Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG]

Chapter 109: Mirrored Surveillance


The silence was the first thing that felt wrong. In our magnificent suite, floating a thousand feet above the heart of a metropolis, the only sound was the faint, whisper-soft hum of the air recyclers. It was a perfect, engineered silence. The kind of quiet that lets you hear a pin drop from fifty feet away.

The kind of quiet that's perfect for listening.

For the first hour, we maintained the act. Lucas paced, projecting the image of a leader contemplating strategy. Eliza flitted from console to window, her awe genuine but also a useful performance. Silas sat in a corner, methodically stripping and cleaning his Vipers, a picture of lethal calm. I took on the role of Jack, sitting wearily in an armchair, looking like I was recovering from the stress of translocation.

But I wasn't resting. My [Predator's Gaze] was constantly active, not only scanning for power, but also for any intent. I let my senses drift, feeling the subtle flows of mana that powered this opulent prison. I felt the conduits in the walls, the ambient field from the Citadel above, and... something else. Tiny. Almost imperceptible. Like motes of dust catching a stray sunbeam, scattered throughout the common room. They weren't passive. Each one carried a tiny, directed signature. Scrying constructs. A dozen of them, woven into the very fabric of the room. We were on stage.

I didn't move a muscle. I closed my eyes, feigning sleep, and sent a single, encrypted thought-burst through our private comms channel, the one Leoric had built for us.

"The walls have ears. And eyes. Do not speak. Watch me."

The reaction was instantaneous and invisible. Lucas' pacing didn't change, but his shoulders squared a fraction of an inch. Eliza's excited muttering trailed off, replaced by a more focused, analytical hum. Silas' hands never stopped their rhythmic cleaning, but I felt his gaze flick towards me for a half-second.

Slowly, deliberately, I pushed myself out of the chair, stretched with a theatrical groan, and walked into my own private bedroom, leaving the door slightly ajar. After a moment, I walked back out and ambled over to the suite's small kitchen alcove, pouring a glass of water. It was an L-shaped space, and for a few feet, it offered a blind spot from the majority of the room. I lingered there, leaning against the counter. A tiny, green rune glowed on my comm bracer. "Safe."

One by one, over the next fifteen minutes, the others found an excuse to wander through the kitchen, grabbing a ration bar or a drink. We never spoke a word aloud. It was all on the comms.

Lucas: "How bad?"

Me: "Total coverage in the common area. Probably the bedrooms, too. This alcove is clean for now. My Gaze can find the dead zones, but they're small and temporary. We have to assume everything we say out loud is being logged."

Silas: "Then we give them a show. Provincials in awe of the big city. Anxious about the tournament. A little friction, maybe. All perfectly normal."

Eliza: "So, our grand strategy sessions are officially moved to thought messages? How thrillingly clandestine."

Mavia's voice, Nyx's calm presence, entered the channel. "This is standard procedure for high-potential assets. They're building a psychological profile. The best cover is the truth, selectively edited. I will be the variable. The cynical mercenary."

And so, for the next three days, we adapted. Out loud, we were Team Bastion, country mice bickering and worrying. Mavia was cold and demanding about her pay. Lucas was the stoic, beleaguered leader trying to hold it all together. Eliza was a bubbly tech-nerd completely obsessed with the city's gadgets. Silas was mostly silent, which fit his persona perfectly. And I was Jack, quiet, tired, and offering the occasional bit of simple, healer's wisdom. We lived in their panopticon, and we played our parts to perfection.

Nyx, in her multiple personas, became our eyes and ears. One day she was a grizzled ex-soldier with a scarred face and a drinking problem, swapping stories with other mercenaries in a dive bar in the Confluence Market's underbelly. The next, she was a sleek, high-end corporate spy, clad in black leathers, making contacts in the high-stakes auction houses of the financial district, while also allowing us to spend some of our QS discreetly.

Her reports came in bursts of thought. "Security is absolute. The city's guard, the Justicars, are all Tier 4 Kyorian regulars. But they're just the public face. There are other forces. Shadowy ones. Another report read: The Conclave is Governor Vorr's pet project. He believes this generation of native-born is the key to unlocking the planet's 'full potential'. He's a data-miner. Every fight, every skill use, is being fed into a massive analytical engine in the Citadel." That confirmed our worst fears.

