Libro Blanco Ramtha -

But the Erasers found him. They could not kill him, for he was already a paradox, but they could unwrite him. Page by page, his memories faded. He began to forget Elisa’s face. He forgot the name of his own mother. Desperate, he wrote instructions in the Libro Blanco for a future reader—a monk who would hold the book in the correct century, under the correct stars.

Ramtha claimed he was a "weaver"—a person from a distant future where history could be visited but not changed. His crime, in his own time, was compassion. He had traveled to the 13th century to give a dying girl named Elisa a medicine that would not be invented for seven hundred years. A single capsule. She lived. But history, sensing a foreign object, began to fray. libro blanco ramtha

In the dust-choked archives of a forgotten Valencian monastery, Brother Mateo uncovered a codex bound in undyed sheepskin. Its title, handwritten in a shaky 13th-century hand, read Libro Blanco de Ramtha . But the Erasers found him

The Libro Blanco was his journal. Each page described a reality beginning to split: a crusade that never happened, a language that reversed its syntax, a star vanishing from the night sky. To repair the damage, Ramtha knew he had to do what no weaver had done: write a confession in a medium so inert that time’s agents—beings he called the "Erasers"—could not detect it. Tin. White vellum. Silence. He began to forget Elisa’s face

"Read this aloud on the night of the winter solstice," the final page commanded. "Speak my name, and I will be unmade fully—or made real for the first time. There is no middle ground."

No one had spoken that name in centuries. Ramtha was a ghost story whispered to novices: a Moorish scholar who had converted to Christianity, only to be tried by the Inquisition not for heresy, but for something far stranger— chronological dissonance .

Brother Mateo read by firelight, his faith trembling.