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Reincarnated as the Villain: The System Made Me Overpowered-Chapter 68: The Scars Beneath Flame
Chapter 68: The Scars Beneath Flame
The battle with the Council had ended, but the sky above refused to settle.
Even now, the stars pulsed in arrhythmic patterns—like the heart of reality was still recovering from a seizure.
The air buzzed.
Magic felt raw.
Unshaped.
Valerian stood at the edge of a newly split ravine, watching rivers of violet starlight surge beneath the cracked earth. His blade—reborn from fragments of his will and Lira’s stolen timelines—rested across his back. But for once, he didn’t reach for it.
Not because he didn’t sense danger.
But because Kael hadn’t said a word in hours.
Behind him, camp had been hastily reformed atop a cliff overlooking the battlefield. Selene was rebuilding the runic lattice that anchored this fragment of realm to a survivable frequency. Lira patrolled the edge of reality, scouting potential dimensional breaches. Seraphina stood guard atop a floating shard of obsidian, her wings folded like a mourning veil.
And Kael?
He sat by himself.
Back to the fire.
Face blank.
Arms wrapped around his knees like a child lost in memory.
Valerian walked toward him, slow and silent. The closer he got, the more wrong everything felt. Kael’s aura wasn’t just dim—it was distorted. As if something still gnawed at the edges of his soul.
Valerian stopped a few feet away.
"You’ve been quiet."
Kael didn’t turn. "You ever wonder what comes after a soul gets unraveled?"
Valerian didn’t answer.
Kael’s voice came lower now, more broken than Valerian had ever heard. "It’s not darkness. Not silence. Not even death. It’s... awareness. Of everything you could’ve been. All at once. And none of it mattered."
He looked up.
His eyes weren’t glowing.
They were hollow.
"They didn’t just pull me out of time, Val," he whispered. "They fed me to it."
Valerian sat beside him. "What did you see?"
Kael clenched his jaw. "A thousand lives. In one, I was a beggar. In another, a tyrant. I saw myself burn children. Save monsters. Kill you. Kneel to gods. Burn my own name out of existence."
He shuddered. "And I felt it. All of it. Like it had already happened. Like every choice I ever made was a lie told by something higher."
Valerian listened, silent.
"I came back whole. But not clean." Kael looked down at his palms. "They don’t burn like they used to."
Valerian finally spoke. "Because your fire’s no longer a weapon."
Kael raised an eyebrow.
"It’s a memory now. Of resistance. Of you choosing who you are in spite of what time said you’d become." Valerian locked eyes with him. "You didn’t lose anything. You proved it can’t take you."
Kael’s laugh was hollow. "Easy for you to say. You’re the golden boy. The deviation."
"I was a puppet too."
Kael didn’t respond.
Valerian rose and held out his hand. "Come on. Something’s coming."
"Another horror?" Kael muttered, taking it.
"No," Valerian said grimly. "Something worse."
---
They returned to camp. Selene’s lattice now glowed in a geometric halo, keeping the world from fragmenting again. Lira stood near it, arms crossed, blade resting at her hip.
"We have a breach forming," Selene said without turning. "Far edge of the ridge. Not Others. Not Council. Something else."
"New?" Valerian asked.
"Old," she replied.
Lira added, "It’s been watching us since the Loop Eater collapsed. I caught its reflection in thirteen timelines. Always near—but never acting."
Valerian’s grip tightened on his hilt. "Then let’s greet it properly."
Seraphina descended from the heights above, armor now reforged with woven strands of light and memory. Her wings shimmered with purpose.
"Then we go as one," she said.
Together, they crossed the unstable ridge.
And there it was.
The tear.
It floated just above a spiral of dead reality—a place where time had given up and space refused to exist. The tear was horizontal, like an open eye, blinking slowly in and out of visibility.
And from it stepped him.
He was not a Valerian.
Nor was he a god, system echo, or looping fragment.
He was human.
Completely, undeniably human.
But wrong.
His eyes were too knowing.
His smile too calm.
His presence like sand in the gears of the world.
"Hello," he said.
Selene stepped forward, magic primed. "Name."
He didn’t flinch. "I don’t have one anymore. But I’ve gone by many. In your recursion... I was briefly called the Witness."
Valerian narrowed his eyes. "You were there. At the Godless tomb."
The Witness nodded. "Observing. Cataloging. You intrigued me."
Kael flared—flames surging from his shoulders. "Start talking or I start burning."
The man chuckled. "You’ve already done enough burning, haven’t you, Kael?"
Kael froze.
So did the others.
Valerian stepped forward. "Speak clearly."
"I am not enemy nor ally," the Witness said. "I serve the Archive."
Selene’s eyes went cold. "That’s a myth. The place where failed realities are recorded."
The Witness nodded. "My people document anomalies. Preserve deviation. But you, Valerian, have gone beyond anomaly. You are infection. You don’t just deviate—you convert reality around you into a mirror of choice."
He gestured to the sky. "Every star above you is changing because of your presence."
Valerian clenched his fists. "So you came to stop me?"
"No," the Witness said. "I came to warn you."
That caught everyone off guard.
"The Archive," he said slowly, "has decided you are unrecordable. You have shifted too many threads. Broken too many rules. You are no longer a deviation. You are a variable."
"What does that mean?" Seraphina asked.
The Witness’s eyes gleamed.
"It means nothing can predict you anymore. And that terrifies everyone."
Silence.
Then Lira asked, "So what now?"
The Witness looked up.
The sky rippled.
Above them, something stirred.
Massive.
Unfathomable.
Shapes within shapes.
Eyes that were cities.
Limbs that reached across dimensions.
Valerian’s blood froze.
"What is that?"
The Witness looked grim. "That is the Curator."
Selene gasped. "The judge of unrecoverable timelines..."
"It has come to erase your influence," the Witness said. "Not out of hate—but out of necessity."
Kael stepped forward. "We’ve killed gods. We’ll kill this thing too."
"No," the Witness said gently. "You don’t kill the Curator."
He looked directly at Valerian.
"You survive it."
The sky began to crack.
Stars bled.
Reality folded.
And in the center of the spiral, the Curator opened its mouth—
And sang.
A song that made the trees rot.
A hymn that erased memory.
A lullaby for dead worlds.
And still, Valerian stepped forward.
Sword drawn.
Voice unshaking.
"Then let’s rewrite one more ending."
Behind him, Kael’s flames ignited—brighter than ever.
Selene’s eyes flared with infinite calculations.
Lira vanished, already moving through cracks in logic.
Seraphina ascended, wings blazing with unyielding faith.
The Curator descended.
And the battle for the soul of all realities—
Began.
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