The god sitting before him had been killed by a player.
By a divergence.
By soone like him.
"What happened?" Alex asked quietly, though even his own voice sounded smaller inside the crushing atmosphere of the sanctuary.
The corpse fell silent for several seconds, its gaze drifting into empty space as though looking beyond the ruined chamber itself. For a brief mont, it almost looked lost in mory.
Then it finally spoke.
"He evolved beyond fear."
The answer sent a chill crawling down Alex's spine.
The dead god's expression didn't change, but the pressure radiating from its body deepened slightly, as though even recalling that existence disturbed sothing within it.
"The system failed to contain him," the corpse said slowly. "The gods failed to kill him. And eventually..." Its cracked lips twitched into the faintest hint of sothing bitter. "...even the Reigners feared him."
Alex froze the mont the dead god ntioned the Reigners, the unfamiliar title imdiately making the atmosphere inside the sanctuary feel even heavier than before.
"The Reigners?" he asked slowly.
The corpse looked directly at him, its hollow eyes carrying an age that made even Alex feel insignificant.
"The true architects."
Alex's pupils contracted slightly at the answer, and before he could process it fully, the dead god continued speaking in that sa calm, ancient tone.
"The gods are not the rulers of existence. They are administrators. Powerful ones. Dangerous ones. But still beneath the Reigners."
As the corpse slowly raised one chained arm, the golden restraints scread against each other with a tallic shriek loud enough to shake dust from the ceiling above them.
"The Reigners maintain balance through controlled chaos."
Alex said nothing now. He simply listened, fully focused as the scale of the conversation gradually expanded beyond anything he had imagined before.
"They allow civilizations to grow," the dead god continued. "They allow gods to rise. Then, once a force becos too dominant, they engineer collapse before that balance can be broken permanently."
Alex's eyes widened slowly as realization began piecing itself together inside his head.
The corpse noticed imdiately.
"The tutorials. The dungeons. The Legacy Trials. Even the Doom Beasts."
Each example hit harder than the last.
"None of them exist to save civilizations," the corpse said. "They exist to accelerate evolution through conflict."
The sanctuary sohow felt even colder after those words, the atmosphere growing so heavy it almost resembled a tomb again rather than a conversation between two beings. Then the corpse delivered the truth that shattered everything Alex thought he understood about the world.
"Humanity was never being saved."
Its dead eyes remained locked onto Alex as the chains around its body creaked softly.
"It was being cultivated."
Silence swallowed the sanctuary afterward, but Alex's mind was anything but quiet. His thoughts spiraled violently as countless events suddenly began connecting together in ways he had never considered before.
The tutorials that imdiately threw billions into life-and-death situations.
The endless monsters.
The escalating disasters that never seed to stop.
The wars between realms.
The constant pressure forcing civilizations toward violence, adaptation, and evolution.
None of it had been random.
It had been engineered.
The realization made Alex's stomach tighten.
The Reigners wanted suffering because suffering created stronger beings. Conflict created faster evolution. Desperation pushed people beyond their limits and forced abnormalities into existence.
Slowly, Alex clenched his fists.
"...That's insane."
The corpse tilted its head slightly at his response, its expression remaining unchanged despite the horrifying truth it had just revealed.
"Insanity," the dead god said calmly, "is efficient."
Then the dead god said sothing that completely changed Alex's understanding of his situation.
"The mont you killed Malik..." its voice lowered slightly, the ancient sound carrying through the sanctuary like a funeral bell, "...your world was marked."
Alex froze instantly.
Kael's threat flashed through his mind alongside the images of the demon invasion, the rage in their eyes, and the overwhelming hatred they carried toward Earth.
But now—
Now it sounded far worse than simple revenge.
"The Demon Realm's interest in Earth is not rely retaliation," the corpse continued as its chains rattled softly against the throne. "Their conflict was guided."
Alex's eyes narrowed sharply.
"What?"
"The Reigners influence the movent of civilizations," the dead god explained while staring directly into him. "They create collisions between worlds, races, and higher realms because conflict accelerates evolution."
Its hollow gaze darkened slightly.
"Wars accelerate evolution. Fear accelerates evolution. Even mass extinction accelerates evolution."
Sothing cold settled deep inside Alex's stomach as the implications fully began to form.
Earth wasn't being attacked accidentally.
The invasion itself had value.
The Reigners wanted war because war created stronger beings, stronger anomalies, stronger divergences—stronger weapons capable of surpassing the limits of the system itself.
Alex slowly realized sothing horrifying as the pieces finally began connecting inside his head.
Maybe none of this had truly been his choice.
Not his growth. Not the suffering that kept pushing him forward. Not even the victories he had clawed his way toward through blood and desperation.
What if every step had simply been part of the system guiding him toward becoming sothing dangerous?
The thought genuinely disturbed him because, for the first ti in a very long while, Alex felt manipulated rather than in control.
The corpse watched him carefully in silence before speaking again, its hollow gaze lowering toward the glowing pathways spreading beneath Alex's skin.
"Your mutation..." the dead god said slowly, "...is not corruption."
Alex imdiately looked up.
"Then what is it?"
"Evolution."
The single word made the pressure inside the sanctuary deepen noticeably, the air growing heavier as the corpse continued staring directly at the unstable Emi coursing through Alex's body.
"It resembles the earliest stages of the one who killed ."
Alex's heartbeat skipped the mont those words left the corpse's mouth, and the pressure inside the sanctuary sohow felt even heavier than before.
The dead god continued speaking calmly, its hollow eyes fixed directly on the glowing pathways beneath Alex's skin.
"At first, the changes were subtle. Enhanced Emi adaptation. System instability. Independent evolution."
Each phrase described Alex almost perfectly.
Then the corpse's voice lowered slightly, and for the first ti since the conversation began, sothing dangerous crept into its tone.
"But eventually... he stopped resembling anything the system could classify."
A cold chill crawled down Alex's spine.
Almost unconsciously, his hand rose toward the small horn protruding near his forehead, fingers brushing against it lightly as mories of his recent mutations flashed through his mind.
The corpse noticed the movent imdiately, and for the first ti since opening its eyes, sothing shifted across its dead expression.
It smiled.
Only faintly, barely enough to even qualify as an expression, but the sight still sent a chill through Alex's body because that tiny movent sohow felt far more unsettling than the overwhelming pressure filling the sanctuary.
It was the first genuine emotion the dead god had shown since opening its eyes.
And sohow, that terrified Alex far more than the crushing divine pressure filling the sanctuary.
Then the corpse leaned slightly forward on the shattered throne, and the movent alone caused the sanctuary to tremble violently around them. The golden chains restraining its body rattled and scread against each other while ancient cracks spread across the floor beneath Alex's feet.
The dead god's hollow eyes locked onto him completely now, piercing far deeper than flesh, deeper than Emi, deeper than the system itself. For a brief mont, Alex felt as though the being sitting before him wasn't looking at his body at all, but directly at his soul.
Then it finally spoke.
"Tell , anomaly..."
The pressure inside the sanctuary exploded outward so violently that entire sections of the ruined walls collapsed in the distance, and Alex instinctively tensed as the dead god's gaze burned into him with terrifying intensity.
"...when the ti cos..." the corpse continued slowly, its ancient voice shaking the chamber itself, "...will you kill the gods too?"
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