On the morning of the second day, a universal chime echoed through the entire city, a pure, resonant tone that seemed to vibrate in your bones. Then, the Prime System spoke, its voice not in our heads, but broadcast from unseen speakers, calm and absolute.

[A TEMPORAL EDICT OF CONFLUENCE HAS BEEN ESTABLISHED.] [FOR A DURATION OF THREE TERRAN MONTHS, ALL KRYPTS, FORMS OF UNPROVOKED KYORIAN AGGRESSION, WILL BE LIMITED WITHIN THE AKKADIAN DEMILITARIZED ZONE.] [LETHAL FORCE IS AUTHORIZED ONLY IN RESPONSE TO NATIVE-INITIATED HOSTILITIES.]

The broadcast ended. We gathered in the "safe" kitchen alcove, the air thick with the implications.

"So they can't touch us unless we throw the first punch," Lucas said, a grim line on his lips. "It's a shield."

"Or a trap," Silas countered instantly via comms. "A way to get us to lower our guard. Goad some hotheads into starting a fight, then come down on them with 'justified' force."

"It's a rule," Eliza sent. "And rules have loopholes. It specifies Kyorian aggression. What about other teams? What about 'accidents'?"

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I saw it for what it was. A cage with very specific, well-defined bars. A way for the Prime System to enforce a baseline of fairness in this farce of a tournament, while still giving the Empire all the power. They couldn't just round us up and kill us. They had to play the game.

For those three days, while Nyx worked the streets and the team familiarized themselves with the Gladiatoriums, I buried myself in the Grand Imperial Library. It was a cathedral of propaganda, a structure whose ten spiraling tiers of knowledge were designed to awe you into submission. Millions of data-slates, filled with Kyorian history, Imperial law, and meticulously cataloged scientific principles. All filtered, of course. All telling the story they wanted told.

I played the part of the curious healer from the sticks, looking up anatomical charts and basic alchemy. But my mind was a raging storm. With every hour that passed, with every dead end I hit searching their public indices for the names "Kai" or "Arthur," a cold, frantic desperation began to build. Three days wasn't enough. I needed more time. I needed to see what they really had.

On the final afternoon, I found a secluded carrel on the fourth tier of the library, the highest level my Gold-tier credentials would permit. For three days I had played the part, diligently studying the public-facing knowledge the Empire offered. Anatomy, alchemy, the meticulously redacted histories of a dozen assimilated worlds. It was all a facade. Every query, every search, was a subtle probe of their systems. And every probe hit the same, invisible wall.

The library was a monument to hierarchical control. The first four tiers were a spectacle of public knowledge, open to anyone with Gold status. But the six tiers above me were another world entirely. I could see them through the grand, open atrium — silent, austere levels where only those with Platinum-tier clearance or higher could tread. Shimmering, translucent energy fields blocked the access lifts and stairwells, and my Gaze could see the quiet, lethal hum of the security runes woven into their matrices.

The answers I needed weren't here in the tourist section. They were up there, in the sealed archives, buried under layers of Imperial clearance. With a five-day cooldown, my Glimpse was too valuable for simple reconnaissance, but this was a lock I had no other key for. This was the high-risk, high-reward maneuver I'd been saving it for.

I closed my eyes, the hushed rustle of scholars a distant shore, and plunged.

[Glimpse of a Path] activated.

The world went silent, then snapped into motion. My phantom form detached, a ghost against the three-hour clock. Activating my [Prime Axiom's Nullifying Veil], the energy fields that had barred my way were now nothing more than shimmering curtains. I phased through the floor of the fourth tier, rising up into the restricted sanctums above like a bubble of air in deep water.

The difference was stark. The noise and ostentatious displays of the lower levels vanished, replaced by a cold, monastic silence. Archivist-constructs, silent golems of polished chrome, glided on unseen paths. The data terminals here were blacker, more severe. I was in.

