Chapter 220: Valerius’s End
The entire planet was a ticking time bomb. A huge, red countdown timer appeared on every screen in the core chamber, its numbers dropping with a terrifying speed. The floor shook so violently it was hard to stand, and the humming machine below them began to glow with the heat of an angry sun.
Ryan, deep inside the fractured dream-world, felt the overload sequence begin. It was a wave of pure, destructive energy washing over the dream, threatening to tear it apart and burn the minds of the awakening citizens to ash.
He was running out of time. He couldn’t guide millions of confused minds to safety while also fighting off this new psychic storm. He had to end this at the source. He had to confront Valerius, not just in the real world, but here, in the world of the mind.
He pushed through the now-chaotic dreamscape, a world of swirling colors and half-formed memories. He followed the thread of cold, arrogant anger to its source. And there, in the very heart of the crumbling dream, he found him.
He saw the psychic avatar of Lord Valerius. It was not a man in simple white clothes. It was a king. A perfect, golden king, sitting on a massive throne made of pure, flawless crystal.
He was the image of how Valerius saw himself: a perfect ruler, a god of order, looking down on a messy, imperfect world. The avatar looked up as Ryan approached, its golden face twisting into a sneer of pure hatred.
"You!" the golden king roared, its voice the sound of a thousand machines grinding together. "You have ruined everything! My perfect, silent world! You have infected it with your chaotic, messy feelings!"
Ryan didn’t answer. He formed a blade in his own hand, not a blade of energy, but a blade made of pure, concentrated hope—the very thing this dream had lacked for so long.
At that exact same moment, in the real world, Scarlett saw her chance.
The planetary overload was causing chaos. Valerius, distracted by the alarms and his own rage, turned his head for a fraction of a second to look at the countdown timer. It was the smallest of openings, a tiny mistake, but for an assassin like Scarlett, it was a wide-open door.
Her mind, Ryan’s mind, and the flow of the battle all came together in a single, perfect instant. It was a synchronized attack, across two different realities.
In the dream-world, Ryan charged. He swung his blade of pure hope at the golden king.
In the real world, Scarlett moved. She didn’t lunge. She didn’t sprint. She used her Void Weave power, turning into a flicker of shadow and reappearing right behind Valerius, her movement as silent as a falling leaf.
The two attacks hit at the exact same time.
In the dream, Ryan’s blade of hope slammed into the golden king’s chest. The avatar of perfect, cold order could not stand against such a pure, chaotic feeling. The golden form cracked, shattered, and then exploded into a million tiny motes of glittering dust.
In the core chamber, Valerius’s eyes went wide. He felt his psychic avatar, his very sense of self, being destroyed. He opened his mouth to scream, but no sound came out.
At that same moment, he felt a sharp, cold sting in his back. He looked down and saw the silvery tip of Scarlett’s phasing dagger sticking out of the front of his chest. It had slipped past his armor, past his ribs, and pierced his heart with perfect, deadly precision.
The energy blade in his hand fizzled and died. The strength left his body, and he staggered forward, falling to his knees. Scarlett pulled her dagger free and stepped back, her face grim.
Valerius looked up, his eyes finding Ryan’s physical body, which was still slumped over the console. His mind was now back in the real world, the dream-world connection severed.
For a moment, their minds, Ryan’s and Valerius’s, connected. There was no hatred left in Valerius’s eyes. In his final moments, as his life was fading, there was only a strange, tired flicker of something that looked like understanding.
"The chaos..." he whispered, a trickle of blood running from the corner of his mouth. "It always wins in the end..."
He had spent his whole life fighting it, trying to build a perfect wall of logic and order to keep it out. But in the end, a messy, illogical feeling like hope had been his undoing.
With his last ounce of strength, he reached out and touched the console in front of him. His fingers moved with a final, desperate burst of speed, typing a complex command.
"If I could not create a perfect universe," he coughed, his voice barely a whisper, "then perhaps you can... stop it from being destroyed."
It was a final, shocking act. An act of succession. He was passing the torch, from one rival to another. With that final command, he transferred master control of all his hidden assets—his secret shipyards, his hidden research labs, his complete archives on the Precursors and the other dark things lurking in the galaxy—directly to Ryan’s command codes.
Then, the light in his eyes faded. Lord Valerius, the tyrant of the Technocratic Hegemony, collapsed onto the metal floor, dead.
For a moment, there was a stunned silence, broken only by the still-blaring alarms. They had won. The architect of the Cult of Final Stillness was gone.
But their victory was short-lived.
"Ryan!" Zara’s voice was sharp with panic. "Valerius is dead, but the self-destruct sequence is still active! It’s running on an automated system! I can’t stop it from here!"
The countdown timer on the screen flashed:
DETONATION IN 2 MINUTES.
The planet was still going to explode.
Ryan’s consciousness was fully back in his body now, and the information from Valerius’s final gift was flooding his mind. But he was weak, and his head was pounding from the psychic battle.
Down below them, in the city, millions of people were just now starting to wake up from their long, gray dream. They were confused, scared, and completely unaware that their entire world was about to be vaporized.
They had won the battle, but now they were in a desperate race against time to survive the victory. Ryan had to somehow guide millions of confused people to safety, while his team had to figure out how to stop a planetary time bomb that was just seconds away from blowing them all to pieces.