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Reincarnated as the Villain: The System Made Me Overpowered-Chapter 69: Archive Break
Chapter 69: Archive Break
The Curator descended like an apocalyptic hymn given shape. Its body was not flesh, nor metal, but an amalgamation of concepts—towers of knowledge, wings of rewritten scripture, a thousand rotating heads whispering in forgotten tongues. The sky broke around it, not with violence, but with reverence. Reality bowed as if honoring a god too ancient to name.
Valerian stood firm.
His newly-forged blade—a fusion of rebellion and remembrance—glowed in his grip, pulsing with rhythm instead of heat. Each thump was in time with his heartbeat. He was no longer wielding a sword; he was wielding a decision.
Selene’s runes twisted midair, rewriting her protective logic shields into self-learning fractals. "If we fight this thing here, we lose the entire sector of this realm. It consumes stability. It makes the ground under us forget it exists."
Kael flared beside her, his flames burning blue now—compressed fury fused with fractured time. "What’s the plan, boss?"
Valerian’s eyes locked on the descending Curator. "We run."
Kael blinked. "We what?!"
"We don’t win this here," Valerian said. "We don’t even slow it. But we can beat it."
"How?" Seraphina asked, landing beside them, blade coated in holy entropy.
Valerian pointed upward.
"By breaking into the Archive itself."
The moment the words left his mouth, the world twisted. Even the idea of entering the Archive was dangerous. A surge of resistance from the universe tried to erase the thought. But Valerian held firm.
"I saw it once," he continued, forcing the vision back into focus. "During the recursion collapse. A fracture led me there. A place where every possible version of us was stored."
Selene’s voice dropped into a whisper. "A vault of fate."
"Exactly."
Lira reappeared from a nearby ripple, face pale. "You know the risks. Archives don’t open. They judge. We break in... and we declare war on every recorded fate."
Valerian nodded.
"Good. Then it’s time we end fate altogether."
Kael laughed. "I love this plan."
Seraphina looked up at the Curator’s descent. "How long until it lands?"
Selene whispered, checking her internal timelines. "Three minutes. Maybe less."
"Then we move now," Valerian said.
With a roar, Kael threw a wave of flames skyward—not to attack, but to blind.
Selene unleashed a time-skew, warping their immediate reality, slowing their perception long enough to act.
Valerian drove his blade into the ground.
"ARCHIVE KEY, ACTIVATE."
From the point of impact, a glyph ignited. It wasn’t magic. It was authorization. Recognition by the system that once governed them. A sliver of authority remained in Valerian’s soul—and it opened the door.
A rift split open in front of them.
Not a portal. A wound in knowledge.
Beyond it—darkness filled with infinite shelves, floating spires, data etched into the marrow of forgotten gods.
The Archive.
They dove in.
And the veil slammed shut behind them—just as the Curator landed.
---
Inside, the air didn’t exist.
Instead, they breathed information. freewebnσvel.cѳm
Everything here was made of meaning—stairs, air, ground, all tangible because they were remembered.
The Archive spanned endlessly in all directions. Towering shelves made of language and soul extended into infinity. Living books flapped like birds above, each a record of a being’s possible life. Rivers of ink flowed uphill. Stone columns whispered, detailing the lives they supported.
Lira blinked. "This place is... wrong."
"No," Selene said. "It’s absolute."
Footsteps echoed.
They turned.
Three figures stood before them.
Identical in form. Robed. Faceless. Holding tomes that burned with internal fire.
The Librarians.
Guardians of the Archive.
"You have entered uninvited," the center one said. "State your claim."
Valerian stepped forward. "I’m here to erase my own record."
Even the silence recoiled.
The Librarians tilted their heads.
"You would unwrite your existence?" the left one asked.
"No," Valerian replied. "I would end the existence of all fate. No more predetermined ends. No more deviant loops. I want the story freed."
The right Librarian spoke. "This has only been attempted once."
Valerian felt the truth coil behind that word.
"Cycle 0," he whispered.
Selene’s eyes widened.
"Denied," the center Librarian declared. "Authorization insufficient."
"Then I’ll take it," Valerian growled—and struck.
His blade cleaved into the nearest Librarian’s book. The impact rippled outward—not through space, but across probability. One million futures screamed as they were destabilized.
Seraphina charged next, wings slicing air into holy slivers. Her sword clashed against the left Librarian’s staff, shattering the floor beneath them into a spiral of lost wars.
Lira vanished and reappeared mid-air, stabbing through a shelf made of tyrants’ memories, bringing it down upon the final Librarian.
Kael unleashed raw entropy fire, igniting entire aisles.
Selene reached upward, grasping glowing lines of timeline-thread and rewriting the room. She inverted gravitational logic, dragging the guardians to the ground.
They were fighting knowledge itself—and winning.
Barely.
The center Librarian threw Valerian backward with a gesture, pinning him to a wall made of his own past choices.
"You wield paradox," it hissed. "But you do not understand its price."
Valerian bared his teeth. "I don’t care about the price. I care about freedom."
And then he did something insane.
He stabbed himself.
The blade punctured his side—but it wasn’t to harm.
It was to bleed memory.
The moment his blood hit the floor, the Archive shuddered.
Books tore themselves from shelves.
Shelves shattered.
Timelines spasmed.
Valerian shouted to Selene, "Now!"
She cast the most dangerous spell she’d ever woven.
A recursive paradox sync, pulling the moment they broke the system into this space.
With a roar, the Archive bent.
The Librarians screamed in unison, dissolving into fractured glyphs.
And from the void ahead, a chamber opened.
The Core.
The place where all scripts were written.
They ran toward it.
Inside the Core, reality flickered.
All around them floated ghost-versions of Valerian.
The tyrant.
The martyr.
The slave.
The failure.
Each tethered to a book.
Each one screaming silently.
Kael snarled. "We kill these?"
Valerian walked to the center, placing his hand on the final book—his current one.
He whispered: "I release you."
And then...
He burned it.
The book ignited in white fire.
Every copy of him vanished.
The room collapsed.
Time buckled.
And then—clarity.
He stood alone in the Core.
The others gone.
Selene’s voice rang out, distant: "You reset the probability layer!"
Seraphina: "He severed the binding thread."
Kael: "Dumbass better come back."
Lira: "He will. Or we go drag him out."
Valerian stared into the fire.
And finally said, "No more records."
With that...
The Archive went dark.
And the Curator, far above, howled.
Not in pain.
But in fear.
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