Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG]

Chapter 66: The Ghost in the Machine


The twenty-four-hour countdown had begun. Bastion transformed into a whirlwind of desperate, organized activity. The ringing of hammers on steel and the shouting of commands replaced the usual sounds of town life. A grim, unified determination had taken hold, a direct reflection of Lucas' unyielding will. I moved among them, helping to organize the infirmary, rationing out bandages and salves, my face a carefully constructed mask of calm reassurance. But inside, I was adrift in a sea of cold dread. I had led them here. Their survival, their very existence, now rested on a knife's edge. And my carefully crafted persona of 'Jack the Healer' was a cage, preventing me from using ninety-nine percent of my true strength.

That night, as the last of the barricades were being hammered into place under the frantic glare of torchlight, I found a secluded, abandoned hut at the edge of the settlement. Ensuring I was completely alone, I sank into a meditative state, my consciousness diving inward, away from the sounds of panicked preparation. I opened the psionic link to my Sanctum. The connection, previously a simple comfort, was now a vital, secret lifeline. My thoughts, clear and precise, shot across the vast wilderness through the network of Waystones.

My first contact was Jeeves. "Jeeves, I need a full strategic analysis. Emergency protocol."

The response was instantaneous, cool and precise in my mind, a welcome anchor of pure logic in my swirling panic. "Master. I have been monitoring the ambient energy fluctuations around Waystone Delta since you relayed the quest information. The buildup is significant. What is the nature of the threat?"

I transmitted the full text of the Evolution Quest, the objective, the timeframe, and the apocalyptic failure condition. For a moment, there was only silence on the psionic link as my companions processed the terrifying scope of the trial.

Then, Leoric's thought, laced with a familiar, high-strung intellectual energy: "Elemental manifestations! Drawn to an Anomaly! Master, this is fascinating! The raw, chaotic essence required for such a materialization is immense! They won't be organized, not like a thinking army, but they will be relentless. They will be pure, instinct-driven embodiments of their element — earth, fire, water, wind… whatever this sector's chaotic energies favor."

Jeeves' voice cut through Leoric's academic excitement with chilling clarity. "Master, the settlement's defenses, as you have described them, will be insufficient. A simple stone wall and a shield line are designed to repel physical threats. They will do little to stop a wave of pure fire elementals from simply flowing over them, or earth elementals from burrowing beneath them. The sheer number of entities attracted to such an Anomaly will be a force of attrition that Bastion cannot withstand."

He was right. The cold, hard truth of it settled in my stomach like a stone. They were preparing for a battle, but they were about to be hit by a natural disaster. My hands clenched into fists. I felt a surge of protectiveness, of responsibility, so fierce it almost made me sick.

"I cannot reveal my full strength here," I sent my thoughts tight with frustration. Not yet. "It would risk my family, the empire must not learn of my existence yet, no matter what. It would shatter the trust I've built, the very foundation of this alliance. We need a solution that works from the shadows. Give me options."

There was another pause, a moment of intense, combined processing between my Anima. Then Jeeves spoke, his strategic mind offering the only logical path forward.

"Master, if we cannot significantly upgrade the settlement's internal defenses without revealing our hand, then we must focus on reducing the external threat before it reaches the walls. The elementals will be drawn to the Crystal like moths to a flame, but their path is predictable. We can use the terrain to our advantage. We can turn the entire valley into a killing field."

Leoric's thoughts immediately latched onto the idea, expanding it with feverish creativity. "Traps! Yes! A brilliant application of proactive defense! Master, with the resources in the Sanctum, I can fabricate dozens of single-use Runic Mines. We can create kinetic traps using pressurized air runes, fire traps using captured solar essence, stasis fields that can hold a portion of the wave for precious seconds! I would need you to transport them via the Waystone network, and someone would have to place them."

Jeeves refined the plan. "The placement would be critical. We must create chokepoints, funnel the elemental waves into pre-prepared kill zones. The elven scouts under Reyna Sunwood could provide the manpower for placement. Their stealth and knowledge of the terrain are perfectly suited for such a clandestine operation. They could work through the night, laying a perimeter of traps that the people of Bastion would never even know existed."

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It was a good plan. A basic but brilliant plan. It was proactive, utilized our unique resources, and most importantly, it could be executed almost entirely from the shadows. It would give Bastion a fighting chance.