My spectral fingers flew over the glowing consoles, a whirlwind of frantic searching. I had the clearance of a ghost, the access of an intruder, and I found… another wall. A digital one. I could see the shape of the personnel records, the directories for residential assignments, the logs of all off-world arrivals for the last decade. They existed. But trying to access any file tagged with a privacy flag or a security designation higher than my phantom self could spoof resulted in a cascade of impenetrable, arcane encryption. It was a digital fortress. I had successfully broken into the castle grounds only to find myself facing the sheer, unbreachable walls of the keep.

Two hours and forty-five minutes of my Glimpse bled away in a series of desperate, failed hacks. The names "Kai" and "Anna" were buried somewhere in that vault, I could feel it, but the lock was absolute. Frustration became a burning, acidic pressure in my soul. My time was running out. I couldn't find them by being quiet. Not even as a ghost.

A new, terrifying thought sparked in the darkness. What if I stopped being quiet? This was a simulation. A consequence-free future. If I couldn't break the lock, what would happen if I threatened to shatter the whole damn mountain? What event, what catastrophe, would be big enough to make the Empire access its most secure records? Records about powerful individuals, purged bloodlines... lost family members of a rampaging Tier 5 monster?

My phantom form strode to the massive window of the library's ninth tier. I looked up at the Citadel. My Glimpse had maybe ten minutes left. I held up my hand.

I didn't summon an orange flame, or a blue one. I reached deep into my core, into the lessons Kharonus had unknowingly taught me. I called upon the void.

The air in front of my palm didn't just ignite. It collapsed on itself. A sphere of pure, silent, nebular blackness formed, no larger than my fist. It drank the light, warped the air, its presence a focused, conceptual hunger. I wasn't just summoning fire. I was commanding my soul to End this piece of reality. Then I launched it upwards, towards the ceiling.

There was no presence of sound in the Glimpse due to the sheer energy released, but I felt the detonation. It was a supernova of silent, ravenous black fire that blossomed over the city center, a rapidly expanding sphere of annihilation that began to eat the sky. For a split second, it was grotesquely beautiful. I felt the city's power grid flicker. I felt a thousand alarms scream inaudibly across a million channels. Information would be moving now. Somewhere in the Citadel, someone would be pulling up the file on the "purged" Ashen Phoenix bloodline. It was a start.

My Glimpse-self had maybe four minutes left. That was four minutes too long.

The space in front of me tore open. Not a teleport. A violation.

Nine figures stepped out. They wore no armor, just severe, form-fitting black uniforms. Their faces were hidden behind reflective, mirrored masks. My Glimpse-powered [Predator's Gaze] screamed. Their auras weren't bright; they were voids, nine pinpricks of absolute nothingness that drank my senses. Elites. No, beyond elite. They moved with a synergy so perfect they might as well have been one being. The attack was instantaneous.

One pointed a finger. A beam of pure anti-matter lanced out, and my [Domain of the Ashen Phoenix] shattered like glass. Another made a grasping motion, and the very concept of "movement" was locked away from me. My feet were rooted to the spot. A third simply looked at me, and I felt my own soul begin to unravel. It was an assault on a conceptual level, an unmaking.

They didn't kill me. They just absolutely nullified me.

The Glimpse shattered. I was back.

I gasped, a raw, shuddering intake of breath. My body was slick with cold sweat. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic drumbeat in the perfect, scholarly silence of the Grand Imperial Library. A phantom ache, a ghost of total annihilation, echoed through my very soul. They were here. They were real. And they were so far beyond me it was laughable.

My resolve, once cold and hard, was now forged in the phantom fire of my own simulated demise. The Jack persona wasn't just a strategy anymore. It was survival. As long as I was in this city, within the shadow of that Citadel, Eren Kai could not exist.

Just as the last tremors of the Glimpse faded from my limbs, a pure, resonant chime echoed through the library, through the entire city. It was the same tone as the Edict, but this time it was followed by the rich, baritone voice of a Kyorian announcer.

"Champions of the Prime Conclave," the voice boomed, full of false reverence and theatrical grandeur. "By the decree of his excellency, Governor Hadrian Vorr, your period of acclimation is at an end. Make your way to the Grand Colosseum. The opening ceremony will commence in one hour."

I slowly pushed myself to my feet, my legs still unsteady. I was still Jack, the weary healer. But inside, I was a ghost, haunted by a death that hadn't happened by beings that I had to still avoid.

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