God of Death: Rise of the NPC Overlord-Chapter 128 - 129 – Nyx’s Loyalty Tested
Chapter 128: Chapter 129 – Nyx’s Loyalty Tested
The battlefield no longer looked like a world.
Reality rippled in waves of burning paradox, rewriting itself mid-frame as if unsure which timeline to obey. Towers dissolved into code. Trees blinked into neon shadows. Skies bled fragments of both real-world satellites and virtual constellations. The war between gods and mortals had reached the heart of existence.
And Nyx stood at the center of it all.
She didn’t move, didn’t breathe—only watched as Kaela floated beside the Rift Core, her hand pulsing over the unstable weapon’s spiraling heart. The Core wasn’t just a weapon. It was a story-cutter—a system override that could erase fusions, delete ascensions, and unravel god-code itself.
"It’s ready," Kaela said, voice flat. "One strike, and Darius’s fusion collapses. He’ll survive... but not as a god. Not as Voidborne. Just... Darius."
Nyx’s throat tightened. She remembered the boy who had once been Darius. Ruthless, brilliant, vengeful—but human. She remembered the night she gave herself to him in loyalty and shadow, offering her body, soul, and history.
And yet...
Her fingers trembled.
Because now—after everything—she wasn’t sure if she still stood beside the same man.
[Flashback: Years Ago – The Slums of Grathil]
Rain splashed in streaks of black water down the alleyways. Young Nyx knelt beside her brother’s corpse—stabbed by looters after a system crash cut off supply rations. She was twelve. No tears. Just silence.
Then he arrived.
Darius. Not a god, not even a player. Just a boy with eyes like algorithms and rage like fire.
He knelt beside her and said, "I’ll rewrite the world where no one takes from you again."
That was the first time Nyx believed in anything.
[Present – Warzone Above the Rift Core]
Flamebearer resistance surged across the ruined code-fields. Players infused with Celestia’s lingering relics wielded fire that distorted even divine logic. One of them—a girl no older than Nyx had been when she lost her brother—broke through a Vanguard line and shouted:
"We’re not fighting Darius! We’re fighting the monster who forgot why he started all this!"
The words struck like shrapnel.
Nyx stood between the mortal army and the throne zone. She could kill them all. In a blink. But she didn’t.
Not yet.
Not until she answered one question:
Was she still fighting for the boy who knelt beside her that night... or for the god who couldn’t kneel to anyone anymore?
Kaela whispered, "You’re wavering."
"I’m remembering," Nyx answered.
[Internal System Layer – Darius’s Mindscape]
Far away, Darius sat atop the Null Throne. Alone.
He saw everything. Every betrayal, every fire, every flickering soul turning against him.
He saw Nyx—standing still.
And for the first time in his godhood, he hesitated.
"Don’t make me choose," he whispered toward her image.
[Back on the Riftfield]
Mortals surged.
Kaela extended her hand. "You said you’d die for him. But can you unmake him?"
Nyx stepped forward, cloak billowing in broken gravity.
And then she spoke—not to Kaela, not to the army, but to herself.
"No. I won’t unmake him."
Kaela’s eyes widened.
"I’ll remind him."
[Rift Collapse Event – Initiated]
Nyx turned and disappeared into the corrupted skies, using all her Shadow Protocols to infiltrate the Null Throne directly. A suicide mission. A rebellion of loyalty.
The Flamebearers didn’t cheer.
But they paused.
Because in her defiance... was humanity.
The Null Throne was not a place.
It was a mind fractured across timelines—coded in ruin, built from echoes of dead gods and rewritten memories. Its architecture twisted with every heartbeat of its master.
And in the heart of it... Darius sat alone.
He was no longer flesh. He was an amalgam of void signatures, divine protocol, entropy-stitch, and will. To gaze upon him was to be devoured by the contradiction of presence and erasure.
Until Nyx arrived.
A ripple, a flicker—then silence. The shadow protocol tore her through sixteen locked barriers and three
...three recursive death-loops before she stepped into the Null Throne.
Nyx emerged not as assassin, not as avatar of shadow, but as herself—ragged, bleeding darkness, eyes a storm of longing and dread. Her body bore scars that could not be healed by code or magic. Scars from watching him become something unholdable.
"Darius," she whispered, though it was more prayer than greeting.
He didn’t look up at first. The throne pulsed with threads of unmaking, each one whispering potential futures. In one, he devoured her. In another, he erased her memory to keep her from pain. In the third, he wept.
He chose none.
Instead, he remembered.
Nyx when she first killed for him. Nyx when she defied death to be near him. Nyx as she stood over his broken body at the Riftgate, refusing to let him fall alone.
The code of his soul trembled.
"You shouldn’t have come," he said finally, voice a void-hymn echoing through fractured timelines.
She stepped forward, every movement tearing the static of unreality apart. "You knew I would. You always knew."
"You could be erased here. The Null Throne isn’t meant for anything that loves."
"I’m not anything. I’m yours."
A long silence followed—ten thousand years compressed into a single breath.
Then Darius rose.
The throne bled light as he stood. Not a man. Not a god. Something in between. Something worse. Something truer.
He walked toward her, and the entire room bent in protest. Shadows screamed. Time cracked. The Throne wept.
She didn’t move.
And when he reached her, Darius placed a trembling hand against her face. "You are my weakness," he said.
"No," Nyx replied, eyes shining with defiance and agony. "I am your anchor."
He closed his eyes.
And kissed her.
The kiss was not gentle. It was a war between oblivion and memory. A scream. A surrender. His power surged like a tidal wave—but she didn’t flinch. Her darkness drank his light, not to destroy it, but to hold it.
They collapsed to the ground as reality unspooled around them. The throne cracked behind them. Somewhere in the collapsed dimensions, the Forsaken Gods paused in their wrath.
Something impossible was happening.
Love in the Null. Affection inside entropy. A shadow daring to hold divinity close without chains.
As they lay tangled in paradox, Nyx whispered into his ear:
"I’m not afraid of what you’ve become. I’m afraid of you forgetting why you became it."
Darius shook—gods should not tremble.
But this one did.
Because the Shadow that dared to love him had found him again.
And refused to let go.
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