. The throne became a paragraph. And Sirid, the last warrior, became a footnote.
Then Sirid drove it point-first into the marble floor. The blade screamed—a chorus of a thousand trapped warriors—and shattered into shards of white light. The QIP within him dissolved like morning frost.
“Heresy,” he breathed. But his sword arm ached. He was so tired of the grind. Page 15 described a ritual
“The same thing that happens to a character at the end of a book,” Ryth replied. “You become finished . No sequel. No loop. Just an ending.”
Instead of the throne room of the God King, Sirid found himself standing in a library. Not a digital archive of QIP tech, but a real library: paper, dust, the scent of forgotten leather. On a pedestal before him rested not a weapon, but a book. Its cover was a mosaic of three symbols: a stylized , a folded page ( M ), and a mountain peak ( P ). The spine read Infinity Blade Redemption and beneath it, in smaller gold leaf: Brandon Sanderson . And finally, the number 15 .
The text shifted. It was no longer a recounting of his past. It was a conversation . You believe the blade chooses you. It does not. It chooses the cycle. You are a tool, Sirid, as much as I am a prisoner. Sirid (the Redeemer): Then why show me this? Why break the pattern? Ryth: Because even a Deathless can grow weary of winning. The 15th iteration of this simulation was designed not to trap you, but to offer you what no Infinity Blade can: an out . Sirid’s hands trembled. A simulation? He remembered his first death, the resurrection via the Dark Citadel’s arcane machines. But what if those machines were just the game’s tutorial? What if the real prison was the narrative ? To refuse to absorb the QIP
He sat down on the steps of the throne, cross-legged, and picked up a real book from the floor—the same one from the library. Infinity Blade Redemption . He opened to page 15 and began to read aloud.
He closed the book. The library dissolved. He was back in the throne room. Ryth stood before him, unharmed, his crystalline face unreadable.
Sirid raised the blade. Ryth flinched.
He waited for the reset. The hum in his blood. The click of the universe folding back onto itself.
But footnotes, as any reader knows, are the only places where a story is truly free.