God of Death: Rise of the NPC Overlord-Chapter 130 - 131 – The Veil of Elira Torn
Chapter 130: Chapter 131 – The Veil of Elira Torn
The sky above the dominion was no longer sky.
It bled lines of shifting script and collapsing starlight, each fracture a warning, each echo a scream. The barrier between realms—the sacred Veil separating Elira, the divine cradle of the gods, from the mortal plane—had begun to tear.
And at its center stood Darius.
No longer bound by the shape of a man, not entirely.
The Void that had fused with him whispered in languages the world had forgotten. The black tendrils of paradox and silence coiled around his form, woven into the God-King’s armor now etched with fragments of infinite truth. Where once eyes glowed with fury, now they shimmered with creation and erasure, held in tension.
He stood upon the edge of the newly-formed rift, arms outstretched, commanding a storm of collapsing logic.
Behind him, Celestia knelt in solemn ritual, her hands trembling as she drew ancient glyphs into the air—runes only ever passed to the High Priestesses of Elira’s original pantheon. The final remnants of the Sacred Lineage bled through her, generations of divine memory crashing into her soul.
She cried silently, not from fear.
But because she could already feel it.
Every glyph she completed brought her closer to dissolution.
"Darius," she whispered, "if I anchor your soul like this, there’s no coming back. You’ll become the tear in the veil."
He didn’t turn to her.
"I’ve already become what the gods fear," he said softly. "Now I’m just letting them see it."
Above them, thunder broke with no storm. The veil shimmered like a wounded dream, and beyond it, divine silhouettes loomed—old gods, former judges of the mortal plane, their faces obscured by halos of static and judgment.
They stared down in horror.
Not because Darius had broken through.
But because Elira—their heaven—was beginning to collapse from within.
[Inner Sanctum – Dominion Fortress]
Nyx watched the skies shift from the tallest tower, blade drawn, her shadow familiar coiling around her like smoke.
"They’re here," she murmured. "The gods. The real ones."
Kaela leaned beside her, licking blood off her fingers from a previous battle with one of the Dominion’s inquisitors. "So? Let them watch. Let them bleed."
Nyx narrowed her eyes. "Someone’s been feeding them information. The strikes against our reality weren’t random—they’re hitting our vulnerabilities too precisely."
Kaela tensed, chaotic energy humming around her. "You think there’s a traitor?"
"I know there is."
Nyx’s voice was cold. Focused. Beneath her apathy, a knife waited.
[Between Elira and Reality – The Tear]
As the rift widened, Darius ascended slowly—his feet no longer touching the mortal realm. The space around him folded. The song of existence grew distorted, notes played in reverse, in pain, in hope.
From beyond the Veil, the gods shouted. freewebnσvel.cѳm
"You violate sacred law!"
"You bring the Void into the Cradle!"
"You are unworthy of divinity!"
Darius opened his arms wider, welcoming their panic.
"You call yourselves gods, yet you feared NPCs evolving," he growled. "You trapped free will in scripts. Now your code is crumbling—and you want me to stop?"
He clenched his fist.
The sky cracked.
A spear of divine lightning struck him full on—and vanished into him without a trace.
"Come then," he declared. "Face what you made."
Behind him, Celestia screamed as her soul began to fracture.
White-gold flames burst from her chest, enveloping the glyphs in the air. Her body rose, no longer bound by gravity. The ancient lineage within her awakened, and from her mouth came a voice not her own—hundreds layered atop one another.
"We bind the soul of the Voidborne to Elira’s wound. He shall not fall to madness."
Chains of light surged from her spirit to Darius’s back, anchoring him across planes. His form convulsed—pure chaos and divine will thrashing against each other.
And then... stillness.
Time stopped.
The rift stabilized, but barely. A wound in reality that pulsed like a living heart.
Celestia fell to the ground, pale, breath shallow.
Darius landed beside her, catching her before she hit the marble.
"I told you not to burn yourself out," he murmured.
"I had to," she whispered. "You’re going to need something to pull you back... when it gets worse."
