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The God-King’s bronze features remained impassive as he studied Adam with calculating intensity. The morial flas cast shifting shadows across his perfect face, highlighting the sharp intelligence that burned in eyes that held mories of both mortal pharaoh and divine construct.

"Your vision troubles ," Ozymandias said, his voice carrying the formal cadence of ancient courts. "I inherited mories of rulers who spoke of peace while preparing chains, who promised freedom while forging new shackles. What assurance do I have that you will not simply beco another tyrant wearing the mask of liberation?"

The question hung heavy in the air between them, weighted with the gravity of divine judgnt. Luna shifted slightly beside Adam, fire igniting in her hand instinctively with a low, serpentine hiss before stopping herself—this was not a battle to be fought with raw power.

Adam considered the words carefully, his blue and red eyes eting the God-King’s unwavering gaze. The star-shaped scar on his chest seed to pulse in the firelight, a reminder of the price he had already paid for his rebellion.

"I’ve seen what happens when gods rule mortals," Adam said finally, his voice quiet but carrying the weight of absolute conviction. "I’ve watched divine authority corrupt everything it touches, turning mortals into cattle to be managed rather than people to be respected. The old order failed because it was built on the assumption that power grants the right to control others."

The God-King’s expression remained neutral, but Adam caught the slight tilt of his massive head—listening, evaluating, calculating probabilities based on tone and word choice.

"But you haven’t answered my question," Ozymandias pressed, taking a step forward that made the bronze braziers flicker with displaced air. "What cos after victory? When the last god falls and the world lies before you like clay in a potter’s hands, what will you shape from it?"

Adam chuckled, the sound echoing strangely in the solemn chamber. His arm found Luna’s waist, pulling her closer against his side with casual intimacy that spoke of deep trust and shared understanding.

"First, we’d have to actually win," he said with a slight shrug, his tone almost conversational despite the divine interrogation. "The sopotamian pantheon still stands, and they’ve got the demons on their side. Marduk, Ea, Ereshkigal, Isthar—they’re not going to roll over and surrender just because we’ve knocked out a few other pantheons."

The God-King’s bronze brow furrowed slightly. "You speak of the war as if it is rely another task to be completed, not the foundation of the future you claim to champion."

"Because that’s what it is," Adam replied, his grip on Luna tightening. "A job that needs doing before we can get on with living."

His eyes grew distant for a mont, as if seeing beyond the walls of the mausoleum to so future only he could perceive. "What I want to do after? Live in peace with her, Shihan, Bart, Garduck, the six troublemakers, Ifrit, and Maven. Find sowhere quiet where mortals can make their own choices without gods pulling the strings."

The simplicity of the answer seed to strike Ozymandias like a physical blow. His massive form went completely still, bronze features locked in an expression of profound confusion. The calculating intelligence in his eyes flickered, processing an outco that his inherited mories and logical fraworks had never accounted for.

Long seconds passed in silence, broken only by the soft crackling of the morial flas. Luna watched the exchange with growing fascination, recognising the mont when a being of absolute certainty encountered sothing that didn’t fit any of his carefully constructed models.

"You... would simply walk away?" the God-King asked finally, his formal tone cracking slightly around the edges. "After achieving ultimate victory, after having the power to reshape the world according to your vision, you would abandon it all for... dostic tranquility?"

Adam’s mouth quirked upward in a genuine smile. "Proving my power was never the point, Ozymandias. Freedom was the point. And you can’t have real freedom in a world where soone—even soone with the best intentions—gets to decide what that freedom looks like for everyone else."

The God-King’s four arms moved restlessly, his weapons shifting in their grips as if seeking so enemy to strike. But this wasn’t a problem that could be solved with divine strength or tactical brilliance—it was a philosophical challenge that cut to the very heart of his purpose.

"The mortals will need guidance," he said, but his voice lacked its earlier certainty. "Without divine authority to maintain order, they will fall into chaos. Wars will consu the realm, tyrants will rise from among their own kind—"

"Maybe," Adam interrupted. "Probably, in so places. But it’ll be their choice to make those mistakes, and their opportunity to learn from them. That’s what freedom ans—the right to succeed or fail based on your own decisions, not soone else’s idea of what’s best for you."

The bronze god turned away, his massive form moving to stand before his creator’s sarcophagus. His reflection wavered in the polished stone, showing both the divine perfection of his constructed form and the complex emotions that played across his features.

"As long as you do not plan to enslave mortals to your rules like the old order," he said finally, his voice heavy with reluctant acceptance, "it should be... sufficient."

The word ca out like it physically pained him to say it, as if every calculation in his divine consciousness scread that Adam’s plan was insufficient, inadequate, dood to failure. But the alternative—becoming another divine tyrant—was even worse.

His gaze turned eastward, toward the distant peaks where the Japanese pantheon held their celestial courts. His bronze features grew somber, and for a mont, the mathematical certainty that governed his thoughts rang in his mind like a prophecy of doom.

He had achieved godhood to protect reality itself, no matter the cost. But if Adam was right, if true freedom ant accepting the possibility of failure, then perhaps his own divine authority was just another chain... It wouldn’t matter if his predictions were right—and he hoped they wouldn’t.

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