Chapter 207: The Law of Eternity
Everything was drained of color, like someone had bled the world dry. Xavier floated in it—weightless and unanchored. There were no walls, no ceiling, no floor beneath his feet. Just endless night stretched across every direction, galaxies spinning, stars flickering far away, a silent sea of eternity.
But then, he noticed the ground. Not real ground, but colossal slabs of stone jutting out from the nothingness, rising like monuments, like fragments of a forgotten temple. They stood scattered at a distance, massive, imposing, their surfaces carved with marks he couldn’t read. Together they almost formed a structure, though broken and incomplete.
As he drifted, something pulled his attention. A ripple, a distortion—and suddenly he was inside a memory. Not like the visions he’d had before, not those prophecies where he was just a passenger inside his own body, chained to what was shown. No, here... he had control. He flexed his hands, twisted his body, and felt the strange freedom of it. He could move, float, and look where he wanted. He wasn’t bound to the script this time.
Then, he heard footsteps.
Xavier snapped his head around. On the slabs ahead, a figure moved. Hood drawn low, robes brushing the nothingness as if it were stone. A tall, cloaked silhouette, walking with slow steps deeper into the structure.
Xavier narrowed his eyes and pushed forward, drifting after it. Each movement felt strange—like swimming through silence—but he adjusted quickly, shadowing the figure as it weaved between the towering slabs.
And then... the robed figure stopped. Slowly, it lowered itself to its knees, head bowed in reverence.
Xavier floated past to see what it was kneeling to—
And there it was.
A throne, carved out of nothing, immense and jagged, like it had grown out of the void itself. Seated upon it was a figure cloaked in shadow. Not the kind of shadow born from light, because there was no light here. The darkness clung unnaturally, a shroud with no source. A presence more than a shape.
Xavier’s chest tightened as he stared at it. Something about that throne, about the figure resting on it, felt wrong. It was too still. Too heavy. Like looking into an abyss that could look back at him any second.
The kneeling figure pressed his head to the ground, voice trembling but heavy with urgency.
"They... the enemies... they’ve breached the innermost dimension. It won’t be long before they are here."
The one on the throne did not move at first. Then a deep, rumbling tone slid through the void, each word carried on a weight that didn’t belong to sound alone but to existence itself.
"If only we had not been betrayed by our own kind... this would never have come to pass." A pause, bitter and sharp. "And now, they come to claim power they cannot even comprehend. Power that will consume them before they could ever wield it."
The kneeling one raised his head slightly, almost pleading.
"Then, my king... I beg you. Escape. At least until the tide has turned. You must survive. You must wait—"
The plea broke off as the air itself shifted. Pressure pushed down on everything, as though the void was trembling in fear. The figure on the throne stood.
He didn’t need words. His presence roared louder than any voice. Towering, broad-shouldered, every step forward radiated something Xavier had no measure for. It wasn’t strength—it was inevitability. A being that simply was, and all else was forced to bend around him.
The shadows peeled back, unveiling him. His form was bare, unmarred, not human yet not entirely alien either. It was something carved beyond mortal design.
Even though the world here was void of color, Xavier swore he knew... he could almost imagine his hair, bright as burning silver, his eyes glowing like molten horizons. The figure was so tall that Xavier could see the pupil of his eyes from far away, except there was no pupil. Only a rotating star at the center, each axis shifting and turning infinitely, an eternal cosmos trapped in his gaze.
Xavier’s stomach tightened. But he couldn’t look away.
The figure raised a finger. Just a single finger.
Particles drifted from the void like they had been waiting for him all along, gathering at the fingertip, compounding, compressing until they blazed like a miniature sun. With a flick, he aimed upward—toward the colossal, rotating, twenty-four-spiked star that hung over the void like a divine anchor.
The blast hit.
Cracks tore through it instantly, jagged lines bleeding raw light. The void shook. Then came the explosion—shards of brilliance scattering outward, swallowed by the endless dark.
The fragments of the star scattered into nowhere, lost in eternity.
The kneeling figure froze, speechless, as if everything he understood had just been crushed underfoot. Even Xavier found himself doubting—was that...?
The king lowered his hand, voice like a judgment etched into stone.
"Strong... weak... people cling to such words. But strength is not a thing, nor is weakness—it is only the echo left behind by choice. What truly separates them... is resolve. The will to walk even when the path has ended. To move... when all else collapses, to exist when existence itself denies you.
Know this, existence bends to those who refuse to vanish. Stars burn, collapse, and are reborn, yet even they are slaves to will. The moment you bow to fate, you are ash. The moment you deny it, you are eternal.
Only the mark that rends eternity apart is real. The stars will collapse, the void will hunger, the gods will be forgotten—but the will that defies them all becomes law, etched upon the marrow of existence. What endures is not life, nor death... but the defiance that makes even nothingness remember.
That is the only truth. All else is illusion."
The void fell into silence. Then, slowly, the king’s gaze shifted. Not to his servant. Not to where the broken star was.
But to Xavier.
"It seems..." the figure’s star-forged eyes glimmered. "...we have a visitor."
Xavier whipped around, scanning the void for someone else, anyone else. Expecting the enemy marching forward. But there was nothing. He was alone.
And when he turned back—
The king stood right before him.
Face to face.
Xavier stiffened, every instinct spiking in alarm. This was a memory. Just a memory. He wasn’t here. He wasn’t supposed to be here. And yet...
Xavier’s breath caught in his throat. His mind screamed it was impossible. He wasn’t part of this time, this moment—this was history, carved in stone. So how... how could the figure of the past see him?