God Ash: Remnants of the fallen.-Chapter 1277: Laced with Poison (1).
The distance between them was still massive, but the act itself mattered. The pressure corridor resisted him immediately, each step forward requiring exponentially more effort. Cain leaned into it, muscles screaming as he forced momentum through an environment actively hostile to motion.
Eidwyrm came up in a two-handed grip despite the damage to his arm. He roared—not for intimidation, not for drama—but to force air into his lungs and keep his body moving.
The blade struck the pressure corridor.
This time, it didn’t rebound.
The impact tore a ragged opening through the compressed space, sending violent distortions rippling outward. The corridor wavered, destabilized, then collapsed entirely in a concussive implosion that flattened what remained of the surrounding terrain.
Cain was thrown upward again, but this time he twisted with the motion, using the force to propel himself higher rather than letting it dictate his trajectory. He cut again, then again, carving through layers of resistance that fought to reassert themselves around him.
The greater presence halted its descent.
That was new.
The sky above fractured further, seams widening as if strained by internal pressure. Light spilled through in jagged patterns, illuminating the battlefield in stark, uneven flashes.
Cain landed hard on what passed for ground now—a broken slab suspended atop compressed debris—and staggered, nearly dropping to a knee. He caught himself with Eidwyrm and straightened, chest heaving.
"Good," he said hoarsely. "Now we’re negotiating."
The response was immediate.
The surrounding air collapsed inward from all directions, not as a corridor this time, but as a sphere. Cain was caught at its center as pressure converged simultaneously, attempting to crush him uniformly, leaving no direction to escape.
He screamed and pushed back.
Eidwyrm flared violently, vibrating as Cain poured everything he had into a single, upward strike. The blade tore through the compressing field, forcing an uneven rupture that relieved pressure just long enough for Cain to twist free.
The release was catastrophic.
The imploding force rebounded outward in a spherical shockwave that obliterated what remained of the immediate area. The battlefield expanded again, the destruction radius increasing by orders of magnitude. Far beyond the city limits, distant hillsides collapsed, and the sea surged violently as the atmospheric displacement reached it.
Cain was hurled clear of the epicenter, tumbling end over end through open air before slamming into the ground kilometers away. He rolled, bounced, and finally skidded to a stop in a cloud of dust and shattered stone.
He lay there for several seconds, unmoving.
Then he laughed.
It was raw and broken and edged with pain, but it was real.
"You feel that?" he called out, dragging himself upright. "That’s what happens when you lean too hard."
The greater presence did not answer, but it adjusted.
The mass shifted, redistributing itself, the fractures above it realigning as if compensating for structural stress. The descent resumed—slower than before, but undeniably closer.
Cain wiped blood from his mouth with the back of his hand and tightened his grip on Eidwyrm. His body was screaming for rest. His balance wavered. Every system was running on borrowed time.
Didn’t matter.
The battlefield was no longer a city. It was a scar carved into the world itself, visible from the horizon. The scale had moved past containment, past collateral.
Whatever happened next would not stay localized.
Cain squared his shoulders and faced the descending presence head-on.
"Alright," he said, voice rough but steady. "You want to see how far this goes?"
The sky cracked again.
And the pressure began to rise.
Cain woke to the smell of iron and rain.
Not the clean rain that washed dust from stone, but the heavy kind that soaked into rubble and turned ash into paste. His back pressed against fractured concrete. Above him, the sky was a torn sheet of gray, stitched together by distant lightning that never quite struck.
He sat up slowly. Pain answered everywhere at once—shoulders, ribs, the inside of his skull—but it was pain he recognized. Familiar. Manageable.
So he wasn’t dead.
The battlefield was gone, or what passed for it now. The wide destruction had collapsed inward, leaving a bowl of broken ground and half-melted structures. Whatever force had torn through this place had moved on, or burned itself out. Cain flexed his fingers. His blade lay a short distance away, half-buried in stone, its surface dull and quiet.
He stood, unsteady, and retrieved it.
The silence bothered him more than the wounds. No distant clashes. No divine pressure crawling across his skin. Even the air felt emptied, as if something immense had passed through and taken the weight of the world with it.
Cain scanned the ruins.
"Steve," he said, voice hoarse.
Nothing.
"Susan. Roselle." 𝐟𝕣𝕖𝐞𝐰𝕖𝚋𝐧𝗼𝚟𝐞𝕝.𝗰𝐨𝐦
The rain answered instead.
He moved carefully, stepping over fissures and twisted metal. Here and there, signs of the others appeared—burned circuitry fused into walls, a collapsed firing position, footprints half-erased by water. They’d been here. Recently. That was enough to keep him moving.
As he climbed a ridge of shattered stone, memory began to bleed back in fragments. The Grid’s collapse. The forced retreat. A surge of power that hadn’t belonged to any one combatant. A tear—not spatial, not divine, but something uglier. Improvised. Desperate.
Cain exhaled slowly.
Someone had tried to end everything in one stroke.
At the ridge’s peak, he found Hunter.
Hunter sat against a slab of concrete, one leg stretched awkwardly, the other bent beneath him. Blood streaked his coat, dark against the fabric, but his eyes were open and sharp.
"You look worse than I feel," Hunter said.
Cain crouched beside him. "Where are the others?"
"Scattered. Alive, last I checked." A pause. "Susan’s hurt, but breathing. Steve dragged her east, toward the river. Roselle went ahead to clear a path."
Cain nodded once. That tracked.
Hunter studied him. "You were closer to the center than anyone. Thought you’d be gone."
"So did I."
They sat in silence for a moment, rain filling the space between words.
"That thing," Hunter said finally. "The force that hit us. It wasn’t planned."
"No," Cain agreed. "It was fear."
Hunter gave a short, humorless laugh. "Fear with teeth."
Cain stood. "Can you move?"
"Eventually. Don’t wait on me."
Cain didn’t argue. He offered an arm anyway. After a brief hesitation, Hunter took it, pulling himself upright with a hiss of pain.
They began moving east together, slow but steady.







