Prime System Champion [A Multi-System Apocalypse LitRPG]

Chapter 79: A Question of Scale


The instant after Jeeves' warning was a moment of pure, compressed dread. There was no time to think, no time to plan. The dozen shapes cresting the frozen waves weren't just larger than the Lurkers; they moved with a terrifying weight, a crushing sense of purpose that made the hairs on my neck stand up. My brief communion with the Architect's memory had felt like staring into the sun; this felt like being caught in the path of the resulting tidal wave.

"Form up! Defensive perimeter, now!" I snapped into the comm, the order a sharp crack in the restored silence. Rexxar, already moving, became our anchor, planting his feet wide on the glassy indigo stone and slamming the base of his massive blade into the ground with a resounding thud. Jeeves and Kaelen fell in beside him, a blur of silver and shadow, while I took a position slightly behind, my mind racing to process the new threat.

These were not Lurkers. My [True Sight] identified them as Void Crushers. Where the Lurkers had been sleek and mantis-like, these creatures were built like monstrous beetles, their thick, segmented carapaces a swirling pattern of obsidian and void-black. They scuttled forward on six massive, clawed legs, their heavy bodies seeming to distort the very air around them. I could see it with my [True Sight] — a subtle, oily shimmer, a localized buckling of space that rippled from their forms.

"Spatial distortion!" I yelled. "Don't let them get close! It will mess with your movement!"

Rexxar, predictably, took this as a personal challenge. "I WILL MESS WITH THEIR MOVEMENT!" he roared, a genuine, joyful battle-cry this time. He met the charge of the first two Crushers head-on, his blade swinging in a wide, gleaming arc.

The impact was not the clean sound of steel on chitin I expected. There was a dull, sickening thump, and Rexxar's blade, a weapon that could cleave solid rock, seemed to slow mid-swing as it entered the creature's distortion field, hitting with all the force of a wooden club. The Crusher was thrown back, but Rexxar was sent stumbling, his follow-through utterly ruined, his expression one of shocked fury. The creature's defense wasn't just physical armor; it was a buffer of warped physics.

The Crusher's response was immediate. It opened its massive, grinding mandibles and spat. Not acid, not fire, but a glob of pure, visual static. A projectile of non-space. It struck the ground where Rexxar had been a moment ago, and a three-meter sphere of buckled reality appeared. The petrified wave inside the sphere seemed to fold in on itself, angles twisting into impossible shapes, colors bleeding into nauseating chaos. It wasn't an explosion; it was a localized aneurysm in the fabric of the world. Getting caught in that would be like being passed through a blender that pureed dimensions.

"Jeeves, patterns!" I commanded, my own Soulfire gathering around my gauntlets, trying to decide on the best application of force. Brute power seemed useless here.

"Their distortion fields fluctuate, Master! They appear to weaken momentarily after they project their spatial anomalies!" Jeeves called out, his silver form a dance of deadly precision. He wasn't firing wildly. He was moving, calculating, waiting. A Crusher charged him, and just as it prepared to spit, Jeeves fired a single, hyper-focused beam. It didn't strike the creature's body. Instead, it hit the space directly in front of the Crusher's mandibles.

The beam didn't explode. It… vibrated. The energy was a specific, resonant frequency that turned the air into a solid wall for a nanosecond. The Crusher's projectile of warped space hit this invisible barrier and collapsed, imploding with a sickening thwump and splashing back onto the Crusher itself. The creature shrieked, a sound like tearing metal, as its own attack warped its leg into a grotesque, twisted spiral of chitin.

The genius of Jeeves' move was breathtaking. He hadn't attacked the creature; he had attacked its attack.

Kaelen was a ghost, a river of shadow flowing between the behemoths. He couldn't damage their strange shells, but his purpose was different. He darted in and out of their distortion fields, his own phasing abilities allowing him a degree of immunity. A tendril of shadow would lash out, not at a leg, but at the glassy ground beneath it. The shadows didn't trip the creatures; they momentarily altered the friction of the stone. A charging Crusher would find its footing suddenly slick as wet ice, its momentum sending it sliding helplessly into its companion. It was brilliant, chaotic battlefield control.

Inspired, Rexxar changed his tactics. He abandoned his wide, powerful swings and instead began using his massive size as a battering ram, letting the creature's own spatial buffer absorb the impact before unleashing a precise, powerful thrust with the point of his blade in the second the field wavered. He roared in triumph as his sword finally bit deep into a Crusher's armored joint. It wasn't a killing blow, but it crippled the creature's leg, turning the tide of his one-on-one duel.

My own mind was working furiously. [Soulfire Lance] was my most powerful single-target attack, a conceptual weapon that should, in theory, bypass their strange defenses. The question was timing. I watched the flow of the battle, waiting for the perfect moment Jeeves had identified. A Crusher turned its attention from Kaelen's harassing strikes towards me, its mandibles wide.

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It spat. The world buckled.

