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Chapter 172 - Ceres Omega

Date: 6/23/2001 – Time Unknown

Location: The Great Void – The Heart of the Final Trial

Perspective: Kaiser Everhart

The white fog did not dissipate. It rearranged itself. The vacuum became a lens, and suddenly, I was no longer looking at nothingness.

I was looking at the structure of a multiverse.

"The Sovereign War is the mechanism of renewal," the Void informed me.

"10 worthy subjects are chosen from the wreckage of existence. Mortals who have lost every significance—family, status, physical form. They are given a single choice: one power, granted by the fate of the Quill."

"With that power, they are dropped into the system of Ceres Omega."

The fog rippled, and I saw them. Ten sparks of light descending through an atmospheric veil.

"Ceres Omega is not a planet. It is an omnipotent solar system, a containment field of conflicting realities."

"Each subject is sent to a different world. One is a high-gravity gas giant where the inhabitants communicate through seismic vibrations. Another is a world of tectonic mercury, where the magic system is predicated on the freezing point of blood. There are races of crystalline intelligence and hierarchies built on the frequency of power."

I watched the visions flicker. I saw a desert world scorched by three suns and a forest planet where the trees were sentient parasites. The complexity was staggering.

"They must adapt. They must prevail over the indigenous logic of their assigned world. They must rise to the summit of their respective hierarchies."

"How is a victor determined?" I asked. My mind was already mapping the logistics of a ten-way universal collapse.

"To win is to be the last remaining."

"The ten subjects are granted equal potential through their wish, but their victory is dictated by their decision-making. Choice is the only variable that cannot be predicted. Nine times, this contest has been completed.

"Nine times, the Quill has found a hand to hold it."

The Void's voice shifted, growing resonant with a frequency I couldn't identify.

"But there was an unheard echo in this cycle. I never expected the One Above All to be present before me once more."

"Not in this skin."

"I don't care about the previous cycles," I said. "I only care about the mechanics of the trials I just endured."

"The trials were not merely assessments of your utility," the Void stated.

"They were the three pillars of the Sovereign Will."

"The first trial—The Essence of Life—is the trial of selfishness. It teaches that to create, one must first persist. Every decision to live causes harm to another possibility. To be the Heir, you must be selfish enough to choose your existence over the void."

I thought of the Cathedral of Mirrors.

"The second trial—The Mirrors of Fiction—is the trial of acceptance. It asks if you can endure the indifference of the narrative. The universe does not care if you find it fair. You must accept the wrongdoings and the rightdoings alike. You must look at the grave and acknowledge it is there."

Then, the fog turned a deep, bruised violet, swirling around my feet like rising water.

"The third trial—The Trial of Acceptance—is where everyone fails. It is the trial of greed."

"In the turmoil of fate, one must fight for the future they wish to persevere. Most simply deny their ending and perish in the lie. To succeed, you must not merely accept the ending; you must rewrite it."

The Void's light focused on me, a beam of absolute clarity that felt like it was scanning my marrow.

"You are the only one who succeeded."

"You did not just survive the grave; you dismantled the concept of the burial. You rewrote the fate of your mother's blood while your own heart had stopped."

I looked at my hands. The darkness was gone, but the sensation of the Quill remained in my nerves.

"Then let me partake," I said. "If I am the only subject, send me to Ceres Omega."

"No."

The word was a tectonic shift. The white fog turned into a wall of solid light, pushing me back.

"Even so, I cannot allow you to partake in the Sovereign War. You are a success, Kaiser Everhart, but you are also a threat."

"Why?"

"The One Above All cannot face the Singularities of the Quill," the Void stated. The voice was darker now, vibrating with the weight of a cosmic warning.

"It is a terrible matchup. Even at your weakest, you will prevail. Amongst those subjects, you remain as an anomaly that cannot lose."

"I'm not that strong," I said. My voice was a flat, clinical rebuttal.

"I am a boy who survived a nursery through living like a cockroach. I have no mana capacity. I have no lineage. I am a collection of recorded desperation trying to keep a heart beating."

"You are the Arbiter," the Void informed me, ignoring my self-assessment.

"You are the Creator of the Quill to write tomorrow. The architect does not descend to the floor to fight the bricklayers. Your existence is a recursive loop of victory. To oppose you is to argue with the creation. You do not achieve results; you dictate them."

I looked at my hands. They were steady.

