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The God of Underworld-Chapter 337 - 36
In the deepest, most stagnant pressurized depths of the Void, where the light of the Hyperverse could not reach, lay the abyss of N’kai.
This was a realm of black ooze and forgotten echoes, and at its center drifted Tsathoggua, the Sleeper.
The entity resembled a colossal, bloated toad-thing, covered in a fine, moss-like fur of obsidian cilia.
It did not move.
It did not roar.
It simply existed in a state of supreme, lethargic indifference.
While the other Great Chaos Gods fought to delete the reality, Tsathoggua seemed content to simply sit in the corner of the narrative and wait for the ink to dry on its own.
Its very presence was a conceptual "Sinkhole"—a drain where effort, motion, and will were sucked into a void of eternal sloth.
Just then, a flicker of torchlight disturbed the velvet blackness.
Hecate, the Goddess of Magic and Crossroads, descended into the pit.
She did not come with the fiery radiance of Hera or the blinding beauty of Aphrodite, but came as a shadow among shadows, her presence engulfing even the depths of the void.
In her hands, she held a lamp and a scepter, her cold indifferent eyes stared at the enormous being.
"So you are the source of the forbidden," Hecate whispered, her voice multiplying into a triple-layered echo. "The Sleeper who knows the secrets of the dark before the first word was written."
Tsathoggua seemed to not hear her, simply drifting aimlessly, treating her as a mere dust that flew close; nothing worth paying attention to.
Hecate hummed, "Tsathoggua, I have come to take your silence and make it my own."
She struck first, her hands weaving the Greater Sigils of Magic, the most powerful spells she created by merging the magic system of the ten worlds.
As a test, she first unleashed a torrent of "Pale Fire"—ghostly, spectral flames that burned not the flesh, but the magical blueprint of the target.
The abyss was momentarily illuminated by a sickly violet glow as the sorcery struck the Sleeper’s hide.
Tsathoggua didn’t even open its eyes, nor did it even flinch.
The Pale Fire hit the obsidian fur and was simply... absorbed. There was no explosion, no scream, no nothing.
The magic just ceased to be.
The Sleeper’s hide acted as a "Magic Eater," or rather, something akin to a "rejection of phenomena", a surface that neutralized every phenomena by stripping it of its intent.
Hecate frowned, not expecting this being to possess such perverted attack nullification ability, even without its intent to defend.
She took a deep breath and waved her scepter, invoking her authority as the guardian of the borders of Underworld.
She summoned the "Spectral Hounds of the Underworld," beasts made of pure, conceptual hunger base on Cerberus, the guard dog of Underworld, and sent them to tear at the Sleeper’s throat.
At the same time, she unleashed the Chains of Tartarus, reinforced by the Mesopotamian and Norse underworld laws, to bind the entity’s sluggish limbs.
The Hounds lunged, their jaws snapping at the air, but as they drew near Tsathoggua, their movements slowed, their ferocity drained away, replaced by a heavy, soul-crushing fatigue.
They slumped into the black ooze, their spectral forms dissolving into lethargic mist.
The chains, meant to bind a god’s strength, hung limp in the water-like abyss, as if they had forgotten they were supposed to be solid.
Hecate watched as all her attempts to attack simply vanished into the Sleeper’s form, leaving behind a silence more profound than before.
The spectral flames, designed to unravel the very conceptual data of an entity, had been treated as nothing more than a light dusting of snow upon a dark mountain.
The spectral hounds, designed to devour even the soul was reduced into mist, not even reaching the Outer One.
The chains, made from the depths of Tartarus and meant to bind Titans and Gods, was also proven useless.
There was no resistance, because resistance implied a struggle between two opposing forces.
Here, there was only a total, effortless cessation.
Tsathoggua remained a slumped mountain of obsidian fur and gelatinous mass, its many-folded chin resting upon its chest in a parody of meditative peace.
The entity did not need to cast a spell or raise a barrier; its very existence was a metabolic insult to the laws of sorcery.
Hecate, the Goddess of Magic, felt that all her effort was in vain. She tightened her grip on her lamp and scepter, the light flickering in response to her mounting calculation.
"Truly, what a ridiculous beings these outer ones are. Or rather, this being is completely the bane of my existence."
This was a "rejection of phenomena." In the Presence of the Sleeper, the "intent" that fueled a spell—the willpower and the cosmic permission required to make a miracle manifest—was simply stripped away.