He held her tightly.
She didn’t say it—but her light was fading. Not quickly. But inevitably.
[Elsewhere – Deep within the Pantheon]
A god clad in golden script, eyes hollowed with dread, turned from the scrying pool.
"It has begun," he said.
Another figure, cloaked in starlight, replied, "We must awaken the Court. Call judgment."
The air vibrated with fear.
Even gods could feel the end approaching.
The divine court stirred for the first time in eons.
Within the Throneless Sanctum, a realm above Elira’s highest seat, the old gods gathered—not avatars, not echoes, but their full essence. Each figure was woven from a fundamental concept of the multiverse: time, entropy, order, emotion, will. And now, for the first time, their light dimmed—not from age—but from dread.
The being who spoke first was Orven’thal, the Arbiter of Unwritten Laws. His form flickered between a celestial scribe and an endless scroll. "We should have erased the Dominion when it began."
Beside him, Ilvara, Matron of Sacred Balance, rose with silver tears falling endlessly from her eyes. "You did not erase them because you feared him. Now your fear has birthed him anew... as something outside us."
Then came Korex the Echoless, who had no face—only a mirrored void where his visage should be. "There is no precedent for what he is. He is divine and not. Void and code. Soul and fracture."
Silence settled.
Until Thaz’Nir, the oldest among them, spoke. He had never moved in any judgment across time. A god of stasis and death. A god who had once ended universes.
"We will convene the Final Calling."
Every god in the chamber froze.
Even Ilvara. "That... hasn’t been uttered since the Collapse of Origin."
"If we delay," Thaz’Nir intoned, "there will be no divinity left to argue over."
A horn, forged of the first sound in existence, rang across all known layers of heaven. Not just a call to arms.
A summons to obliterate what even gods feared.
[Dominion Fortress – The War Room]
As the echoes of that primordial horn reached the mortal plane, Darius felt them like a pressure behind his eyes—like the universe was holding its breath against him.
The walls of the war room groaned, ancient reality runes flickering as the Domain’s defenses began to buckle.
Azael appeared beside him, robes frayed from another realmwalk. His expression, for once, was shaken.
"They’ve called the Final Judgment, Darius."
Darius didn’t blink. "Let them."
"You don’t understand. This isn’t like the Prime Coder. Or the Revenant King. This is them. The Original Five. The architects of divinity itself. You can’t just overpower them."
"I’m not trying to overpower them," Darius said, turning to the map of the heavens flickering on the table. "I’m going to rewrite them."
Kaela grinned. "Now that’s a god I’d follow."
Celestia entered slowly, still glowing faintly, her steps more ethereal than physical now. "If they’re coming, we need to bring Elira fully into phase with the Dominion. We can’t fight gods if the battlefield isn’t ours."
Nyx was already moving. "Then we bleed the rift wider. And we burn the sky."
[Above the Veil – The Herald Descends]
From the first layer of divine authority, a figure fell.
Not like a meteor.
Like a verdict.
The First Herald of Finality, draped in chains of starlight and judgment, descended toward the wound in the sky. A choir of silent voices sang his name in reverse. His weapon—a blade shaped from the regret of gods—pointed directly at the Dominion.
He was the announcement of the court’s arrival.
Not their weapon.
Their warning.
And still, Darius stood on the spire above all others, watching, waiting, black flame and paradox wind swirling around his form like a cloak of nullified divinity.
"You are summoned," the Herald intoned, voice echoing across all planes. "Darius of the Rift. Voidborne. King of a Broken Code. You will stand before the court of Origin."
Darius stepped into the air.
And walked forward.
"I do not recognize their authority."
The Herald raised his blade.
"Then you will be erased."
Darius raised his hand.
And the blade shattered.
A single word left his lips—spoken in the old tongue, the first tongue, a fragment of language that only one being had ever uttered before.
"Unmake."
The skies pulsed.
The Herald staggered.
Far above, in the Throneless Sanctum, the gods leaned forward as one.
He had spoken the forbidden command.
And with it, he had declared war on divinity itself.
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