Observatory, Morning - Three months after the proposal
Raj stood at the center of the observatory's stabilization chamber, reality bending around him like watercolors in rain. His power had grown beyond comprehension—twenty iterations of the Shattered Limiter across ten years of multiple crises had pushed his Eidolon abilities into territories that had no names, no classifications, no safe boundaries.
The engagement ring on his finger seemed to anchor him to something human, even as cosmic forces threatened to sweep his consciousness into realms beyond mortal understanding. Three months had passed since he'd proposed to Kiran on the observatory's roof, three months of quiet congratulations from their friends—Wally's enthusiastic backslapping, Artemis's knowing smile, even Batman's subtle nod of approval. The Justice League had been more reserved but equally supportive, with Superman offering a handshake that somehow conveyed both congratulations and understanding of the weight of cosmic responsibility placed on personal relationships.
But now, as equations wrote themselves in golden fire across his vision, each one describing forces that could reshape galaxies or unweave the fundamental constants of existence, Raj felt the crushing weight of what he was becoming.
"Too much," he thought, pressing his palms against his temples as cosmic awareness pushed past its limits. "I can feel the Source Wall calling, can sense the boundaries between what is and what could be dissolving. And still no clear path home."
The power flared, and for a moment, the observatory existed in seventeen dimensions simultaneously. Roy's startled yelp echoed from the workshop as his tools briefly achieved sentience before returning to mundane steel and silicon.
"Raj!" Kiran's voice cut through the chaos, her golden aura flaring as she anchored him to present reality. Her hand found his, warm and human and perfectly real, the matching engagement ring on her finger pulsing with gentle light. "Breathe. Center yourself."
But before he could respond, the temperature dropped and starlight gathered in the corners of the room. Death of the Endless stepped through the spaces between heartbeats, her presence both comforting and absolute.
"Hello again," she said, her voice carrying the gentle finality of sunset and completed songs. "I see you've been growing into something quite remarkable."
Raj's power settled reluctantly, like a wild animal recognizing a superior predator. "Death. I wasn't expecting—"
"A house call? I make exceptions for interesting cases." Her pale eyes took in the distortions still rippling around him, the way reality itself seemed to lean away from his presence. "And you, my dear Raj, have become very interesting indeed."
She approached with unhurried steps, each footfall somehow in harmony with the universe's deepest rhythms. "You're approaching true multiversal-tier power. The kind that can reshape the fundamental laws of existence with a stray thought. The kind that makes the Source Wall look like a garden fence."
"Is that why you're here?" Raj asked, though he already knew the answer.
Death's smile was radiant and terrible and infinitely kind. "It's time, Raj. I promised you a way home, and I always keep my promises. But first, we need to discuss what 'home' means for someone who can touch the face of infinity itself."
Observatory, Meeting Room
The revelation hit the family gathering like a thunderbolt.
"What do you mean, 'too powerful'?" Roy demanded, his mechanical fingers drumming against the workshop table with increasing agitation. "Power's never been a problem before. You just... control it, right?"
Raj shook his head slowly, his eyes distant with cosmic understanding. "It's not that simple anymore. The Shattered Limiter doesn't just increase power—it fundamentally alters the relationship between consciousness and reality. After twenty iterations across ten years..." He gestured helplessly. "I'm becoming something beyond human comprehension, Roy. My existence warps spacetime just by being present. My native universe—my original Earth—it's not built to handle something like me."
Match's pale features cycled through concern and calculation. "Structural integrity compromised?"
"The entire local reality cluster would destabilize," Raj confirmed quietly. "I go home, and I destroy the very thing I'm trying to return to. Everyone I love, everyone I left behind—they'd all cease to exist the moment I crossed the dimensional threshold."
Kiran's hand tightened in his, her golden aura pulsing with protective instinct. Throughout their decade of multiversal adventures, she'd grown alongside him, her power evolving to complement and balance his cosmic forces. But even she looked shaken by the implications.
"There has to be another solution," she said firmly. "There's always another path forward."
