Elias’s technique tracked him through every jump.
Found him in a hidden dinsion he’d prepared as an ultimate refuge.
And was about to delete him like the others.
But Elias pulled back at the last instant.
Not rcy. Practicality.
He needed information.
The technique shifted from "delete" to "capture." Reality folded around the Hierarch leader, and space twisted. The cultivator vanished from his hiding place and reappeared directly in front of Elias, suspended in the air by invisible forces.
Elias’s hand shot out and grabbed the leader by the throat.
The Hierarch’s eyes went wide with shock and terror. He tried to activate defensive techniques—his body began glowing with Law energy, formations inscribed on his very bones lighting up.
Elias’s grip tightened slightly.
The formations shattered. The Law energy dispersed.
"Don’t," Elias said quietly.
But the Hierarch was beyond reason. Three years of planning, destroyed. His entire team, annihilated. His mission, failed.
Zealotry overrode survival instinct.
The leader’s core began to collapse in a controlled implosion—a self-destruct technique that would erase his mories, destroy his soul, and detonate his accumulated Law energy in a blast that might damage even Elias.
Elias’s eyes narrowed.
His Quantum Law sense perceived the technique’s structure in complete detail. Saw how the Hierarch was destabilizing his own cultivation foundation, turning decades of careful progression into a weapon.
Simple enough to stop.
Elias’s free hand extended, two fingers pointing at the Hierarch’s chest.
Then he just... removed the cultivation.
Not destroyed it. Not sealed it. Simply edited reality so that the Hierarch’s core and spiritual sea no longer existed as functional entities. Like deleting a program from a computer—one mont it was there, the next it wasn’t.
The self-destruct technique fizzled imdiately. You couldn’t detonate power you no longer possessed.
The Hierarch convulsed, his entire being rejecting the sudden transformation from Peak Sovereign to mortal. His eyes rolled back. Consciousness flickered.
Elias held him steady and activated a mory scanning technique.
This was delicate work. Minds were complex, and forcing your way through another cultivator’s ntal defenses usually destroyed what you were trying to find. But the Hierarch no longer had cultivator-level defenses. His mind was just... a mind. Imnsely Sophisticated by mortal standards, but trivial for soone at Elias’s level.
Elias rifled through the mories like files in a database.
Hierarchy operations. Cell structures. Communication protocols. Locations of...
There.
Headquarters. The Hierarchy maintained seventeen major bases across the Infinity Realm and countless minor ones, each one hidden through dinsional obscurent and protected by formations that would make most Sovereigns hesitate.
Elias cataloged every location with perfect precision. Every dinsional coordinate. Every access thod. Every defensive asure.
Useful.
He pulled out of the Hierarch’s mind, leaving the cultivator alive but broken—a mortal now, powerless, his zealous mission ended not through death but through absolute defeat.
Elias released his grip, and the forr Hierarch collapsed to the ground, breathing shallowly, staring at nothing.
"Live," Elias said without looking at him. "Spend your remaining years rembering what happens when you make a priority."
Then he turned his attention to the palace.
His full-power manifestation—brief as it was—had done damage. The ancient structure was resilient, built by an Infinite cultivator, but even it had limits. Spatial cracks spiderwebbed through nearby walls. Dinsional anchors had destabilized.
Nothing catastrophic. The palace would repair itself eventually.
Elias walked past the broken Hierarch, toward the exit that was no longer sealed.
Behind him, in the garden core, Archon’s echo might have stirred if it had remained. But the echo had already fulfilled its purpose, delivered its lesson, and returned to dormancy.
The palace was silent except for the ragged breathing of one defeated zealot.
Elias erged into the trial chamber where the Continuum Bridge had been. Empty now—all the other Sovereigns were either still attempting earlier trials or had given up and left.
He continued walking.
Through the dinsional maze that parted for him without resistance, having already recognized him as soone who understood.
Through the shattered remains of the trial chambers, past scorch marks and dinsional fractures left by his battle with the guardian.
Out through the main entrance.
Back into the Shattered Void Region where two thousand Sovereigns had gathered days ago, though now only a few hundred remained, most having given up or been expelled by the trials.
Those who were still present felt Elias erge and imdiately created distance. The pressure he’d unleashed earlier had marked him as sothing dangerous beyond normal Sovereign standards.
Whispers rippled through the crowd:
"That’s Elias Vance..."
"Did you feel what he did? The entire realm felt it..."
"What did he find in there?"
"Look at his eyes. He’s changed..."
Elias ignored them all. His quantum senses swept the area, confirming no additional Hierarchy presence. Good. The ssage would spread—Elias Vance was not to be targeted. Not to be threatened. Not to be made into an enemy.
The Hierarchy would learn that lesson thoroughly.
He had seventeen headquarters to dismantle, after all.
But not today. Today he had different priorities.
Elias activated his spatial techniques and began the fold back toward the City of Infinite Horizons. Back toward the Epochal Ascendance Academy. Back toward his family.
He’d learned what he needed. Gained the insights that mattered. The path to 100% was still unclear, but he had direction now—forge his own thod, embrace his quantum nature, exist in paradox without following soone else’s frawork.
Good enough.
As he traveled, Elias pulled the Eternal Paradox thod manual from his storage space and began studying it properly. Not to use it—he’d already decided against that—but to understand it. To see what Archon had done and learn from it.
The manual was complex, sophisticated, brilliant. Exactly what he’d expected.
And completely wrong for him.
Elias smiled slightly and returned the manual to storage.
He’d figure out his own approach. Always had.
The Infinity Realm spread out beneath him as he flew—seventeen continents, forty-seven trillion cultivators, countless mysteries and opportunities.
And sowhere among all that infinity, seventeen Hierarchy bases waited, unaware that their locations had just been compromised.
Unaware that their organization’s days were numbered.
Elias had tolerated them long enough.
Ti to finish what they’d started.
But first—family. The academy. Make sure Aria was settling in properly, check on Kaelen’s progress, perhaps have an actual conversation with Sarah about her cooking techniques.
The important things.
Hierarchy extermination could wait a few days.
Infinity was patient. So was he.
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