From Idler to Tech Tycoon: Earth-Chapter 178: Dark God Descending

If audio player doesn't work, press Reset or reload the page.
Chapter 178: Chapter 178: Dark God Descending

Richard strode through the gleaming corridors of Level -1, heading towards the central hall. Lina’s holographic avatar materialized beside him, her presence a cool, calm counterpoint to the underlying tension of the base.

"Sir," Lina stated, her voice precise, "I also received a data transfer from your doppelganger just now."

"Oh?" Richard said, not breaking his stride. "Display it."

Lina brought up a series of holographic images: faces, organizational charts, and detailed data packets. "These are the identities of the Divine Concordance Seats, sir, along with comprehensive information about their last meeting. And, most interestingly," she paused, a subtle shift in her tone, "a sample of the silver liquid they consumed."

Richard stopped, turning fully to her. His silver eyes gleamed with renewed interest. "So, what did you find? Any immediate breakthroughs?"

"Nothing conclusive yet, sir," Lina replied. "The sample is currently undergoing a full quantum-biological analysis. Its properties are... unique. We will have more data once the doppelganger arrives back at the mansion and I can conduct a more direct, high-resolution scan of its internal containment unit."

"Alright," Richard said, resuming his walk. "Keep me updated. This could be crucial."

"Yes, sir," Lina acknowledged, her avatar fading slightly as she returned to her core processing.

Somewhere 400 Light-Years Away – The Golden Palace

Four hundred light-years away from Earth, on a desolate, arid planet, a colossal palace of burnished gold and dark obsidian jutted from the peak of a jagged mountain range, its spires piercing the clouds. Within its vast, echoing halls, a scene of ancient power and simmering dread was unfolding.

At the entrance to a cavernous, darkly lit chamber, a Krill warrior with shimmering silver scales, easily a hundred feet tall, flew on massive, leathery wings. Even at this immense size, he seemed dwarfed by the colossal palace doors, which were being opened by two guards dressed in golden armor, their own wings folded respectfully behind them. This was King Vurmak, a monarch among his kind, yet a mere supplicant here.

Vurmak walked with a heavy, deliberate tread towards the far end of the dark hall, where nothing but oppressive shadow seemed to reside. The air grew colder, heavier, charged with an ancient, primal energy. He gulped, his massive throat working. No matter how many times I come here, he thought, a tremor of fear running through his scaled body, Emperor Mainu gets bigger and bigger. Those lying chancellor bastards... he’s not dying, he’s growing.

Suddenly, in the impenetrable darkness at the hall’s end, a single, colossal golden reptilian eye, easily the size of a small starship, slowly opened. It pulsed with an ancient, terrifying intelligence, illuminating a fraction of the vast space.

King Vurmak immediately bowed low, his head touching the cold, polished floor. "Your Majesty, the Emperor," he rumbled, his voice a strained whisper. "I bring news." As he spoke, a faint, internal fire flickered in his throat, a residual sign of his own Krill heritage.

The darkness at the hall’s end seemed to shift, coalesce, revealing a towering figure. It was a dragon, truly a dragon, with scales of molten gold that gleamed even in the dim light. Massive, intricate tubes, filled with the same shimmering silver liquid snaked from its back, disappearing into the shadows. It stood an impossible three hundred feet tall, its head brushing against the unseen ceiling of the cavernous chamber.

"What useless news did you bother me with this time, King Vurmak?" the giant dragon’s voice boomed, a deep, resonant growl that vibrated through the very stone of the palace. It was a voice that spoke of eons, of power beyond mortal comprehension.

"Your Majesty," Vurmak stammered, his head lowered even further, "information from the Krislu slave race came up... the nobles have planned to coup and will pull their forces from the frontlines. The Federation’s main forces will easily break our bordering fortress planets. Within a year, they will reach the capital."

Mainu merely grunted, a sound of profound indifference. "For many years, the Federation has tried again and again, and yet failed. Your great-great-great-great-great-great-great grandfathers tried, and yet failed. If you useless lizards can’t even fend off a few insects, what use do you have to me?" Mainu’s golden eye gazed down at the trembling Krill. "Your ancestors were wise not to tell you about me. I’ve been couped many times more than the Federation ever waged war, and it was easy to wipe them out."

The giant dragon slowly approached, its immense golden eye nearing the kneeling Krill, its gaze piercing. "Tell me, King Vurmak, tell me, why I shouldn’t wipe you out again. You and your kin are so worthless, fools. This is the reason I don’t want to share my blood with you. You’re not worthy of the dragon blood. No matter how you grow wings and horns and your scales, the true qualities of a dragon, is the dragon’s heart."

Mainu’s voice dropped, becoming a low, dangerous growl. "The reason why I even entertain your race, is because your ancestors begged me to save yours. And look at it now. Time and time again, you and your puny race, paint me a bad picture telling the people I hoard all of the harvest, while you nobles, keep it somewhere safe. I may sleep around all day, but I’m not stupid. You nobles are the ones managing the harvest. I’m just doing my part of the bargain: my blood for Anu’s blood. The reason I stayed up until now, is I can feel my evolution has reached a bottleneck. With the blood and essence of Anu’s, I can live for as long as the universe exists, and then your race is of no use to me now. So tell me why, Vurmak? Why should I not end this charade?"