Jeevika's holographic form flickered with unusual uncertainty. [Theoretical analysis suggests multiple potential solutions, though each carries significant risk factors. The probability matrices are... complex.]
"That's a fancy way of saying you don't know either," Roy muttered, running his hands through his hair. "This is insane. You spend ten years saving fifty-two worlds, and your reward is cosmic exile?"
"It's not exile," Raj said, though his voice lacked conviction. "It's just... not the homecoming I imagined."
Death materialized beside him, her presence filling the room with the scent of autumn leaves and distant music. "Actually, there might be another option. But it will require faith that even seasoned multiversal guardians might find... challenging."
She gestured, and reality rippled. For a moment, they could see beyond the local multiverse—past the Source Wall, past the boundaries of known existence, into the vast and terrifying realm of the true Omniverse.
"The Silver City," Death said simply. "Where all questions eventually find their answers."
Kiran stepped forward, her jaw set with the same determination she'd shown when facing down cosmic tyrants. "You're not going alone."
"Kiran—"
"No." Her voice carried harmonics that made the air itself listen. "Ten years, Raj. For ten years, we've faced impossible odds together. Ten years of you trying to protect everyone by carrying the weight alone. I'm not letting you disappear into cosmic infinity without me."
Raj's throat tightened with emotion. Even facing the incomprehensible vastness of the Omniverse, she stood beside him without hesitation. "It could be dangerous. We don't know what exists beyond the Source Wall."
"Then we'll discover it together," she said simply. "That's what partners do."
Death's smile was warm with approval. "I was hoping you'd say that. True partnership is one of the few constants that remain stable across all levels of reality. You'll need that foundation where we're going."
The Silver City - Beyond the Source Wall
The transition was like being born backwards through pure concept. One moment they stood in the familiar warmth of the observatory, the next they existed in a realm where physics was poetry and mathematics sang hymns of creation.
The Silver City defied description not because it was alien, but because it was more real than reality itself. Streets paved with crystallized light wound between towers that existed in seventeen dimensions simultaneously. The air tasted of forgiveness and possibility, and every breath carried whispers of prayers answered and hopes fulfilled.
Raj felt his multiversal power dim to barely perceptible levels—not suppressed, but simply irrelevant in a place where existence itself was mutable according to will and wisdom rather than force.
"Welcome," Death said, her form more radiant here in this realm beyond realms. "To the place where all creation begins and ends."
They walked through gardens where flowers bloomed in colors that had no names, past fountains that sang lullabies in languages older than time. Angels went about their duties with serene efficiency—not the winged humanoids of human imagination, but geometric patterns of pure intent that shifted between forms as their tasks required.
At the city's heart stood a structure that wasn't quite a palace and wasn't quite a cathedral, but somehow managed to be both simultaneously. It rose impossibly high, its spires touching realms of existence that hurt to contemplate directly.
"The Presence will see you now," Death said, though she hadn't spoken to anyone or received any message. "Be respectful, be honest, and remember—here, intention matters more than words."
The throne room was vast and intimate, cosmic and personal, all at once. The Presence sat at its center, and His form was like looking into the face of a beloved grandfather who happened to contain the wisdom of all creation. His voice carried the warmth of every father's loving guidance and every teacher's patient wisdom:
"Raj Kumar Singh. Transmigrator of Central-Earth. You have served well across the local multiverse cluster."
Raj felt his cosmic powers steady themselves in the presence of absolute authority. "I tried to help where I could."
"Help." The word carried gentle amusement. "You prevented seventeen universal extinctions, rehabilitated four fallen pantheons, and taught hope to realities that had forgotten how to dream. This constitutes something more than mere 'help,' my child."
Kiran stepped forward, her golden aura barely visible but somehow more present than ever. "We worked together. Neither of us could have accomplished any of it alone."
"Yes. Partnership as a foundation for stability. Fascinating. In all our observations of transmigrator protocols, few have achieved such perfect dimensional resonance with a native consciousness."
