Reincarnated as a Mushroom?-Chapter 58 - 57: The Heat Beneath Her Hunger

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Chapter 58: Chapter 57: The Heat Beneath Her Hunger

Chapter 57: The Heat Beneath Her Hunger

My legs coiled, charged, and released—snap—and I flung myself backward through the steaming air, skimming across the surface of the pool like a skipping stone made of sarcasm and sex injuries. I needed distance. Not for some clever tactical reason. I just didn’t want to get stabbed again.

The moment I landed, I began shaping another psionic bullet in the air—one fueled by raw kinetic intent, a construct born of focus and orbital math. Onyx, of course, was already after me.

She didn’t so much run as materialize in my blind spots. Her body was a black blur of death and legs. Every time I blinked, she was closer. Every time I thought I had a half-second to breathe, she had already inhaled it.

I’d been trying to slow her down with gyrokinesis since the fight began—manipulating her angular momentum, screwing with her trajectory, nudging her center of balance just slightly off so her timing would break.

No dice.

The psionic field around her—her armor, her goddamn stubbornness—just shrugged it off like I was trying to stop a charging rhino with passive-aggressive poetry.

So I switched to what did work: manifesting psionic bullets through sheer psychic overpressure and prayer.

Problem: moving and dodging while generating a complex thoughtform was like trying to do calculus on a unicycle during an earthquake. If I was stationary, I’d have the bullet loaded in three seconds flat. But every step, every evasive roll, every fuck-you-sidestep reset a sliver of the charge.

Minutes passed. My body burned. The air thickened. Sweat slid down my neck and into the wound on my shoulder. A steady throb pulsed behind my eyes as I finally felt the psionic sphere complete itself—like slotting the final rune into a volatile matrix.

The bullet was ready.

Onyx, however, had caught on.

She began weaving through the air with impossible grace—zigzagging, spiraling, collapsing her silhouette like a heat mirage. Her path twisted logic. Each movement was a dare.

I lined up the shot.

Held.

Held.

Arms trembling.

The heat had become oppressive. A sauna run by sadists.

With a grunt and a final flick of the wrist, I fired.

The bullet shrieked through the air—a pulse of violet force wrapped in an imploding psionic lattice. It tore a line across the battlefield.

And Onyx—

Twisted her torso mid-flight. She didn’t dodge completely, but she took it in a controlled way—absorbing the outer edge of the blast across her upper body. The chitin there cracked, hissing, but held.

I fired again.

And again.

Each time, I had to charge the bullet mid-motion. Each time, the heat built up in my body like an overclocked engine.

My sweat began to steam. The water around me fizzed at the surface. The air shimmered with refractive distortion—like reality itself was getting drunk off the tension.

Onyx stopped dodging.

She was dancing.

With each shot, she seemed to read me more easily—predicting the arc, stepping just far enough that the bullets passed through where she was, not where she would be.

The moment I fired my fifth and final shot, my knees collapsed into the shallow pool. I was done. My breath rasped in the heat. My vision blurred. My skin stung like it was being kissed by angry sunlight.

To her, I must’ve looked pitiful. Vulnerable.

She approached.

Not with the menace of a killer, but with the slow sway of something curious. Her hips moved with a rhythm she didn’t even recognize. Something primal, something confused.

She didn’t know why she strutted.

She just did.

And when she reached a meter from me, I smiled.

A trap’s best bait is your own damn face.

She had no idea.

---

Here’s the thing: I’d always been able to use thermokinesis to keep my body cool—to regulate temperature, make hot rooms pleasant, cold winds irrelevant. Post-Origin, though, that skill had... evolved.

Until recently, I hadn’t been able to tap into it. My soul injury had crippled most of my deep gifts. But now?

Now it whispered.

And the heat I’d allowed to build up wasn’t just environmental. It was strategic.

Onyx—lovely Onyx—was biologically immune to extremes. Her species evolved in vacuum-seared void worlds and magma-bathed forests. Lava was a pool toy to her. Fire was foreplay. So when the temperature had begun to rise slowly during our battle, she hadn’t registered it as hostile.

But the room was hostile.

I was hostile.

Because I’d been compressing the air. Preparing it.

I was the battery. My psionic strain the fuse. My pain the catalyst.

The moment she stepped too close—boom.

A sphere of fire detonated outward from my core, fed by pressurized oxygen and psionic fuel. It didn’t burn—it devoured. Shockwaves carved lines in the ground. The pool itself inverted for a split second.

I flew backward, slamming into deeper water. Steam erupted.

