The territory of the Magus Alliance stretched across forty-two sectors within three vast quadrants, forming a civilization so imnse that even its internal borders felt like distant frontiers. Worlds were linked by a lattice of teleportation gates and long-distance void routes, each one critical to maintaining cohesion across such a staggering scale. Even so, distance remained a defining factor.
In the Alpha Quadrant, Sector Thirteen sat near the outer edge of the Alliance's domain, far removed from the central worlds and even farther from the war that had been raging along the distant frontlines. That war—spoken of in reports and rumors—felt abstract to most people here, softened by ti delays and the sheer scale of space.
Travel itself reinforced that illusion. Even with the fastest warp-drive ships, crossing multiple sectors required weeks of continuous flight. Without teleportation gates, that journey extended into months. And for vessels relying on standard propulsion, it could take years to traverse the sa distance.
For most of Sector Thirteen, the war existed far away.
Far enough to feel irrelevant.
That distance had always been their comfort.
Until the scourge appeared within their own sector.
It began only two weeks ago.
A manifestation erupted on Baeldum Planet, ranked in the twentieth most densely populated world within the sector.
At first, the reports were unclear—localized disruptions, missing patrol units, and unexplained fluctuations in planetary energy fields. But within hours, the situation escalated beyond control.
Entire villages went silent.
Surveillance grids failed.
And then the infection began to spread.
The outbreak moved with unnatural speed, leaping from isolated regions into populated cities before containnt forces could respond effectively. Ergency evacuations were initiated across multiple urban centers, and defensive units were deployed in an attempt to isolate the affected zones.
This was not a conventional crisis.
Recognizing the severity of the threat, a classified high-priority signal was transmitted between Magus Alliance headquarters. The response was imdiate.
Under special directive, the Alliance dispatched the strongest available force within the Sector, led by a Supre Commander.
They entered Baeldum's atmosphere within hours of receiving the directive, bypassing standard staging procedures and heading straight for the identified source.
The core of the infestation had been located.
Contact was made shortly after landing.
Then—
An ergency signal was transmitted.
Brief, fragnted, and urgent.
Monts later—
All communication was lost.
#####
All of these changes unfolded without Ery's awareness, for his focus remained entirely within his inner domain, where a transformation was taking place.
The Khaos gate, which had remained sealed for more than thirty years, had finally opened.
At first, it did not swing wide. The massive structure creaked as it parted slowly, its ancient surface trembling as if resisting the very act of awakening. Then, as the gap widened, what lay beyond revealed itself—not a chamber, nor a pathway, but sothing far more violent.
A storm.
Not of wind or fla, but of pure spatial force.
Void energy howled beyond the threshold, twisting and tearing through space itself in a chaotic torrent of destruction. Layers of distorted reality folded into one another, collapsing and reforming in unpredictable waves, while unseen currents surged with enough force to shred even the strongest defenses.
Ery stood before it, unmoving, yet his expression tightened.
Even without stepping inside, his divine sense extended cautiously forward, brushing against the edge of that space. The response was imdiate. A crushing pressure pushed back against him, sharp and absolute, forcing him to withdraw almost instantly.
If he entered unprepared—
He would be torn apart in seconds.
The sight stirred sothing familiar.
This was not entirely unknown to him.
It resembled the extre spatial tunnels he had once traversed while crossing realms—those unstable void passages where even the slightest miscalculation could result in annihilation. The eternal void in its rawest form.
Ery exhaled slowly before turning his head, glancing back at the three towering Khaos guardians behind him.
"Any idea what is happening here?" The bone dragon, Daurgototh, remained silent as always, its hollow gaze fixed upon the storm without reaction. Beside it, the green, grotesque form of Chututlu shifted slightly before answering in its usual fragnted tone.
"Trust… in the lord of Khaos."
Not helpful.
On the other side, Killgragah let out a low, impatient growl, its fiery presence flickering as it spoke with barely restrained irritation.
"Just step in already."
Ery let out a quiet breath, half amused, half exasperated.
Typical.
Still, there was truth in their response.
He had not co this far to hesitate.
Turning back toward the gate, Ery stepped closer until he stood directly before the thin, shimring boundary that separated his domain from the raging void beyond. For a mont, he simply observed it, feeling the pressure, asuring its flow, understanding its rhythm.
