Chapter 630: 630. Can The Underlayer Survive The Upcoming Destruction? (Yes, I’m Joking)
BAAMMMMMM!
The impact was not a crash; it was a collapse. The gravitational entity’s core shuddered, its internal equilibrium shattered by the golem’s mass meeting its own pull in a violent, recursive loop.
The entity imploded, a momentary black hole that sucked in the surrounding air and stone before detonating outward in a shower of crushed matter.
Rex didn’t even look at the explosion. He was already scanning for the next threat, his eyes flickering with a cold, predatory intensity.
His breath came in short, hot bursts, the adrenaline mixing with the ozone-thick air.
"Is this what you wanted, Mordecai?" Rex’s voice was a jagged, arrogant snarl, carrying over the звуки of war. "You wanted to stop being a bum?"
"You wanted to show me you had a spine?"
"Well, congratulations; you’ve turned the underlayer into a fucking slaughterhouse!"
Mordecai stood at the center of the maelstrom, his clothes tattered, his face smeared with soot and blood. He was trembling, but not from fear.
The energy surging through him was too immense to be contained; he was a living conductor for the gacha’s raw power.
"I’m not a bum anymore, Rex!" Mordecai shouted back, his voice cracking with the sheer weight of the emotion he had bottled up for six long months. "I’m not the guy who signs the paperwork while you do the heavy lifting!"
"I’m the one who brought this here! I’m the one who opened the sky!"
Rex glanced at him, a flicker of genuine, surprised respect crossing his face. It was a brief moment, a crack in the cocky facade. "Yeah, you did."
"You destroyed the sky and you’re going to destroy the city if you can’t control the leash on these things!"
"You’ve got the power, Mordecai, but do you have the fucking balls to use it MORE!?"
Another SSR class entity, a shimmering mass of blades and iridescent wings, screeched as it dived toward the courtyard. Rex didn’t flinch.
He snapped his fingers, summoning a pillar of molten stone to erupt beneath the creature, impaling it mid-flight.
"I can clearly see that you’re FUCKING shaking," Rex pointed out, his voice dripping with a cruel, challenging amusement. "And what makes the fun slowly disappear is that... you’re still terrified."
"You’ve unleashed hell, and now you’re realizing you’re just a man standing in the middle of it!"
"Admit it, Mordecai! You’re still that frightened little boy who doesn’t know how to fight!"
"All the pulls in the world won’t change that."
"Your gambling isn’t enough!"
Mordecai’s eyes burned, a deep, swirling violet that mirrored the weeping rifts above. "I’m not afraid of the monsters, Lustful Villain."
"Then what are you afraid of?" Rex demanded, stepping closer, ignoring a stray SR class entity that tried to take a bite out of his shoulder; he swatted it away with a single, violent burst of telekinetic force. "You’ve got the power of a thousand worlds pouring into your lap, and you’re still shaking like a fucking leaf."
"What’s the matter? Too much reality for you?" ƒгeewёbnovel.com
"I’m afraid of what happens when I stop," Mordecai whispered, his voice low and heavy. "I’m afraid that if I let go, there won’t be anything left of me."
"I’ve been holding it in for so long... I don’t know where I end and this power begins."
Rex stopped, his cocky expression softening into something more complex, something that resembled a dangerous kind of empathy. He looked at the man across from him, the man he had mocked, the man he had dismissed.
"Then don’t let go," Rex said, his voice sudden and serious, the arrogance momentarily replaced by a grim, guiding authority. "Don’t you dare drop the leash!’
"You’ve jumped into the deep end, Mordecai!"
"Now you fucking swim or you drown. There is no middle ground anymore."
The sky above them groaned, a new rift tearing open as the pressure reached its critical point. A massive, armored form began to emerge, the air around it warping with a gravitational field that made the ground beneath them heave.
Rex grinned, a sharp, feral expression. "Come on. Let’s see if you can actually handle the weight of your own ambition."
