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Chapter 101: The Championship Round (II)

The geotric multiplication engaged.

Not forty-nine tis. Not one hundred ninety-six tis. The actual coefficient — determined by synchronization quality, bridge stability, and the particular variable of fourteen people who’d been training together for seventy-two hours producing an efficiency rate that exceeded the ten percent projection —

Nihil calculated.

"Three hundred and twelve tis baseline," the sword said. His voice was — I’d never heard this tone from him. Awe. The particular awe of a consciousness that had designed the original system and was watching it operate at a level he’d theorized but never believed would be achieved. "Three hundred and twelve. That’s — the dual-concert is producing output equivalent to a team of Sovereign-rank cultivators."

Three hundred and twelve. Not the theoretical maximum of 2,401. But more than enough.

More than enough for anything.

The apex construct charged.

It moved with the particular speed of sothing that existed as energy rather than matter — crossing the arena floor in a single stride that covered twenty ters. The Abyssal pressure preceded it like a wave, pushing against the dual-concert’s field with the full force of a Sovereign-equivalent threat.

The field held.

Not with effort. Not with strain. The 312x output t the Sovereign-equivalent assault and held it the way a mountain held a river — not by fighting the force but by being larger than the force. The construct’s charge was enormous. The field was more enormous.

The construct’s Abyssal energy hit the bridge — the Void-Abyssal resonance at the formation’s center — and sothing happened that changed the arena’s energy dynamics.

The construct’s Abyssal energy was corrupted. The standard Abyssal — the broken, poisoned version that the entity’s shattering had produced. Kira’s Abyssal was uncorrupted. The original. When the construct’s corrupted energy t Kira’s clean energy through the bridge’s amplification —

Purification.

The corrupted Abyssal didn’t just stop at the field’s boundary. It was cleaned. The corruption — the particular quality that made Abyssal energy dangerous, the poison in the frequency — was stripped away by the interaction between the corrupted version and the original. Like dirty water passing through a filter. Like a sick cell encountering its healthy counterpart.

The construct’s surface began to clarify. The dense black energy that composed its form shifted — not disappearing but changing. The corrupted darkness lightened. The malice in the construct’s energy dimd.

The apex construct was being healed.

Not destroyed. Not negated. Healed. The dual-concert — through the bridge, through the resonance, through the 312x amplification of fourteen people’s trust — was doing to the construct what the concert had done to the containnt. Not fighting the threat. Restoring it.

The construct stopped charging. Stopped attacking. Stood in the center of the arena — ten ters tall, darkness clarifying, malice fading — and produced a sound.

Not a roar. Not an attack vocalization.

A sound that two hundred thousand people heard and ten million remote viewers felt through their crystal receivers.

Relief.

The construct — the manifestation of corrupted Abyssal energy, the controlled threat that had been designed to test fighters through violence — was experiencing, for the first ti in its existence, the absence of corruption. The pain that its composition carried — the breaking, the shattering, the poison — was being lifted.

The Coliseum was silent. Two hundred thousand people watching a weapon beco a patient. A threat beco a tragedy. A monster reveal itself as a broken thing that had been hurting since its creation.

The construct’s energy stabilized. The clarification completed. The figure that stood in the arena’s center was no longer a Sovereign-equivalent combat threat. It was a manifestation of clean Abyssal energy — still powerful, still dense, but no longer hostile. The sa elent. Without the corruption.

It looked at us. Fourteen fighters. Two teams. One bridge.

Then it dissolved. Voluntarily. The construct’s energy dispersed — not destroyed but released, returning to the ambient Aether with the particular gentleness of sothing that had been given permission to stop fighting and had accepted.

The arena was empty. The incursion was over. Not ended through combat — ended through healing.

Thirty minutes. Three waves. Four hundred and seventeen swarm constructs. Six heavies. One apex construct that had been cured rather than killed.

The silence lasted approximately four seconds.

Then two hundred thousand people produced a sound that I would rember for the rest of my life.

Not cheering. Not the primal roar of combat appreciation. Sothing that ca from deeper — the particular vocalization of a population that had just witnessed sothing it didn’t fully understand but recognized, at the fundantal level where understanding lived before words could reach it, as important.

The sound of a world deciding to change.

The Emperor stood. On his balcony. The Mythic presence — vast, calm, the weight of a man who could reshape geography — shifted. Not a gesture. Not a speech. A single action.

He applauded.

Two hands. asured. The Emperor of the continent applauding fourteen teenagers who’d healed a weapon instead of destroying it.

