Another short story. This one you don't have to include if it's too philosophical. I tried to tame it a little, but the wording could be simplified A LOT. So if this doesn't make the cut, don't feel bad at all.
Karthmin
word count 993
Yes to critique results
short story
Ultimacyauthor: Karthmin Aretani
Quote:
“Why are you fighting me?”
His foot was planted firmly on my fingers, the only thing holding me back from two thousand feet of unhindered gravity and unforgiving granite. My free hand still held my sword, but using it was useless. If I started any stroke, he would simply step away, and I would fall.
“Why?”
He ground his foot down harder, driving me to answer. I fought because he was undoing everything we had been taught to treasure, everything we had been told was right. Individuality and its expression is only just if it doesn’t impose on another’s expression of their individuality. Self is only attainable in a network, a community. The true source of power is unity... he was breaking all these. Imposing his will, breaking the community, shattering any unity there had been among the Avowal before he rebelled. How could he not know this?
Why was he asking?
I lifted my eyes to meet his and found my answer. He had always doubted. The stories were too vague; too simplified…he had never believed they were true. And because that foundation was cracked, the walls of doctrine that held me so tightly were invisible to him. He could not understand my resistance.
“I fight because your philosophy denies and will ultimately destroy the only way existence is possible.”
He smiled and let up some of the pressure on my hand. I felt each millimeter of raspy stone creep under the lacerations in my palm like a meter.
“How can that be when my existence is a reality apart from Ultimacy?”
It was as I thought. He denied Ultimacy and yet still existed in reality, so he disbelieved. But did he not see that there was no way out of the box? But how could he? They are unseen, the corners and the edges. What is more, the reality of Ultimacy is not dependent on any one person’s existence. Regardless of individual realities, Ultimacy exists. So why did he think he was any different? How could he believe that his reality affected anything ultimate? The very idea was laughable. The idea was…
“An idea, a thought, is as real as reality because it exists. And if it exists, it can become real.”
I was stunned for a moment at my own whispered words…memories of a sterile Avowal classroom so unlike the present civil war. Unity, disunity. Love, hate. Justice, injustice. Right, wrong…all of Ultimacy could be negated by one man’s idea – by his creation of a new reality – just by thinking. And he was making that thought a reality – through this war, through his denial of Ultimacy.
“Exactly,” he said. “It’s simple.” He put more weight on my fingers, grinding my slow slip to a halt.
It was too simple. His contrary reality presupposed the original... The only reality that his denial of Ultimacy could exist in, was a reality in which Ultimacy was a presupposed reality. It was self-defeating. In order to deny it, Ultimacy had to be present. And if Ultimacy was present as an idea, even in the denial of it, it was… a reality.
But his denial of Ultimacy was just as much reality, because it was just as much an idea – because it existed. And yet its existence required Ultimacy! So it couldn’t be a true reality. It couldn’t exist except as an idea. Because...
“You can deny the air you breathe,” I whispered, looking up again. “And that denial may be real for you, but it’s self-defeating. It exists, but it can’t be reality. Ultimacy is the only reality.”
He stepped back, his confidence weakened momentarily. A half-second later, I realized I was slipping. The gritty ledge loomed huge in my mind as my failing grip tightened around it, increasing the texture of the solid pain that drove into my hand with each tiny movement.
Desperate, I swung my sword arm up towards him – my enemy, my nemesis…and long ago my friend.
Another hand on the ledge, and I could pull myself up. And yet he had to be distracted, wounded, or I would be defenseless with both hands on the ledge.
The sword had to go, and it had to distract him. As the arc of my sword grew, I closed my eyes and focused on the picture of his unprotected chest and the course of my blade; and channeled every power of my aching arm into the bloody mass of fingers clinging to the ledge.
We Avowal never wore armor, and he wouldn’t be expecting this. It was my only choice, my only chance.
The picture lined up perfectly and I loosened my grip on the hilt. The precision I had achieved from hours of training with the Purge was still a marvel to me, and as I opened my eyes and dropped my good hand to the ledge and heaved my body upward, I could still see the picture as if my eyes were closed.
The point of my sword skewered through his shirt – cleanly cutting no more space for itself than was necessary – and continued its course.
Exhausted, I rolled away from the edge, listening intently as the man beside me gasped, staggered, and slowly fell.
+++
Desperation lends great power, but I had never seen it like this. I stood uncertainly beside his still form, just barely touching the pommel of the sword that was buried upright in his body.
“I fought because you were destroying the foundations of reality, denying the air you breathed and building an existence that could not stand without falling,” I sobbed. “I fought because you said there was no evil. Because your empire was based on a lie, and lived on falsehood.”
“The truth could not sustain your reality…and it has destroyed you.”
“I’m sorry, but… there was no other way.”
I leaned down and whispered into his lifeless ear, my tears splattering on the ground.
“I wish it didn’t end like this, brother.”
Glad I can help out, Kitra!

Areth,
Ka