"Transmigrator protocols?" Raj asked, confusion bleeding through his cosmic awareness.
The Presence gestured, and suddenly they could see it—the vast network of stories and inspirations that flowed between realities like rivers of liquid dream. Human authors on countless Earths, unknowingly channelling multiversal events into fiction. Readers whose imaginations shaped the very realities being described.
"The Random Omnipotent Being—what you would call 'ROB'—is part of an ancient congress of Omnipotent Beings. When realities face existential crisis, champions are drawn from universes where those realities exist as stories. The familiarity provides necessary context, while the distance provides objectivity."
Raj's mind reeled as the implications cascaded through his consciousness. "The CYOA, the perks, even being isekai'd in the first place—it was all part of some cosmic intervention protocol?"
"The Great Darkness grows stronger with each passing eon. The Dark Multiverse spawns' new horrors daily—twisted reflections of hope that seek to corrupt all they touch. Traditional heroic paradigms prove insufficient against threats that exist beyond the conceptual framework of their home realities."
The cosmic view expanded, showing them the true scope of the battle being fought across infinite dimensions. The Great Darkness—not just an entity, but a fundamental force of nihilistic entropy that sought to return all existence to primordial void. Against it stood champions like Raj: transmigrators who could think outside the narrative constraints of their adopted realities.
"But you have grown beyond the parameters of the original protocol. Your power now rivals that of multiversal abstracts. Returning to your native reality would indeed cause catastrophic dimensional collapse."
Raj's heart clenched. After everything—ten years of fighting, of growing, of becoming something more than human—he still couldn't go home.
"However," the Presence continued, and somehow that single word carried infinite possibility, "true partnership remains a foundation for stability across all levels of reality."
Kiran stepped closer to Raj, her mind racing through possibilities at lightspeed. "What if we don't return as we are? What if we create echoes of ourselves?"
The Presence leaned forward with the weight of divine attention. "Explain, child."
"Quantum resonance copies," Kiran said, her voice growing stronger with conviction. "Not duplicates, but echoes. Versions of ourselves with full memories but power scaled down, removed even to exist in Raj's native reality without destabilising it."
Raj's eyes widened as he followed her logic. "Dimensional entanglement across reality barriers. We could share experiences, maintain connection..."
"You'd live the life you always wanted," she continued. "See your family, walk familiar streets, experience home."
"The technical challenges would be... significant for you." the Presence observed thoughtfully. "Creating stable consciousness echoes across multiversal barriers while maintaining personality integrity and memory coherence..."
"But possible?" Raj asked, hope kindling in his chest.
"For beings of your current power level, working in harmony with My divine authority... yes. Quite possible."
Kiran's golden aura flared brighter. "There's one condition. I won't let him go alone—not even as an echo. If we're doing this, we do it together."
Raj turned to stare at her. "Kiran, you'd fragment your consciousness across dimensions? Risk everything for a chance at an ordinary life?"
"Raj." Her voice was gentle but infinitely certain. "Do you remember what I told you on that rooftop? About deserving to be loved completely?"
He nodded, throat tight with emotion.
"True partnership means choosing each other, again and again, across all possible realities. It means that even if I have to divide my essence across the multiverse, I'm not letting any version of you face existence alone. Not even the version who gets to go home."
The mathematics of it blazed through Raj's enhanced consciousness—the elegant complexity of creating stable quantum echoes, the delicate balance required to maintain personality coherence across dimensional barriers, the sheer audacious beauty of partnership as a binding force stronger than entropy itself.
"Very well," the Presence said, and His voice carried the warmth of cosmic approval. "Love is the greatest Miracle there is, believe in it. We shall attempt this grand work."
The process was unlike anything they'd experienced—not painful, but profoundly transformative. Raj felt his consciousness divide like light through a prism, each fragment carrying the full spectrum of his memories and emotions while remaining distinctly itself. He was simultaneously cosmic force and mortal man, multiversal guardian and homesick son.
