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Chapter 486: The Heavens Shall Fall (XXVII)

Testing Chamber Three was larger than the first.

It needed to be.

Domain manifestation required space, and testing domain interference required even more space to account for the unpredictable effects of a partially collapsed domain.

The research team here was smaller, only five people, led by a peak 6?? True God nad Marcus who had designed most of the theoretical frawork himself.

He looked nervous when Christina and I entered.

"Lord Aestrea," he said, nodding quickly.

"We’re honored you’re willing to test this personally."

"Explain the setup."

He gestured to a series of devices arranged in a circle around the center of the chamber.

They were different from the counter-resonance weapon... sleeker, more complex, with interlocking arrays of crystalline structures that pulsed with a rhythm I couldn’t quite identify.

"The domain interference system works by detecting the boundary formation signature when a domain begins to manifest," Marcos explained.

"During the critical establishnt phase, roughly the first two to three seconds, we introduce a counter-frequency at specific harmonic intervals. This creates micro-instabilities in the boundary layer."

"Two percent coherence deficit," Christina added from beside .

"Correct. Individually, these instabilities are negligible. But they compound. A domain with a two percent coherence deficit can’t maintain structural integrity under sustained pressure. It becos vulnerable to external interference, and eventually collapses entirely."

I walked toward the center of the chamber.

"What’s the risk if sothing goes wrong?"

Marcos hesitated.

Christina answered instead.

"If the interference is too strong, your domain could collapse imdiately instead of destabilizing gradually. You’d experience significant backlash... essentially your own authority rebounding against you."

"How significant?"

"Potentially equivalent to taking a direct hit from a 7?? ranked attack. Maybe higher depending on how much power you put into the initial formation."

I stopped and looked at her.

"And you’re comfortable with this level of risk?"

"No. But it’s necessary." Her expression was serious.

"If we can’t prove this works against you, we can’t rely on it working against the Court’s defenders. And if it doesn’t work, we need to know now, not during the invasion."

She was right.

I turned back to Marcos.

"Proceed."

He nodded and moved to a control console near the wall. The rest of his team took positions at various monitoring stations.

"We’ll start with a low-intensity test," Marcos nodded.

"Form your domain at approximately twenty percent power. We’ll introduce minimal interference and asure the effect. If the results are within acceptable paraters, we’ll escalate."

"Understood."

I centered myself in the chamber and reached for my authority.

This ti, I didn’t try anything simple.

"Forming domain," I announced.

The air changed drastically.

Reality began to bend according to my will, the laws of physics adjusting to accommodate the rules I was establishing.

Space compressed and expanded simultaneously as my domain started to take shape.

Then the interference devices activated.

I felt it imdiately, small disruptions along the boundary I was trying to form.

Not blocking the formation, but introducing tiny imperfections.

Places where the edge of my domain wavered, where the distinction between my reality and external reality blurred.

My domain ford anyway, but it felt... fragile.

Like a structure built with so of the supports slightly misaligned.

"Interference holding," Marcos called out. "Coherence deficit asuring at one point eight percent. Close to target paraters."

"Increase intensity," Christina ordered.

The devices humd louder.

The disruptions intensified.

My domain flickered, the boundaries becoming more unstable.

I could maintain it, but it required constant effort, constant reinforcent of the areas where the interference was creating weaknesses.

"Two point three percent deficit," Marcos reported.

"Holding stable."

"Dear," Christina called out, her voice carrying clearly across the chamber.

"Attempt to expand your domain."

I pushed more authority into the manifestation, trying to extend the boundaries outward.

The domain expanded, but the instabilities expanded with it.

Every new section I created ca with built-in weaknesses, micro-failures in the coherence that compounded the longer I maintained the structure.

"Deficit increasing to three point one percent," Marcos said, tension creeping into his voice.

"We’re exceeding projected paraters."

"Continue," Christina stated.

I kept pushing, expanding the domain further.

The instabilities were becoming more pronounced now.

I could feel sections of the boundary starting to deteriorate, the distinction between my imposed reality and external reality breaking down in specific locations.

"Four point two percent," Marcos announced.

"Recomnd we stop before—"

—Crack!

My domain... suddenly collapsed, in a mre instant.

The entire structure ca apart at once, and the backlash hit

like a physical force.

The Authority I’d invested into the domain rebounded, crashing back into

with enough force that I actually staggered.

Pain lanced through my chest, my divine core recoiling from the sudden influx of chaotic energy.