In that instant, as the creature's field wavered, I struck. "[Soulfire Lance]!"

The spear of golden light screamed across the distance. This time, I didn't aim for the center of mass. My [True Sight] was screaming at me, showing me the 'anchor-heart,' a shimmering, unstable pinpoint of light deep within the creature's torso. It was a smaller target, more protected, but it was the source of its reality-defying power.

My lance struck true. The Crusher went rigid. There was no explosion, no cloud of dust like with the Lurkers. The creature simply… froze. Then, like a pane of shattered glass, its entire body cracked. Hundreds of black, fissure-like lines spread across its carapace, and with a soft, final tinkle, like a broken chandelier, it collapsed into a pile of obsidian-sharp, glassy fragments.

The tide had turned. With a proven method of attack, our teamwork became a symphony of destruction. Kaelen created openings, Jeeves provided pinpoint defensive support, Rexxar brutalized and pinned them down, and I acted as the executioner, landing one precise [Soulfire Lance] after another.

The battle raged for what felt like an hour. We were pushed to our limits. I took a glancing blow from a spatial projectile that hit my [Mana Shield], and the shield didn't break, it curdled, the magical energy twisting into useless, chaotic strands that left my arm numb and tingling for minutes. Rexxar's armor was dented and scored, and a deep gash on his shoulder was sluggishly bleeding, a testament to a hit that had partially bypassed both his plate and his tough hide. By the time the last Crusher tinkled into a pile of glassy shards, we were all breathing heavily, the adrenaline fading to a deep, bone-weary exhaustion.

"That… was a proper fight," Rexxar panted, leaning heavily on his sword, a wide, bloody grin splitting his face.

This time, the remnants were different. The fragments weren't dissolving. I picked up a shard of chitin. It was heavy, unnervingly cold, and felt slick, even though it was perfectly dry. Jeeves crouched beside me, a scanner emerging from his fingertip.

"Fascinating," he murmured, his silver eyes narrowed in concentration. "Their biological makeup is a paradox. It is fundamentally incompatible with baseline universal matter, yet it is intricately woven with the unique spatial laws of this realm. It is as if they were designed to be both the immune system and the disease. Invaders who were... invited."

Invited. The word sent a fresh chill down my spine.

My eyes scanned the now-quiet battlefield, and that's when I saw it. Near the Locus Point, half-buried in the shattered fragments of a Crusher, lay something new. Something that hadn't been there before. It was a small, palm-sized disc of the same matte white material as the Temple, covered in a spiraling pattern of faint, silvery runes. I picked it up. It was cool to the touch and hummed with a faint, dormant energy.

[Key-Rune of the Architect (1/3) acquired.] [Description: A tool of calibration used by the Prime Artificer to attune a Locus Point to the master control of the Temple of Concordance. It holds a fractional charge of its original purpose.]

It wasn't just loot; it was another piece of the puzzle. It felt less like a key and more like a circuit board, a component in a machine of unimaginable scale. And holding it, a cascade of thoughts, born from the Architect's downloaded memory, began to connect in my mind.

I remembered my second Glimpse, Traichus Mac sneering about my crude Aura, telling me it wasn't a "Domain." I remembered the Kyorian Empire's Imperial System Module, a custom-tailored, predatory version of the broader Prime System. I thought about the quest naming — The Architect's Folly, Traces of the Architect, but also the title whispered in the Glyph: The Prime Artificer.

My internal monologue was a frantic, chaotic race to connect the dots. Prime System... Prime Artificer. Is that a title it bestows? Or something it recognizes? Like my S+ Soul, a classification for something beyond the normal scale...

And an Architect... this place... it has its own quests, its own ecology, its own rules. The creatures aren't just random monsters from a bestiary; Jeeves said it, they're woven into the fabric of the place. It's like... it's like the Architect didn't just build a place within the System. It's like they built their own version of the System itself.

The thought was staggering, world-shattering in its implications. What if a "Domain" wasn't just a fancy aura, a glorified power-up? What if mastering a Domain was the first step on the path to becoming an Architect yourself? To gaining the knowledge and power not just to use the System's rules, but to write them? To create your own pocket of reality, with your own laws, your own dungeons, your own physics. Was that the true endgame? Not just being a powerful fighter, but a creator? A master of a personal sector of the universe?

This place wasn't just a sealed dungeon. It was a failed attempt at godhood. A bespoke universe, custom-built by an entity who had achieved a level of power I could barely comprehend, and it had all gone horribly, catastrophically wrong. The Void Crushers weren't invaders; they were antibodies. A failed immune system designed by the Architect to purge any "chaotic" intrusion — like the flare of my Soulfire — from its perfect, sterile world.

My bargain with Kharonus felt small and petty in that moment. The path to the Temple of Concordance wasn't just a journey across a dead sea anymore. It was a pilgrimage into the heart of a fallen god's dream, a place where I might learn the very secrets of how to build my own.

Or how to fail just as spectacularly.

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