Vurmak paled, if a Krill could pale, and began to sweat profusely. In his mind, a single, horrifying thought screamed: He knows! He knows everything! We’re fucked!

He begged, kowtowing even lower, his massive body trembling. "I apologize, Your Majesty! I apologize! It will not happen again!"

Mainu scoffed, a sound like grinding stone. "That’s what your great-great-great-grandfather said, after I nearly wiped your race, after attempting a coup. They wanted me hostage, controlled." He scoffed again, a chilling, dismissive sound. "Strength and power outgrows your schemey manipulations, Vurmak. Your 30,103rd emperor even put the blame on me in your history. No, there will be no next time. My contract with your Krillian race is cancelled. I can feel it, even 400 light-years away. One of them has awakened. The galaxy’s throne will finally be fulfilled."

Vurmak’s eyes widened in profound shock and terror. Awakened? An Anu? Here? Now?

Mainu continued, his voice now tinged with a strange, almost amused irony. "Perhaps I should just go to Earth and make a deal with the humans instead. Somehow though, they revere my race. What an irony, for a race that’s slaughtered only to reach my evolution, they somehow revere the Draco race."

With a sudden, powerful movement, the dragon Mainu rose to his full, immense height. The golden palace, built to accommodate his vast form, shuddered. Cracks spiderwebbed across the ancient stone, and sections of the ceiling groaned under the strain of his sheer bulk. With a single, mighty beat of his colossal wings, he tore through the palace roof, destroying the structure due to his immense size, and launched himself into the arid sky. 𝒻𝓇𝑒𝘦𝘸𝑒𝒷𝓃ℴ𝑣𝘦𝑙.𝒸ℴ𝘮

King Vurmak stared in horror, watching the colossal figure disappear into the twilight. It was larger than he had ever truly comprehended, a force of nature. As Mainu flew away, the other Krill kings, drawn by the destruction and the sudden, terrifying silence, rushed into the ruined chamber, their faces a mixture of confusion and dawning dread.

As the 4 kings struggled to comprehend what had just happened, Vurmak, being the strongest, turned to the other kings, his scales paling. "You said that dragon was dying!"

One of them, Vanak, stammered, "The Krislu... they said he was weakening!"

Vurmak roared, a sound of pure, frustrated fury. "He wasn’t dying, you fools! He was morphing! He just reached the bottleneck to become a true dragon! He grew bigger, you incompetent idiots!" He whirled on the other king. "Krinak! You were supposed to poison him! What in the void did you do?!"

Krinak recoiled, his voice trembling. "I did! The Krislu gave me gamma-radiated poison, and I administered it! He was supposed to be weakening, just like the Krislu said!"

"FUCK! FUCK! FUCK!" Vurmak bellowed, slamming a massive fist against a crumbling pillar. "Let’s go! We consult the Dark God! And hopefully, he doesn’t ask for dragon blood this time!"

Later, the four Krill kings arrived at the summit of a jagged, black mountain range. The air here was thick with a perpetual, unnatural storm, dark clouds swirling with malevolent energy that crackled with unseen lightning. They landed onto a vast, desolate platform, carved from the very rock, at the mouth of a cavern. The cave itself emanated a palpable, suffocating dark aura, a chilling presence that seemed to absorb all light and sound.

The four kings bowed in unison, their voices echoing in the oppressive silence. "All hail, Xa’Mharr the Unshaped! These lowly servants ask for your consultation, my Lord!"

A sound of shifting, squelching flesh emanated from the abyssal depths of the cave, followed by a voice that was less a sound and more a vibration of pure, ancient malice. It was a chorus of whispers, deep and guttural, yet impossibly vast, as if a thousand tormented souls spoke as one. "Whaaa.....t Dooooo... yo...u seeeee.....eee.k, my... little... ones...?"

The four kings, their fear momentarily overshadowed by the urgency of their plight, spoke, Vurmak leading. "The Dragon knew of our schemes, my Lord! He escaped! He is headed for Planet Earth!"

As Vurmak finished, Lashrak, one of the kings, convulsed. His eyes glowed a malevolent, pulsing red, and his silver scales began to turn a sickly, dark crimson. His limbs twitched uncontrollably as if an unseen force was tearing at his very being. Then, the voice of Xa’Mharr, the Unshaped, spoke through Lashrak, the king’s own voice a mere puppet to the dark entity.

"A perfect opportunity," Xa’Mharr hissed, its voice now a chilling, sibilant whisper, emanating from Lashrak’s contorted form. "The cracks in the veil are enough to impart a portion of my power." From Lashrak’s clawed hand, a dark red orb, pulsing with an eerie, corrupting aura, materialized, radiating cold. "Throw this into the planet’s star. Everything will be engulfed in crimson flame. I will descend into that dragon’s body. It’s nearly reaching maturity with Anu’s energy. The Threshold of Dominion will be opened." A guttural, echoing laugh, devoid of mirth, reverberated through the cavern, shaking the very foundations of the mountain.

The three remaining kings, their faces pale with a mix of terror and grim understanding, acknowledged the dark god’s command with a unified, trembling bow. Their desperate gamble had just escalated into a galactic-scale ritual of unimaginable horror.