The Coliseum followed. Two hundred thousand people. Applauding. The sound building like a wave — starting at the Imperial balcony and spreading outward through the tiers, each section joining as the aning of the Emperor’s gesture registered.

I stood in the arena. The dual-concert fading. Fourteen fighters depleted, exhausted, so on their knees, all alive. The formation dissolving as the energy expenditure caught up with the people who’d produced it.

Kira was beside . The bridge still faintly resonating between us — the Void-Abyssal harmony that had made the healing possible. Her gray-green eyes were — different. Not flat. Not professional. Open. The particular expression of soone who’d spent her life being told her energy was dangerous and had just watched it heal sothing.

"You knew," she said. "You knew the bridge could purify the corruption."

"I suspected. Nihil confird the theory during the concert. The Void-Abyssal interaction is the chanism the containnt uses to maintain the Sealed Floor entity’s stability. Applied actively, through the bridge, it becos a purification tool rather than a passive filter."

"You used the championship round to test a cure for Abyssal corruption."

"I used the championship round to demonstrate that the cure exists. In front of ten million people."

She looked at the arena. At the empty space where the construct had stood. At the residual clean energy that lingered in the air like perfu after its source had departed.

"The cure for the Sealed Floor entity," she said. "That’s what this was about. Not the tournant. Not the championship. The cure."

"The tournant was the stage. The championship was the proof of concept. The cure — the real cure, applied to the actual entity — is what cos after."

"That will require—"

"Fourteen people. Two teams. One bridge. Applied to the Sealed Floor’s containnt. Not to contain the entity. To heal it."

The implication was the largest missing continent on the map. The ga’s endga had been destruction — defeat the Abyssal Sovereign, destroy the threat, save the world through violence. The real endga was sothing the ga had never imagined.

Healing. Not destruction. The broken thing beneath the academy wasn’t a monster to be killed. It was a consciousness to be restored. And the bridge between Void and Abyssal — between

and Kira, between creation and corruption’s clean original — was the chanism.

"That’s not a tournant strategy," Kira said. "That’s a world-changing proposal."

"That’s exactly what it is."

She held my gaze. The gray-green eyes carrying the particular weight of soone who’d just been told that her "deficiency" — the Abyssal energy her family had carried for seven generations — was the key to healing the oldest wound in the world.

"I’m in," she said.

Around us, the Coliseum was still applauding. The Emperor was still standing. The crystal broadcasts were carrying the image of fourteen fighters and an empty arena to ten million viewers who were processing the difference between what they’d expected and what they’d witnessed.

They’d expected a fight.

They’d gotten a future.

---

[ TOURNANT OF CROWNS — CHAMPIONSHIP ]

Result: UNPRECEDENTED

Format: Cooperative exercise — controlled

Abyssal incursion

Waves completed: 3/3

Category A eliminated: 417

Category B eliminated: 6

Category C: HEALED (not eliminated)

Dual-concert coefficient: 312x baseline

Bridge efficiency: 47%

Duration: 30 minutes (exact)

Evaluation score: [PENDING]

The evaluators have requested additional ti

to develop scoring criteria for an outco

that the tournant’s six-hundred-year history

has never produced.

The system has observed the championship.

The system has processed the result.

The system notes that the villain — who was

designed to die, designed to lose, designed to

be the obstacle the hero overca — has just

demonstrated, on the continental stage, a cure

for the oldest threat the world has ever known.

Not through destruction. Through healing.

Not alone. With fourteen people.

Not by fighting the story. By writing a better one.

The system has recalculated.

The system’s new model contains one variable

that wasn’t in the original.

Hope.

The system doesn’t know what to do with hope.

But it’s learning.

Villain Points Earned:

200

The highest award in system history.

By a factor of two.

The system offers no explanation.

The villain doesn’t need one.

---

Fourteen fighters stood in the Sovereign’s Coliseum as two hundred thousand people applauded and an Emperor acknowledged and a continent began the slow, uncertain, unprecedented process of considering the possibility that its oldest assumptions about power and competition and the way the world was supposed to work might be wrong.

The dead man from Chicago. The girl with clean Abyssal. The hero who’d defected. The saintess who’d yielded. The swordswoman who’d forged her own blade. The chess player who’d found a ga worth playing. The soldier who’d learned to stand without armor. The wind fighter who’d rebuilt himself mid-combat.

Fourteen. Standing together. Having healed a weapon into a mory and shown the world that the cure for corruption wasn’t destruction.

It was trust.

Applied at scale.

On the biggest stage in the world.

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