"I don't care about dictating results," I said. "If there is a winner, there must be a loser to achieve a dream. To end the dream of others is the only way to protect the one I have."

"That is the logic of the system you created."

I stepped forward, the white fog yielding to my movement.

"You're wrong to think so greatly of me," I continued, my voice growing colder.

"Since birth, I have had no gifts. No gifted intelligence—I had to learn. No gifted magic—I have none. No gifted talents. I was a corpse that refused to stay dead. I am a human who had to fight for every breath while the world tried to suffocate me."

The Void fell silent. The white light began to bleed into a bruised, abyssal violet. The tone shifted from informative to iconic, echoing from a place deeper than thought.

"It was never fair for you since birth," the Void whispered.

"That was the point. Being lonely was the point. Being overwhelmed to survive was the point. Being tired of losing was the point. Feeling the need to give up and quit was the point. Not knowing what to do was the point. Having the pressure was the point. Failing was the point."

The air in the void grew heavy, like lead.

"This life form you've taken has pushed you into pits that nobody could have risen from. Except you."

"That is why you, the One Above All, cannot fight amongst mortals for the power you created."

"There is a distance between you and all… that will never be overcomed."

I clenched my fists. I didn't want to be a singularity. I wanted to be a player.

If I was too strong to play, I would never reach the truth of my own existence.

"Then nerf me," I said.

"What do you mean?"

The Void's voice was no longer a lecture. It was a glitch. It was the sound of an absolute authority encountering a variable it couldn't compute.

"You don't know my powers," I said. I began to walk through the white fog, my steps silent. "You don't know my limits. You don't even know if I truly exist or if I am just a projection of your own expansion."

"If I am 'The One Above All,' then the universe should bend to me even if I am failing. I want to test that hypothesis."

I stopped and looked into the emptiness where the visions of Ceres Omega had been.

"Erase my memories," I commanded.

"Throw me into one of the planets where a subject has already been sent. I want to remember my name—Kaiser—and nothing else. Not the Foundation. Not the Void. Not my knowledge."

"You seek to abandon the vantage point of the architect?"

"I seek to prove I am average. Handicap me. Limit my physical abilities. Ensure I cannot use magic at all."

"Equalize the playing field so that the only thing I have is the moment."

I looked back at the swirling violet nebula of the Void's core.

"Summon me next to a subject. Give them the chance to eliminate me immediately with whatever power they wished for. And send this version of me—this one-year-old mind. Not a day older."

"Why?" the Void asked. The word was a ripple in reality. "What are you trying to achieve by courting your own erasure?"

"To see if I am worthy of the title you've given me," I said. I looked at my hands. They were small, the hands of a child who had done nothing but survive.

"I don't see a creator. I see an average life form that has been lucky. I want to prove you wrong by losing."

"I want to fail."

"The Creator of all knowledge, beings, and emptiness shall prevail once more even at his weakest," the Void countered. Its tone had turned darker, more iconic.

"I will grant your request. An identical replica of your consciousness will be sent to the Ceres Omega universe to partake in the Sovereign War."

"If you wish to be humiliated, the universe will provide."

"I wish to be in a sixteen-year-old body," I interrupted. "Average physique. Average health. Nothing special. No genetic advantages."

"Understood," the Void replied. The white space around us began to hum with a low, vibrating frequency.

"However, a total nerf is redundant. Your first seal—out of 1,507—already limits your physical output by 97% percent in active combat. How many seals do you wish to fight without?"

"All of them," I said.

"I want every power I possess to be sealed. I want to start at zero."

The Void remained quiet. The silence lasted for what felt like an aeon, as if the expansion itself had paused to consider the absurdity of a god begging for a cage.

"Understood."

A chair appeared.

It wasn't a chair. It was a throne carved from a single block of pressurized white light, standing alone in the center of the nothingness. I walked over to it. The material felt colder than ice, yet it hummed with a warmth that felt like home.

I sat down.

Suddenly, the white expanse shattered into a kaleidoscope of origins. I watched the creation of everything from the absolute nothing. I saw the first spark of heat, the cooling of the first star, the slow, agonizing crawl of time before space had a name.

I saw the dawn of space-time, and I saw the darkness that existed before even that.

The weight of the 1,507 seals began to settle onto my shoulders, a metaphysical weight that felt like lead. My mind began to blur.

"May you begin?" the Void asked.

I gripped the arms of the white throne, watching the birth of the sun that would eventually shine on my current self.

"Wait," I said.

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