In the space between heartbeats, between thoughts, between the spaces that existed only in the moment before existence decided what it wanted to be, two new souls crystallized into being. Perfect echoes of themselves, complete with every memory and feeling, but scaled to exist safely within the boundaries of a single, fragile universe.
"It is done," the Presence announced gently. "Go well, children of two realities. May your Love remain strong across all dimensions."
Delhi, Central-Earth - All India Institute of Medical Sciences
Beep. Beep. Beep.
The sound pierced through layers of unconsciousness like a lifeline thrown into dark water. Raj's eyes fluttered open, and for a moment, he couldn't process what he was seeing.
White ceiling tiles. Fluorescent lights humming with electrical current instead of cosmic energy. The mundane, wonderful, ordinary reality of a hospital room.
"Oh, beta, you're awake!"
The voice hit him like a physical blow.
Raj turned his head—slowly, carefully, marveling at how human movement felt after years of cosmic existence—and saw his mother rising from a bedside chair.
Sunita Singh looked older, worry lines etched deeper around her eyes from three days of vigil, but her smile was exactly as he remembered. Exactly as he'd carried in his heart across fifty-two realities.
"Maa?" The word came out as barely a whisper, his voice rough from disuse, but it carried ten years of longing.
"Haan, beta, I'm here. We're all here." Tears streamed down her face as she reached for his hand with trembling fingers. "The doctors said you might not wake up. Three days in a coma after the accident, but you're here, you're awake, you're—"
Her voice broke, and she pressed his hand to her cheek, her tears warm against his palm. In that moment, Raj felt the weight of every battle fought, every cosmic crisis faced, every moment of homesickness that had driven him forward across impossible odds.
'This. This was what he'd been fighting to return to.'
The door burst open and his father rushed in, his usually composed face raw with emotion. Behind him came Arjun, now taller and more angular than the teenager Raj remembered, and his grandmother, moving slowly but with desperate urgency.
"Papa," Raj whispered, and Rakesh Singh's stoic composure—the same steadfast strength that had shaped Raj's entire childhood—crumbled completely.
His father grabbed his other hand with trembling fingers, this man who had taught him that strength meant protecting those you loved, who had worked double shifts to pay for his education, who had worried in silence for ten years about a son who had simply vanished from their lives.
"My son," his father said, voice thick with ten years of suppressed fear and hope. "My brave son."
"I'm here, Papa," Raj said, his own voice breaking. "I'm here."
Arjun hung back, teenage awkwardness warring with obvious relief. He was twenty-four now, the same age Raj had been when he'd first been transmigrated. A man grown, but still his little brother.
"Bhai, you scared us," Arjun said quietly. "Really scared us. Maa... she barely left your side."
"I'm sorry," Raj said, meaning it in ways they couldn't understand. "I'm so sorry for worrying you."
His grandmother shuffled forward, her weathered face bright with joy, the same woman who had told him stories of brave princes and faithful wives, who had taught him that love was worth any sacrifice.
"Arrey beta, no crying now," she said, her voice wavering with emotion. "You're home. That's all that matters."
'Home.'
The word resonated through him with profound meaning. He was home—really, truly home. He could smell the familiar scents of his mother's jasmine perfume and his father's aftershave. Could hear the distant sounds of Delhi traffic and vendors calling their wares. Could feel the weight of gravity that followed normal laws instead of bending to his will.
His mother's hand in his, worn from years of worry but still gentle. His father's quiet strength, steady as always. His brother's awkward affection. His grandmother's unconditional love.
'This was what love looked like. This was what home meant.'
For ten years, he had carried their faces in his heart, their voices in his memory, their love as his anchor across the infinite void. Now, impossibly, miraculously, he was back where he belonged.
A gentle knock at the door interrupted the reunion. "Excuse me, sorry to intrude. I need to check on the patient."
Raj's breath caught. The doctor who entered was tall and graceful, with dark hair pulled back in a professional bun and eyes that sparkled with golden light—so subtle that anyone else would assume it was just a trick of the fluorescent lighting.