...
The silence that followed the collapse of the temporal bubble was unnatural. It was a heavy, ringing stillness that felt like the world was holding its breath, waiting for the final blow.
Rex stood in the center of the ruined courtyard, his chest heaving, his skin slick with sweat and the shimmering residue of raw mana. His clothes were shredded, his elemental constructs were flickering like dying candles, and his energy reserves were finally, for the first time in his life, feeling the genuine, gnawing ache of depletion.
He had been fighting for two hours straight, a relentless, high-octane dance of destruction that would have killed a lesser man ten times over.
He turned his head, his eyes landing on Mordecai. The other man was a wreck.
He was slumped against a fallen pillar, his eyes glazed, his hands trembling so violently he had to clench them into fists to keep them still. The violet glow in his eyes was dimming, flickering like a dying star.
"You look like hell, Mordecai," Rex said, though there was no mockery in his voice this time and it was a raspy, breathless observation.
He wiped a streak of blood from his jaw, a cocky, lopsided grin still fighting to surface through the exhaustion. "But hey, you did it."
"You broke the world..."
"You’re officially the most dangerous man in the Underlayer." Rex raised his arms. "How does it feel to finally be the center of the universe?"
Mordecai looked up, a hollow, haunting laugh escaping his lips. "It feels... heavy..."
"It feels like the weight of every choice I never made is finally pressing down on me."
"Is this what it means to be ’more’? To just be a bigger target for the gods?" ƒreewebɳovel.com
Rex stepped toward him, his movements heavy but still possessing that predatory grace. "It’s not about being a target."
"It’s about being the one who decides who survives the hit..."
"You stopped being a spectator, Mordecai."
"You stopped waiting for permission to exist."
"That’s the only difference between a man and a god."
"But there’s so much more coming," Mordecai whispered, his gaze drifting back toward the sky, toward the massive, weeping wound in reality that had been festering for two hours. "The pressure... it hasn’t stopped... It’s actually increasing."
Rex followed his gaze, and the grin on his face finally, slowly, died.
The largest rift, the one that had been pulsing like a wounded heart since the moment the limiter snapped, wasn’t just expanding. It was unfolding. It was a tear in the very concept of "where" and "when."
The dimensional pressure was so intense that the air around the rift began to crystallize, turning into shards of frozen time that drifted aimlessly through the courtyard.
Then, the SSS class emerged.
It didn’t fall, and it didn’t descend. It simply was.
It was a silhouette of pure, terrifying nothingness. It was a hole in the tapestry of existence, a shape that the human eye struggled to process because it lacked the fundamental properties of being.
It was an absence so profound that it felt like a physical weight on the soul. Looking at it was like trying to remember a dream that was being erased as you woke up.
It was the silence before the first word was spoken; the void before the first light was struck.
Rex’s foresight, his most reliable, most arrogant tool, went dead. It didn’t give him a warning; it didn’t give him a trajectory.
It simply returned a terrifying, absolute null. It was as if the entity were a blind spot in the eye of God.
Rex felt a coldness he had never known, not the cold of ice but the cold of nonexistence. His telekinesis reached out instinctively, but it felt like grasping at a shadow in a room with no light.
His elemental mastery, his absolute authority over the world’s forces, felt suddenly, pathetically small.
He stood there, the most confident man in the Underlayer, the master of all he could perceive, staring into the face of something that didn’t care to be seen.
"Lustful Villain..." Mordecai’s voice was a mere breath, filled with a sudden, existential dread. "What... what is that?"
Rex didn’t answer immediately. He tightened his grip on the air, his knuckles white, his eyes wide and unblinking.
He forced the cocky smirk back onto his face, a desperate, beautiful act of defiance against the encroaching nothingness.
"I don’t know," Rex whispered, his voice low and dangerous, vibrating with a mixture of terror and a dark, manic excitement. "But it’s the first thing in this entire goddamn universe that actually looks like it might be able to kill me."