Basically, as long as she uses magic, harming this being would be impossible, but magic is her method of attack, how would she even harm this thing if she didn’t use magic?
Damn it. She should’ve switched with Aphrodite or Hera.
"Lady Nyx, you tricked me" Hecate sighed in exasperation, already feeling mentally and physically exhausted from these short exchang. "Tsathoggua isn’t the most suited opponent for me at all. This thing is a complete bane of my existence."
She began to pace, her sandals clicking against the void-slicked floor.
If the Sleeper acted as a Magic Eater, then traditional offensive incantations were merely offerings of sustenance.
The Greater Sigils of Magic, which she had spent countless time perfecting by weaving the disparate threads of the Ten Worlds—from the rune-scripts of the North to the soul-geometry of the East—were being treated as a light snack.
But despite this, the goddess felt a cold thrill of intellectual challenge.
To strike at something that neutralized intent, she would have to bypass the "phenomenon" altogether.
"Alright, let’s try it. Hopefully this works."
She raised her left hand, and instead of weaving a sigil, she began to pull at the raw, unformed threads of the abyss itself.
She wouldn’t use magic; she would use the absence of it.
"Magic can create artificial phenomena, but this thing is the embodiment of rejection of phenomena," Hecate whispered, her eyes glowing with a sharp, predatory intellect. "So let us see if your power can handle this."
If Tsathoggua was a vacuum for magic, she would feed him a void so heavy it would collapse the throat that tried to swallow it.
Hecate stilled her breathing, if the Sleeper was a black hole for intent, she would not provide him with a target to consume.
She lowered her lamp, allowing its divine fire to dim into mere embers, and instead reached into the hollow spaces between the atoms of the abyss.
She began to construct a Paradox.
Instead of weaving a Greater Sigil, Hecate used her fingers to trace the outlines of a "Void-Constraint".
She was not creating fire, lightning, or even spectral energy; she was folding the vacuum of the sector upon itself, layering the "nothing" until it gained a physical, crushing weight.
This was the manipulation of raw, unrefined Causality—a strike that contained no magical blueprint because it was simply the universe asserting its own emptiness.
As the air began to groan under the pressure of this non-phenomenon, the mountain of fur before her finally stirred.
"Is this the power of Sorcery?" a voice rumbled in Hecate’s mind—a deep, wet sound like mud shifting in a cave. It was the Sleeper’s thought. "Magic is just... a dream of the living, something to alter reality that they do not like. But I am the one who... rejects those dreams."
Tsathoggua opened its mouth slightly, but it didn’t bite; it exhaled.
A cloud of "Conceptual Sloth" billowed out, it was a grey, viscous gas that carried the weight of a billion years of boredom.
Hecate’s earlier attack immediately faded away.
She frowned, and tried to teleport away, to cross the "Crossroads" of space, but she found that her magic was also sluggish.
Her thoughts felt like they were mired in tar, and even the simple act of raising her arm felt like lifting a mountain.
The Goddess of Magic began to struggle as she felt her mind beginning to blur into one, losing the sharp, analytical edge that defined her.
The Sleeper’s aura was a passive erasure—it wasn’t fighting her; it was simply making her "irrelevant".
"No..." Hecate rasped, her voice thick.
She tried to ignite her lamp, intending to burn away the corruption, but the flame flickered and died.
The "Rules of Magic" were being overwritten by the "Rule of the Abyss."
Tsathoggua’s massive, bat-like ears twitched. One of its bloated, clawed hands drifted toward Hecate, moving with agonizing slowness, yet she was too fatigued to dodge.
The hand closed around her waist, and the touch felt like being buried alive in ice and silt.
The entropy of the Sleeper began to drain the divinity from her.
Hecate felt her connection to the Empyrean fraying.
She looked into the half-closed, sleepy eyes of the monster and saw an infinite nothingness—a library with no books, a world with no light.
"You are... just a candle," the Sleeper rumbled. "And I am... the eternal rest."
Hecate bowed, her lamp dimming to the size of a small flickering ember.
The Goddess of Sorcery, who had mastered the secrets of ten worlds, was being swallowed by the one secret she couldn’t solve: the silence of the void.
She was drowning in the abyss of N’kai, and for the first time, her magic was silent.







