Chapter 230: The Unknown!
Chapter 230: The Unknown!
Zorvak’s footsteps echoed softly as he approached, each step deliberate, unhurried, carrying a confidence that did not need to be asserted loudly to be felt.
He stopped just short of Bane, looking down at him with mild interest, as though examining a tool rather than an enemy.
“It’s almost disappointing,” Zorvak said casually. “All that reputation. All that fear surrounding the name Bane Reign.”
His gaze drifted over Bane’s immobilized form, unthreatened, unimpressed.
“I expected more… struggle.”
Vexor remained silent at his side, eyes sharp, posture relaxed. He did not interrupt. This was Zorvak’s moment.
“You see,” Zorvak continued, his tone almost instructional, “this world has rules. Crude ones. Simple ones. They bind you whether you acknowledge them or not.”
He lifted one finger slightly, as if recalling something trivial.
“As long as you have not broken through yet, what was the measurement of force in this world again?” He tilted his head, feigning thought. “Ah. Yes. Tons.”
A faint smile tugged at his lips.
“As long as you are yet to reach one million tons of force, defeating me or my subordinate is nothing more than a dream. A pleasant one, perhaps, but still a dream.”
His eyes narrowed slightly, red light glinting within them.
“Yes, you are strong,” Zorvak admitted, almost generously. “Stronger than most inhabitants of this SSS world. Strong enough to make the weak kneel and the foolish worship you.”
He leaned forward just a fraction.
“But the class limitation of this world caps you,” he said quietly. “It strangles your growth. No matter how talented you are, no matter how refined your control becomes, your peak strength is still confined by the ceiling imposed on you.”
Zorvak straightened. “I, however, am not.”
The air thickened subtly around him.
“With an Ex class existence,” he continued calmly, “I can unleash more strength at SSS rank than you could ever hope to manifest at the same rank. Not because I am faster. Not because I am smarter.”
He smiled.
“But because my existence allows it.”
Vexor finally spoke, his voice smooth and respectful. “It is not a matter of effort, Lord Bane. It is hierarchy.”
Zorvak nodded once in agreement.
“You are fighting a system you do not yet understand,” Zorvak said. “And systems always win, until one becomes something beyond them.”
He raised his hand slightly, fingers flexing as if testing the air.
“And you,” he added, “are not there yet.”
As he spoke, something shifted.
Bane felt it before he saw it.
A presence. Cold and dense.
It manifested behind him without warning. No distortion in space, no fluctuation in mana, no sound to betray its arrival. It was as if it had always existed there, lurking just beyond perception, and had only now decided to acknowledge him.
The aura that surged from it was unmistakably demonic, yet fundamentally different from Zorvak’s and Vexor’s. Where Zorvak’s presence was domineering and crushing, and Vexor’s razor sharp and precise, this one felt wrong in a way Bane could not immediately define.
Alien. Twisted and refined.
It rushed toward Bane’s back in a silent, predatory wave, intent condensed into something sharp enough to cut through thought itself.
For the first time since the clash began, Bane’s eyes widened.
He didn’t hesitate.
He proceeded to use his last card.
A deep, ancient darkness erupted from his body.
An SSS domain fueled by his mana.
The labyrinth screamed as space itself was overwritten. Shadows were torn from every surface as though reality had been flayed open, flooding outward in an expanding sphere of absolute black. The ground vanished beneath it, swallowed whole. The air ceased to exist. Light was erased so completely it felt as though it had never been there to begin with.
The darkness did not spread chaotically.
It moved with intent. Condensed. Perfect.
The domain surged outward, its expansion precise to the smallest margin, yet it did not engulf Zorvak or Vexor.
Intentionally. Bane focused everything on what stood behind him.
The domain thickened, layers of void folding over one another until it became an oppressive abyss where sound had no meaning, perception fractured, and even intent struggled to take form. Within its boundaries, the Labyrinth’s rules warped violently, crushed beneath the sheer density of Bane’s will as if they were nothing more than fragile suggestions.
This was not defense. This was preparation.
A space carved out of reality itself, where he could unleash everything he had left without interference.
Without distraction.
The darkness roared in utter silence, vibrating with restrained, annihilating power, and for the first time since arriving in this Labyrinth, Zorvak’s expression shifted.
Just slightly, the domain had been released, and whatever had come for Bane from behind had stepped into a world where only one will was permitted to exist.
[You’ve used your Domain.]
[You’ve gained Domain Superiority.]
[Unmoving Curse has been lifted.]
[Unfeeling Curse has been lifted.]
The notifications flashed and vanished at the edge of his perception, their meaning instantly understood.
The moment the shackles were gone, Bane moved.
He shot through the darkness like condensed night given form, his body blurring as he swerved violently, twisting mid motion to face the presence still pressing against his senses. Space itself rippled to accommodate him, the domain bending in obedience as shadows peeled apart and reformed in his wake, flowing around him like living matter.
Yet the dread in his chest only deepened.
Something was wrong, profoundly wrong.
Every instinct screamed at him to avoid contact with whatever carried that aura. It wasn’t fear. It was rejection, raw and absolute, as though his very existence was being warned away, as if the darkness itself recoiled.
“Darkness,” Bane commanded, his voice sharp and absolute, cutting through the void like a blade. “Obey my will.”
The domain responded instantly. Shadows thickened and compressed inward as the authority of the domain surged. Pressure multiplied, darkness layering upon darkness until it became absolute, not merely concealing but suppressing, an overwhelming dominance meant to erase any foreign existence daring to intrude.
The effect should have been immediate.
It wasn’t.
Bane turned fully, and froze.
There was nothing there. No shape. No silhouette. No distortion. And yet the presence remained, closer now, pressing against his senses with suffocating clarity.
His pupils constricted.
“Impossible,” he was alarmed, disbelief cutting through his focus for the first time. “My domain has no effect?”
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