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The upgraded Leraje quiver at her hip thrumd with barely contained malevolence.

Her first target was a group of celestial guards whose armor glead with the reflected glory of their masters, beings who had spent centuries enforcing divine will without ever questioning whether that will deserved enforcent. Shihan’s arrow took the lead guard in the shoulder, penetrating divine protection as if it were paper, and where it struck, the wound began imdiately to fester.

But this wasn’t infection in any physical sense. The corruption that spread through the guard’s essence was mory—every mont when he had followed orders without thought, every ti he had chosen obedience over compassion, every life that had been crushed beneath the weight of his unexamined loyalty. The guard’s eyes widened as he experienced, in compressed and agonising detail, the consequences of every action he had taken in service to absolute authority.

His companions moved to assist, their weapons raised and techniques prepared, but Shihan was already elsewhere, her form blurring between positions with movents that seed to bend space around her passage. Where she had been, only the lingering scent of cherry blossoms remained—beautiful, epheral, and sohow deeply sad, as if the flowers themselves were mourning for all the beauty that had been sacrificed on the altar of order.

Her second arrow found an immortal whose jade sword had cut down ten thousand rebels over the centuries, each death justified by the greater good, each life ended in service to cosmic harmony. The projectile struck him in the chest, just above his heart, and the wound blood like a flower of acidic light against his perfect defenses.

The poison that spread through his system wasn’t toxin but empathy, forced and absolute. He felt every one of those ten thousand deaths as if he were the one dying, experienced each rebel’s final monts of hope crushed beneath the weight of divine indifference, understood with crystalline clarity what it ant to die for the simple cri of wanting choice.

"You... you made see..." he whispered, his features twisting with the weight of accumulated anguish. The sword fell from nerveless fingers as he collapsed to his knees, overwheld by the sudden, terrible understanding of what his loyalty had actually cost.

"See?" Shihan’s voice was soft, almost gentle, carrying none of the malice that her arrows delivered. "That’s all I ever wanted. For you to see what you’ve done, what you’ve allowed, what you’ve enabled through your beautiful, perfect, unthinking obedience."

More guards surrounded her, their formation perfect, their coordination flawless, their certainty absolute. They moved like clockwork soldiers, each step calculated, each attack precisely positioned to minimise chaos and maximise efficiency. It was, by any objective asure, a textbook example of celestial military doctrine applied by beings who had perfected their craft over millennia of practice.

Shihan smiled, and her tails began to glow with foxfire that burned in colors that had no nas.

"Your turn," she purred, and vanished into movent too quick for even immortal eyes to follow.

At the battle’s eastern edge, where the void grew strange and reality began to rember what it had been before order taught it manners, Izanagi fought like the concept of creation given murderous intent. The ancient creator-god moved with the terrible confidence of soone who had shaped the fundantal forces of existence with his own hands, and his spear Anonuhoko carved new realities into being with each thrust and parry.

This was not re combat but fundantal restructuring of what was possible. Where the spear’s point passed, the laws that governed divine interaction rewrote themselves to favor justice over authority, truth over convenience, courage over obedience. The weapon itself seed to exist in multiple places simultaneously, its form shifting between the crude jade original that had stirred islands from primordial chaos and sothing altogether more sophisticated—a tool refined by eons of use into the perfect instrunt for reshaping worlds that had grown too comfortable in their imperfection.

His opponents were among the Court’s most ancient immortals, beings whose existence predated most of the cosmos’s current structures. They fought with techniques that were less martial arts than applied philosophy, using concepts like harmony and balance as weapons, wielding the very idea of proper order as both shield and sword.

The first immortal—whose na translated roughly as "He Who Maintains The Proper Distance Between Stars"—attacked with movents that sought to restore cosmic proportion to the battlefield. Where his techniques landed, space itself tried to expand, creating distances that would separate the combatants according to their proper stations in the divine hierarchy. It was elegant, sophisticated, and completely ineffective against soone who had created the fundantal concepts that the technique was trying to manipulate.

Izanagi’s counter-thrust with Anonuhoko opened a crack in reality through which primordial chaos leaked like luminous fog. Where it touched the immortal’s perfect technique, order simply... forgot what it was supposed to be doing. The cosmic distances collapsed into confused tangles, space folding in on itself like origami created by soone having a seizure, until the immortal found himself sohow standing upside-down relative to his own feet while simultaneously occupying seventeen different positions in a formation that had ceased to make geotrical sense.

"Show them what was before their precious order!" Izanagi called to his companions, his voice making reality shiver in recognition of sothing older than its current managent. The spear spun in his grip, its point describing patterns that wrote new laws into the vacuum itself—physics that favored the underdog, mathematics that bent toward justice, possibilities that turned defeat into victory through sheer audacious will.

A second immortal, whose title roughly ant "She Who Ensures That Rivers Flow Downhill," responded with a technique that sought to restore natural law to the imdiate area. Water began to manifest from nothingness, flowing in perfectly straight lines toward gravitational sources, obeying every rule that governed proper liquid behavior with the desperate intensity of soone trying to prove a point through excessive compliance.

Izanagi simply stabbed the concept of downhill.

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