Incubus Living In A World Of Superpower Users-Chapter 279: God
"And when weak men," Lilith said softly, her voice like the edge of a blade wrapped in velvet, "are given purpose by monsters..."
Her gaze shifted slowly toward the doorway. She didn’t expect anyone to speak. She wasn’t waiting for agreement. The words were already complete.
"...they always become monsters themselves."
No one replied.
There was nothing left to add. The truth had landed too fully, filled the space between them like quiet smoke, curling into every corner of the room.
To speak now would only make it smaller. And no one wanted that.
The silence didn’t push down. It didn’t threaten to explode. It just... stayed. Still. Balanced on the edge of something unseen.
Like the breath before a scream. Or the calm before a sky falls open.
But far beyond that quiet room, past the polished floors of Astralis, beyond the fortified outer rings of the last surviving cities of man, and even past the charts of star-faring ships or dream-seekers, there was no such stillness.
There was only the Void.
It wasn’t space. Space had stars, but here, there was nothing in any distance or direction—just blackness.
A tear, not a canvas. It didn’t wait. It didn’t reflect. It was consumed without the intention to consume.
A wound that reality had failed to heal.
And deep within that wound, something pulsed.
There were no galaxies here. No suns. No life.
Just fragments.
Dead things.
A fossilized whale the size of the moon drifted in silence, its bones cracked and webbed with tendrils of black metal.
There were towers too—some broken, some upside down—floating with no purpose except to remind anything still watching that they had once meant something.
And at the center of it all, seated upon a throne grown from the corpse of a shattered world, rested the thing they called a god.
The Hollow Crown.
The Sleeping Thought.
The God Beneath Names.
He didn’t sit the way mortals sat. He was more suggestion than form—humanoid only in outline.
Shoulders bent slightly forward, one hand slung over the armrest like a man asleep on his throne, the other resting beneath something vaguely shaped like a face.
His body was made from the pieces of other things. Bones and rusted alloys, ligaments strung from sinew and shard. There were no eyes. No mouth. No features. Just presence.
And silence.
Complete, eternal silence.
Around him circled the remnants of worshippers, though none would have used that word. They didn’t kneel. They didn’t bow. They didn’t chant.
They bled.
They gave.
One sect, spiraled in a loop of flesh and iron, crawled endlessly in circles, each body chained to the next.
They never stopped moving. They whispered a single syllable—never spoken, never written, and only breathed.
Passed from mouth to mouth, so that it was never a word, only a presence.
Another group—further in, near the lightless pits—had long since removed their memories.
Daily, they tore slivers of thought from their minds using glowing tongs, feeding them into flame-fountains that screamed when fed.
They wept with joy. They rejoiced in forgetting. Each memory lost was one step closer to Him.
And the temples?
They weren’t built from stone. They were sewn—from bone, from regret, from guilt made solid.
Floating without anchor, the priests inside read backwards from scrolls made of human spine and dried intestines, their voices split by tongues they had intentionally forked.
Their sermons didn’t ask for understanding. They asked for removal, for the disintegration of thought.
To them, He wasn’t a god because He demanded it.
He was a god because they needed Him to be.
Belief was the only thing holding back the reality that they were all mad.
But even madness needs contrast. And in the Void, there was none.
And then—something moved.
Not loud. Not sudden. A ripple.
Tiny. Insignificant to anything but them.
But to them?
To them, it was everything.
Every being in that realm—every shrieking priest, every whispering chain-dweller, every half-dead bishop holding a knife over a throat—froze.
They didn’t breathe.
The ripple wasn’t a sound. It was a shift. A tremor. As if a breath had entered a place that had long since exhaled.
And then came the noise.
Not a voice.
Not thunder.
Just the sound of something... waking.
The God stirred. Only slightly. But in this realm, that was enough.
His left hand, once limp, curled. Then uncurled. A twitch. A flex.
No words.
But something changed.
He didn’t remember as mortals remembered. There were no thoughts—only sequences. Sensory lines of signal, scent, memory, and blood.
And he had felt something. A flicker. A strand.
A staff.
His staff.
Once lost and once silenced. Now... touched.
Not correctly. Not through ritual. But activated.
The ripple it had sent, weak though it was, had pierced the membrane of worlds and brushed against his slumbering awareness.
The mortal who touched it had died.
Too soon.
That should not have happened.
The cult leader who held it was dead. And not by natural cause. Not by a sanctioned sacrifice. Not by beast or enemy faction.
Someone outside had interfered.
Someone who did not bear the mark.
Who had not sworn.
Who had not been seen by the runes.
The God did not rise.
He didn’t even shift again.
But something inside the air around him went cold.
Across the great expanse of cult strongholds scattered throughout the known and unknown worlds, old wards lit up. Ancient contracts activated. Symbols began pulsing.
The faithful began to shake.
Because they felt it too.
He wasn’t sending avatars. He wasn’t sending punishment.
He was... watching.
A thousand temples fell to silence.
Then the dreams began.
Not dreams of fire or beasts.
Dreams of instructions.
Schematics. Ideas. Commands. Patterns with no language, but full understanding. They flooded the minds of the devout.
Waking up everything that had been waiting.
Not warriors.
Concepts.
Thoughts wrapped in hunger. Symbols designed to rewire belief. Scripts that turned followers into hosts for more than faith.
The God did not stand.
He did not speak.
But he raised a finger.
And across the void, the plans began.
He would not rise.
Not yet.
But something had changed.
He knew they were watching.
And now? 𝒇𝒓𝙚𝒆𝔀𝓮𝓫𝒏𝓸𝙫𝓮𝓵.𝓬𝙤𝙢
He would watch back.