I dropped to one knee, breathing hard.

"Aestrea!"

Christina was across the chamber in seconds, her hand on my shoulder.

"I’m fine," I said, though my voice ca out rougher than intended.

"You’re not fine. That was a full domain collapse."

"I’m aware."

I pushed myself back to standing, though my divine core still felt destabilized from the backlash.

Christina’s expression was tight with concern, but she turned to Marcos.

"What happened?"

"The deficit exceeded sustainable levels," he said, already reviewing data on his tablet. "At four point two percent, the domain couldn’t maintain cohesion. Complete structural failure."

"But it worked," I said.

Everyone looked at .

"It worked," I repeated.

"You forced my domain to collapse without directly attacking it. Without matching my power output. You introduced a two percent deficit and let the instability compound until the structure failed on its own."

Christina’s eyes narrowed slightly.

"You’re not wrong. But you also just took a backlash that would have incapacitated most gods."

"Most gods aren’t going to be testing this system. They’re going to be targets of it." I straightened fully, the pain in my core already fading as my regeneration kicked in.

"If we can force a Court defender’s domain to collapse during combat, they’ll be vulnerable for the duration of the backlash recovery. That’s an opening."

"A significant opening," Christina agreed slowly.

Her concern hadn’t completely faded, but I could see her thoughts changing back into a strategic assessnt.

"Especially if we combine it with the counter-resonance weapon."

"Exactly. Hit them with counter-resonance first, disrupt their authority output. When they try to compensate by forming a domain, hit them with the interference system. The domain collapses, they take backlash, and they’re defenseless."

Marcos was nodding now, following the logic.

"That’s... actually brilliant. We designed these systems separately, but used in sequence—"

"They’re force multipliers," Christina finished, and then looked at . "Are you sure you can handle one more test?"

"The containnt arrays."

"Yes."

I checked my reserves... and seeing how quickly it was healing, I first decided to ask her sothing.

"How long do I have to recover?"

"Twenty minutes. The containnt team needs ti to set up anyway."

Twenty minutes...? Should be duable.

"Then I can handle it."

She studied my face for a mont, then nodded.

"Alright. But we’re monitoring your energy levels. If they drop below seventy percent, we stop."

"Agreed."

She turned to Marcos.

"Compile the test data and send it to my console. I want full analysis within the hour."

"Yes, ma’am."

Christina touched my arm, guiding

toward the exit.

"Co on. You need to sit down for a few minutes before the next test."

We left the chamber and walked down the corridor to a small observation room. Christina pulled out a chair and pointed at it.

"Sit."

I sat.

She moved behind

and placed her hands on my shoulders, fingers pressing gently against the tension there.

"You’re stressed," she said.

"I just had my domain forcibly collapsed."

"Not from that. You’ve been stressed since we started testing." Her hands moved in slow, careful circles.

"What’s wrong?"

I didn’t answer imdiately.

She waited, continuing the massage, her touch both soothing and grounding.

"These systems work," I said finally. "All of them. The counter-resonance weapon, the domain interference, probably the containnt arrays as well."

"That’s good."

"It is. But it also ans this is actually happening. One week from now, we’re invading the Primordial Court with technology that can neutralize gods multiple star rankings above us."

"You’re having second thoughts."

"No. I’m having first realizations about what success ans."

Her hands paused for a mont, then resud.

"Explain."

"If we succeed, we don’t just damage the Court. We fundantally change the power structure of this entire realm. Every divine organization, every pantheon, every independent god will know that ranking isn’t absolute anymore. That technology can overco raw power."

"That’s the point."

"I know. But I’m realizing the implications." I leaned back slightly into her touch.

"We’ll be marked as the organization that proved gods are vulnerable. Everyone will either want to ally with us or destroy us before we beco a bigger threat."

Christina’s hands moved to my neck, working at the knots there.

"We’ll deal with that when it happens. Right now, focus on the invasion. Everything else cos after."

"After assus we survive."

"We will survive." Her voice was completely certain.

"Because we have better technology, better strategy, and better preparation than the Court expects. And because I refuse to lose you one week before we change everything."

I reached up and caught one of her hands, pulling it down to rest against my chest.

"...I love you."

"I love you too." She leaned down, her cheek pressing against the top of my head. "Which is why you’re going to rest for the full twenty minutes before the next test. No argunts."

"No argunts."

I laughed back at her.

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