"Do it, I commanded," my resolve hardening. "Leoric, begin fabrication immediately. Spare no expense. Jeeves, contact Reyna, offer her a triple bonus in alchemical supplies and Primal Essence for this one night's work. Let's get this valley armed to the teeth."

The hours that followed were a silent, frantic flurry of activity conducted across hundreds of kilometers. Leoric's forge roared to life in the heart of my Sanctum. My mental space became a command center, relaying complex runic trap diagrams and optimal placement patterns to Reyna and her fastest Whisperwind Seekers. I could feel the ripple of their movements through the forest as they began their dangerous, ghostly work.

With an hour left to spare before dawn, the perimeter defense network was in place. But one final preparation remained. My Glimpse was off cooldown again. I had to see. I had to know if it would be enough.

My mind sank into the familiar, timeless void, my intent focused on the impending battle. The Glimpse slammed into my consciousness with the force of a physical blow. The simulated dawn broke, and with it, the Anomaly arrived.

It wasn't a physical creature, but a tear in reality itself, a shimmering, heat-hazed distortion in the air directly above the Central Crystal. And from it, the elementals poured forth. My Glimpse-self, standing on the watchtower beside Lucas, could only watch in abject horror.

They were a true horde. Not dozens, but hundreds upon hundreds. Writhing creatures of living mud and stone — Earth Elementals of a dozen shapes and sizes — surged from the ground. Searing Fire Elementals, like miniature, malevolent suns, coalesced from the air, turning the grass to ash as they moved. And sweeping through them all were gusts of enraged air, screaming Wind Elementals that were nearly invisible save for the vortex of dust and debris they whipped up around themselves. They were almost all Tier 2, but their strength was in their sheer, overwhelming numbers and their single-minded purpose: to reach the Crystal.

Leoric's traps worked, at first. The initial wave was blunted, disorganized. But it wasn't enough. It wasn't even close. For every elemental the traps destroyed, three more seemed to take its place. They were a mindless, relentless tide of raw, destructive power. They slammed into the stone walls, the impacts shaking the foundations. Fiery globules sailed over the palisades, setting tents ablaze.

The defenders fought with a courage that was breathtaking, a courage that broke my heart. The Dweorg shield wall was an island of pure defiance in a sea of chaos. Lucas was a beacon of golden light and steel. But I watched them die. I saw a young human archer incinerated by a Fire Elemental. I saw Elder Borin take a crushing blow from a massive stone fist that shattered his shield and his arm. I saw Masha, the old medic, dragged down as she tried to pull a wounded fighter back. I saw the walls begin to crack. I saw the line break. I saw the tide of elementals pour into the settlement, their mindless rage focused on the crimson-glowing Crystal. I saw the hope on Lucas' face turn to ash as he witnessed the unstoppable destruction of his dream.

The three-hour Glimpse felt like an eternity of failure. My plan, our brilliant, secret plan, had failed. It had bought them time, but it hadn't changed the outcome. It had only prolonged their agony. The sheer, overwhelming mass of the enemy was a variable our calculations had fatally underestimated.

The vision dissolved, leaving me shaking in the cold, dark hut, my body drenched in a cold sweat. The triumphant cheers from the previous victory felt like a sick, mocking joke.

I refused to accept it. I refused to let that future come to pass. I had seen the faces of the people who would die. I had felt their despair. I had stood by Lucas' side as his dream crumbled into dust.

My deception, my carefully maintained persona of 'Jack the Healer,' wasn't enough to change anything. It was a lie that would get them all killed, but perhaps there was a way. A healer couldn't save them. A secret advisor couldn't save them.

But a true warrior could.

My jaw clenched, my knuckles turning white. A cold, hard certainty settled in my soul. There had to be another way. The valley had been turned into a killing field, but now it needed a hunter worthy of it.

I opened the psionic link again, my thought a sharp, clean command that cut through the silence like a shard of ice. It was a call to the most purely destructive force in my entire arsenal.

Rexxar.

The mental response was instantaneous, a joyful, deafening roar of pure, unadulterated battle-lust that filled my mind so powerfully it almost made me stagger. "MASTER? IS IT TIME? IS THE GLORIOUS BATTLE FINALLY UPON ME? OH, JOYOUS, WONDERFUL, BEAUTIFUL DAY! MY CLAYMORE SINGS WITH ANTICIPATION! POINT ME TO THE FOE!"

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