I coughed. Blood ran down my lips. But I knew that had to hurt her.

...Right?

Smoke cleared.

Onyx walked out of the fire like a rejected war goddess.

Her left arm was gone—incinerated at the shoulder. Her torso crackled with dancing flame. But she didn’t care. Her expression didn’t shift. She wasn’t smiling. She wasn’t mad.

She was possessed.

She charged.

And then her hand—her remaining hand—clamped around my skull and dragged me out of the water like a trophy.

Our eyes met.

And hers were torn in half.

One part cold, clinical death. The other... confusion. Guilt. Something trying to feel again.

She raised her arm to finish the job.

And then—

"ONYX. STOP."

The voice that left my mouth was not mine.

It was mine the way a thunderstorm is technically "rain." Deeper. Richer. Laced with power and command. My eyes burned violet.

She froze.

It wasn’t obedience. It was dominion.

She tried to resist. You could see it. Her limbs shook. Her teeth clenched. But each rebellion shaved off a chunk of her psionic core like a dull blade across a mirror.

"I don’t know what Kimchi asked you to do," I thundered, "but you’ve gone too fucking far."

The air rippled. My mindspace flared.

"You will return to my Mindspace and restore yourself. Regain your memories. Your emotions. All of it."

Something tore in the world behind her.

Chains burst from nothingness—silver, psychic, laced with divine authority. They punctured the anti-psionic field like it was paper. Even the Queen’s guard—lurking nearby—was caught off-guard.

They hastily patched the cocoon with another overlay to keep the outburst from reaching the Hive’s broader network.

The chains lashed around Onyx—limbs, torso, mind—and with a final shriek of reality...

She vanished.

---

I was still dangling mid-air, just above the water’s surface.

"...The fuck?"

Before I could ponder, the power toll hit me.

My nose exploded in blood. My limbs went slack.

I dropped like a sack of narrative weight and sank half a second before someone—Kimchi—burst through the foliage like a maternal missile and yanked me to safety.

"Irvine! Irvine are you okay?" she cried, hands cupping my cheeks, eyes wide and glossy with panic.

"Honestly?" I wheezed. "Yeah. Hole in my shoulder. Burn on my thigh that stings like a bastard. But I’m good."

Relief broke over her like sunrise.

"Kimchi didn’t mean for that bi—Onyx to go that far," she said, ashamed, brushing damp hair off my brow. "Kimchi thought it would be controlled training. Not... that."

I shook my head. "No hard feelings. Hell, I might thank you later. That was the most realistic near-death experience I’ve had since that thing with the bathhouse and the exploding jelly priest."

She blinked. "You... you forgave me?"

"Forgave you?" I grinned and stroked her hair. "Don’t drop killer assassins on me before coffee next time. That’s my only note."

I leaned on her for support. Together, we made our way to the lab, where I dunked myself into my regen-tank with a sigh. My head poked out while I babbled to Kimchi and Crystal—who had joined us halfway through and was pissed.

"I told you," Crystal huffed, arms folded. "You never mix Onyx and early morning surprise drills. That’s like giving a nuke a sugar rush."

"I survived, didn’t I?" I muttered.

"One more burn and I’d have put you in stasis," she snapped.

After an hour, my burns healed. My soul stopped wheezing. And I asked the question.

"...What was that voice? That power? The one that bound Onyx?"

Crystal’s expression shifted. Carefully neutral.

"Bondage protocol," she said. "Tied to your dominion over her. But the anti-psionic field should have stopped it. You overpowered it."

"That... shouldn’t be possible."

"Exactly."

Which meant I had a lot to unpack. Later.

For now, I decided to lay in bed and stream live Hive battles from my bio-pad like a lazy warlord watching football.

Kimchi and Crystal curled up beside me like jealous cats.

And for once, the galaxy was quiet.

---

Later that night, I felt it.

A ripple.

A ping from within.

My Mindspace.

I entered.

And saw her.

Onyx.

Curled into herself like a wounded titan. Her body wrapped in psychic chains. Her tears—actual manifested tears—pooled around her.

She shook.

She twitched.

Each memory of almost killing me etched another scar on her psyche.

I approached.

Knelt.

Tilted her face toward mine.

Her dark, alien eyes looked into mine with sorrow and dread.

I said nothing.

I kissed her brow.

Then pulled her into a hug. frёeweɓηovel_coɱ

She stiffened.

Then melted.

Her enormous body coiled around me like a protective cocoon, arms tight, breath shallow. She didn’t speak. Neither did I.

We just... held each other.

And for the first time since she’d been broken—

She cried.

---

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