God Ash: Remnants of the fallen.-Chapter 1274: Black Mountain (4).

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Chapter 1274: Black Mountain (4).

Slowly, painfully, he rolled onto his side and pushed himself upright. His left arm hung useless, bone visibly out of alignment. Blood soaked his coat. Breathing hurt. Everything hurt.

He laughed anyway.

"Still standing," he rasped. "That’s got to be annoying."

The lesser figure reappeared above the crater, its form more unstable now, edges blurring as if struggling to maintain coherence under the strain of its superior’s presence.

"You are being measured," it said. The voice had lost some of its certainty. "And you are failing."

Cain spat blood into the rubble. "Funny. Feels like you’re the ones bringing reinforcements."

The response was cut off as the sky collapsed inward.

Not fully—but enough.

A vast portion of the fractured firmament folded down like a lid, dragging clouds, light, and atmosphere with it. The pressure spike flattened what remained of nearby structures. The crater Cain stood in deepened as the ground compacted beneath him.

He staggered, knees bending despite his effort to stay upright.

The greater presence was closer now. Close enough that Cain could feel its internal structure—layers of authority stacked atop one another, each reinforcing the next. It wasn’t raw power. It was permission. The right to act unopposed.

That was worse.

Cain dug his heels in and raised Eidwyrm with his good arm, blade trembling under the strain.

"You think I don’t recognize this?" he shouted upward. "You think I haven’t fought things like you before?"

No answer.

The pressure increased again, focused now, narrowing from an environmental catastrophe into a directed force aimed squarely at him. The air around Cain compressed into a cone, trying to fold him in on himself, to erase him by making his existence geometrically inconvenient.

Cain roared and pushed back.

Not with finesse. Not with strategy.

With refusal.

Eidwyrm flared violently, its edge vibrating as it tore into the compressed space, carving a jagged line straight up through the descending force. The cut didn’t disperse the pressure—it redirected it.

The redirected force detonated sideways.

A horizontal shockwave tore through the city, leveling what little remained standing. Entire blocks vanished into expanding rings of destruction. The skyline was erased, replaced by smoke and fire and open sky.

The lesser figure was caught in the blast and flung end over end, barely managing to stabilize itself before slamming into the remains of a transit spire.

For the first time, the greater presence reacted.

The descent slowed.

The fractures in the sky widened further, light bleeding through in violent pulses as if the structure above was straining to contain what was pushing through it.

Cain dropped to one knee, gasping, Eidwyrm embedded in the ground to keep himself upright. His vision tunneled. His heartbeat thundered in his ears.

He forced himself to look up anyway.

"Yeah," he said hoarsely. "You felt that."

The pressure didn’t lift—but it shifted. Reconfigured. Adapted.

The presence began to descend again, more carefully this time, its mass compressing the air into visible layers. Each meter it closed multiplied the strain on Cain’s body.

This was no longer a test.

This was an attempt to end him.

Cain dragged himself upright, bones grinding, and wrenched Eidwyrm free of the ground. The blade was chipped now, its edge imperfect, but still very much alive.

He squared his stance as best he could amid the devastation.

The city was gone. The battlefield had expanded beyond anything recognizable. The sky itself was failing. 𝗳𝗿𝐞𝕖𝘄𝗲𝕓𝗻𝚘𝚟𝕖𝐥.𝚌𝕠𝕞

And still, Cain stood.

"Come closer," he growled, lifting the blade. "Let’s see how much you’re willing to break."

The fractures pulsed.

The descent continued.

And whatever was about to happen would not stop here.

The descent did not accelerate.

That was what unsettled Cain most.

The presence above him continued downward at a steady, deliberate pace, as if it had all the time in the world and wanted him to understand that fact. Each fraction of distance it closed warped the air further, folding light and pressure together until the space between them felt dense enough to bruise thought itself.

Cain planted his boots deeper into the ruined street. Asphalt cracked and sank beneath him. He adjusted his grip on Eidwyrm, compensating for the dead weight of his shattered arm by angling his stance and letting his core take the strain instead. Every breath scraped. His ribs complained with sharp, immediate feedback.

Still, he did not retreat.

The lesser figure stabilized itself atop the broken transit spire, watching from a distance. It did not intervene. That, too, was information.

The greater presence reached the height of the tallest remaining structures—what little passed for tall now—and paused. The pressure peaked, then held. The surrounding air vibrated, producing a low, omnipresent hum that rattled loose debris and made Cain’s teeth ache.

The ground around him began to liquefy.

Not melt—fail. The structure of the material simply gave up under the stress, turning solid surfaces into sluggish, collapsing waves that dragged wreckage downward. Cain shifted his footing constantly, small corrections keeping him from sinking as the battlefield destabilized beneath him.

Above, the mass shifted again.

A portion of it extended—not a limb, not quite—more like a concentrated vector of intent, aimed directly at Cain. The air between them compressed further, forming a narrowing corridor of force.

Cain braced.

The impact was silent.

Not an explosion, not a blast—just a sudden, overwhelming shove that drove him backward like a hammer striking a nail. He skidded across the collapsing ground, carving a trench with his boots and heels, before slamming into the remains of a reinforced foundation.

The structure did not stop him. It disintegrated.

Cain crashed through concrete and rebar, finally coming to rest half-buried in rubble. His vision flashed white, then dark. For a split second, his grip on Eidwyrm loosened.

He snarled and forced his fingers to lock down again.

"Not yet," he muttered, dragging himself free of the debris. Blood ran freely now, soaking into dust and ash. He ignored it. Pain was data, nothing more.

The presence advanced again, slower still, as if adjusting its approach based on the resistance encountered. The pressure corridor tightened, becoming more focused, more precise.

Cain felt it probing him.

Testing his posture. His reactions. The way he absorbed force and redistributed strain through his body. This was no brute assault. It was analysis.

"Figures," Cain said under his breath. "You don’t swing blind."

He pushed off the ground and charged.