Then he reached out.
The instant his fingers made contact, the reaction was imdiate.
A massive ripple surged outward.
The chaotic storm froze—just for a fraction of a second—before the surrounding space began to shift. The violent currents parted, forced aside by an unseen will, forming a narrow passage that extended forward like a tunnel carved through destruction itself.
A path.
Ery did not hesitate.
He stepped forward.
The mont he crossed the boundary, the world changed.
Space folded around him, compressing and stretching simultaneously, creating the sensation of being pulled forward at impossible speed. The violent currents still raged on either side, but the path held firm, guiding him through the storm as if he were traveling through a controlled warp corridor.
Seconds—or perhaps monts beyond ti—passed.
Then the tunnel opened.
Ery stepped out onto solid ground.
He found himself standing upon a massive floating landmass, suspended within a vast and fractured expanse. Before him lay the remains of ancient ruins—broken pillars, shattered structures, and weathered stone that hinted at a long-forgotten civilization. Above, the sky was not truly a sky, but an endless void filled with drifting stone fragnts and countless streams of fluctuating energy, each one pulsing and shifting in complex, unpredictable patterns.
Yet despite the chaos, the sight was familiar.
Ery narrowed his eyes as recognition settled in. Those fluctuations—those streams of distorted energy—were not random. They were pathways. Khaos Waypoints. The sa kind he had once relied upon when traversing realms.
There was no doubt.
This was Khaos Domain.
But it was not really the sa as before.
The difference this ti lay behind him.
The massive swirling tunnel he had just crossed remained open, its violent currents still raging with the sa destructive intensity. At the sa ti, Ery could sense the chaotic expanse beyond, which surrounded the entirety of Khaos's domain. It was as if the boundaries of Khaos space had loosened, allowing him to perceive what lay beyond it. Layers of space, distant fluctuations, even faint traces of pathways far outside this domain—all of it brushed against his divine sense. The world no longer felt contained. It felt… connected.
Ery remained still for a mont, absorbing the sensation.
This was new.
And it was significant.
He could not help but wonder what had caused such a change. Was it the advancent of his realm, granting him a stronger foundation to perceive higher layers of space? Was it the growth of his soul power, allowing his consciousness to extend beyond previous limits? Or perhaps it was his recent comprehension of the Law of Origin, subtly altering how he interacted with the fabric of existence itself.
There was also another possibility.
The rge completion of the three Khaos guardians.
Each of them had changed this domain in so way. The answer eluded him.
But the difference was undeniable.
Shaking off the thought, Ery began to move forward, passing through the familiar rows of broken stone statues that lined the path toward the heart of the domain. Each step felt both known and new, as though he were walking through a place he had visited before, yet seeing it for the first ti.
When he reached the circular hall, he imdiately noticed the change.
Where there had once been four dark rune stones, only three now remained.
At the center of the hall, hovering above a newly ford massive stone table, the familiar pitch-black crystal floated silently.
Ery approached the table.
Then he stopped.
The surface beneath the crystal shimred with countless points of light—millions of them—glittering in intricate patterns. At first glance, it appeared chaotic, but as he focused, a structure began to erge.
"What is this…" he murmured.
His gaze deepened as a sense of familiarity took hold. The scattered lights began to organize themselves in his perception, separating into two vast clusters, each composed of countless smaller lights. The formations were imnse, overlapping slightly where their edges t, forming a region of convergence between them.
Within seconds, VIA confird his suspicion.
What he was looking at was not an abstract pattern.
It was a map.
A map of the universe.
Two superclusters, each represented by four quadrants. One corresponded to the territory of the Magus Alliance, while the other belonged to the domains of the elven races. Between them lay the overlapping regions—the neutral zones.
Ery slowly raised his hand above the table.
As he did, an indescribable sensation washed over him.
It felt as though he were no longer standing within his domain, but above it—like a distant observer gazing down upon the vast expanse of existence itself. Worlds, pathways, territories… all of it lay beneath his awareness, interconnected and exposed.
For a fleeting mont, he felt as if he stood in the position of a god, looking down upon the fabric of space.
Then—
The voice returned.
Low, ancient, and unmistakable.
It echoed from the black crystal.
Calling him.
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