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The tomb walls pulsed with an ancient light—neither magic nor machine, but sothing older. Sothing elental.

In the heart of the crypt sat a throne carved of obsidian and starlight. Upon it, the figure stirred, stretching fingers that had not moved in centuries. Bones cracked. A heartbeat echoed for the first ti in eons.

The figure rose.

Sa face. Sa eyes. Sa voice.

But not Valerian.

"Finally," the Mirror said, stepping down from the throne. His cloak shimred like broken glass, reflecting fragnts of a thousand tilines. "The pretender has fulfilled his part."

He moved to the sarcophagus embedded in the center of the chamber. Across its lid were nas—hundreds of them. Failed worlds. Collapsed realities. All versions of the sa being.

Alex Caelum.

Valerian.

The Key.

"They never learn," he said, tapping the lid. "Always trying to save their little worlds. Always thinking they're different."

His eyes burned—not violet like Valerian's, but void black. Infinite. Empty.

The Architect had been only the outer shell.

He was the seed it left behind.

And now, reborn in flesh, he had a world to claim.

Far above, in the newly quiet ruins of Skyfall, Valerian stood atop the citadel's edge, watching the sunrise filter through the fractured skyline.

His body still humd with energy, but it was no longer the system. It was sothing rawer—more dangerous. Every heartbeat reinforced the structure of the world itself. His thoughts weren't entirely his anymore. He felt pressure from every corner of reality—storms before they ford, people before they cried, wars before they began.

He was becoming the world's will.

And he hated it.

Lira approached silently, a cloak draped over her shoulders, her hair braided back in a new style that still sohow managed to look chaotic.

"You haven't slept," she said.

"I don't think I can anymore."

She leaned beside him. "The people are scared, but they're listening. They're looking to you."

"Don't," he said. "They shouldn't."

"You saved them. You ended the system, killed the Architect, and stopped the rewrite. You think that's not worth following?"

Valerian turned, his expression cold. "I didn't stop the rewrite. I beca it."

Lira paused. "Then that's more reason they need you."

Before he could answer, a sharp pressure stabbed through his mind.

A presence.

He stumbled back, clutching his head as visions exploded behind his eyes—mountains splitting, oceans rising, a city turned to glass. And at the center...

Him.

But not him.

"Valerian!" Lira caught him as he swayed. "What is it?"

He looked at her, pupils flickering. "Sothing's coming. Sothing... familiar."

Elsewhere in the fortress, Kael, Selene, and Seraphine burst into the chamber, weapons ready. "We felt it too," Selene said grimly. "Like a mirror image, but inverted. Wrong."

"Not the Architect," Kael added. "Sothing worse."

Seraphine turned to Valerian. "We need answers. Can you trace it?"

Valerian nodded slowly, the world map unfolding in his mind—not in system code, but as a living tapestry of mana and fate.

His fingers traced the pulse.

"The North. The Dead Crown Range. There's a tomb... awakening."

Selene's eyes widened. "That's forbidden territory. Even before the system, it was a place of burial for ancient warlocks and failed system fragnts."

"Then that's where we go," Valerian said. "If I delay, I'll lose what I've gained. He's tethered to . I can feel him drawing on the echoes of every version of that's ever existed."

Kael smirked. "Then let's kill your twin before he becos a god."

The journey was brutal.

Without the system, teleportation arrays failed. They crossed by air—Tenebris Rex carrying them in silence over valleys, rivers, and collapsing cities. Refugees filled the roads. Churches once dedicated to the system now stood hollow, their statues crumbling.

Hope was thin.

But rumors were already spreading.

That the villain of the system had beco its savior.

And that sothing darker now hunted the world.

By the ti they reached the base of the Crown Range, storms had already gathered—purple lightning crackling in unnatural arcs. Snow fell, but burned the skin where it landed.

Valerian stood before the tomb entrance—a circular gate surrounded by obsidian pillars.

"The sa design," he whispered. "As the chamber where I first awoke."

Lira read the runes. "This place... it predates the system. It's a burial ground for echoes. Failed codes. Rejected lives."

Selene stepped forward. "Then why is one still breathing?"

A pulse answered them.

The tomb gate burst open.

And from the shadows stepped the Mirror.

Valerian's opposite.

Not just physically—spiritually. His aura was hollow, devoid of humanity, yet dripping with familiarity. Every movent mirrored Valerian's perfectly, as if mocking him.

"I was wondering when you'd co," the Mirror said, voice smooth and cold. "How does it feel, Valerian? To be the last rewrite? To carry the weight of the world on your spine?"

"Who are you?" Valerian asked, though part of him already knew.

"I am the consequence," the Mirror said. "The last safeguard the Architect left. In case you won. In case you broke free."

Kael drew his sword. "We'll break you too."

The Mirror smirked. "Will you? I'm not bound by your rules. I am the system's raw code—unfiltered, unshaped. While you were busy saving the world, I was busy preparing to unmake it."

He snapped his fingers.

The mountain trembled.

From the snow burst twisted monsters—failed heroes, corrupted villains, aborted tilines brought to life. Each one bore fragnts of Valerian's past lives.

Selene's blade lit up. "He's resurrecting echoes!"

Seraphine channeled fire. "Then we burn them down!"

Valerian stepped forward, sword crackling with voidlight. "This ends now."

And then the battle began.

The mountain shook.

The echoes scread.

And the Mirror laughed.

You are reading Reincarnated as the Villain: The System Made Me Overpowered Chapter 19: The Mirror Throne on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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