"I'm Dr. Kiran Sharma," she said, her voice carrying warmth that made his heart skip. "I've been monitoring your recovery."
Their eyes met across the hospital room, and in that moment, Raj saw it—the flash of recognition, the smile that held the weight of ten years and fifty-two worlds and all the quiet moments in between. She was here. Somehow, impossibly, perfectly, she was here.
"How are you feeling, Mr. Singh?" she asked professionally, though her eyes danced with secret joy.
"Like I'm exactly where I'm supposed to be," he replied, his voice steady despite the emotion threatening to overwhelm him.
Dr. Kiran Sharma smiled—the same radiant expression he'd fallen in love with, now gracing a face that belonged to this world but carried the soul he knew better than his own.
"That's very good to hear," she said softly. "Recovery can be... challenging when you're far from home."
"Not anymore," Raj said, his hand tightening around his mother's while his eyes never left Kiran's face. "I think the hardest part is over."
Delhi, One Year Later - A small apartment in Defence Colony
The evening light slanted through the windows of their cozy study, painting everything in shades of gold and amber. Raj sat at a simple wooden desk, a notebook open before him, pen moving steadily across lined pages. The room was wonderfully ordinary—bookshelves filled with dog-eared paperbacks, a small television playing old Bollywood songs, the scent of chai drifting from the kitchen.
He paused in his writing to look around, still marveling at the simple miracle of mundane existence. No cosmic responsibilities weighing on his shoulders. No dimensions to save or realities to stabilize. Just the gentle rhythm of a normal life lived with someone he loved.
"What are you writing?"
Kiran entered carrying two steaming cups of chai, her hair loose around her shoulders, wearing one of his old university t-shirts. She'd "met" him during his recovery, a young doctor who'd somehow felt an inexplicable connection to her patient. Their courtship had been swift but felt inevitable—two souls recognizing each other across the boundaries of reality itself.
She was perfect even in this world—brilliant, kind, with just enough mystery in her golden eyes to remind him of cosmic adventures that might have been dreams. They'd been married six months ago in a simple ceremony that made his grandmother cry with happiness.
"Just a story that came to mind," Raj said, accepting his tea gratefully. "Something about... oh, you'll probably think it's silly."
"Try me," she said, settling onto the arm of his chair and peering at the notebook.
He gestured at the pages covered in his careful handwriting. "A young man gets transmigrated to another reality and has to learn to be a hero while dealing with cosmic-level threats."
Kiran's eyes sparkled with barely contained mirth. "Sounds intriguing. Does he have a love interest?"
"Of course. A brilliant woman with golden powers who teaches him that even cosmic forces need someone to come home to." Raj set down his pen and pulled her into his lap. "She's the heart of the story."
"Naturally," Kiran said, pressing a kiss to his temple. "And how does it end?"
Raj considered, thinking of another version of himself standing in an observatory on Earth-16, watching stars that held the weight of infinite responsibility. That Raj was happy too, he knew—cosmic guardian and protector of the multiverse, with his own Kiran by his side as they faced whatever challenges the universe could devise.
"The hero saves the multiverse," he said finally. "But the real victory is that he learns home isn't a place—it's the people who choose to stand with you across any distance, any dimension, any reality."
Kiran's smile was radiant. "I like that ending."
"Me too," Raj said, closing the notebook and wrapping his arms around his wife. Through the window, Delhi's lights twinkled like distant stars, and somewhere in the space between one heartbeat and the next, he felt an echo of cosmic awareness—a glimpse of infinite realities where other versions of himself stood guard over hope and possibility.
But this was his reality now. This warm room, this gentle woman, this beautifully ordinary life built on the foundation of extraordinary love. He was home at last, in all the ways that mattered.
"Come on," Kiran said, standing and tugging his hand. "Dinner's ready, and your mother is calling to check that you're eating properly."
"Some things never change," Raj laughed, allowing himself to be pulled toward the kitchen and the simple, perfect routine of a life lived in love.
Inside the notebook, the title of the story read: 'CYOA in DC'.
The End.