My Infinite System.-Chapter 250: Ashuras and Divas
The message from the Psion echoed through channels older than civilization, a ripple in the pond of reality that could not be ignored. It reached the two oldest powers, the ones who had, for a time, been the Aethel’s siblings.
In the heart of a Diva core world, a planet-sized crystal that sang with perfect mathematical harmony, the call was received. The air in the central chamber was so still it felt solid. Light moved in precise, geometric patterns. Here, three figures sat on thrones of solidified sound. They were the Triad, the current rulers of the Diva. Their forms were humanoid but wrought from light and crystal, their faces serene masks of absolute order.
"The Psion’s warning is confirmed," the central figure, Luminar, stated. Its voice was like a perfectly tuned bell. "The Aethel signature has reignited. Alistair lives. And he has successfully awakened a new one."
To their right, in a realm where a blood-red sun cast long shadows over a landscape of floating mountains and volcanic spires, the message was received with very different energy. The Ashura High Chieftain, a massive being of obsidian flesh and molten cracks named Krazak, roared with laughter that shook the very rock beneath his feet.
"He’s back! The old fool actually did it!" he bellowed, slamming a fist the size of a small starship onto his throne of skulls and cooled magma. "And he brought a pup with him!"
His two lieutenants, a swift, blade-limbed hunter named Syphon and a hulking brute named Gorn, grinned with sharpened teeth. "Do we smash them, Chieftain?" Gorn growled, cracking his knuckles.
"Patience, you lumbering oaf," Krazak chuckled, though his eyes glinted with a predatory light. "Let’s see what the pretty crystal people have to say about it first. I’m sure they’re having a meltdown." He found his own joke immensely funny.
A shimmering portal, anathema to the chaotic Ashura aesthetic, ripped open in the center of the Diva chamber. From it, Krazak, Syphon, and Gorn stepped through. The Ashura leader took a deep, exaggerated breath of the sterile air.
"Ah, still smells like a museum in here," he grinned, his molten eyes scanning the Triad. "So. The architects are back. I’m guessing you’re not here to throw a welcome party."
Luminar did not react to the provocation. "The situation is grave, Krazak. The Culling was necessary to preserve the stability of existence. The return of even one Aethel is a threat. The return of two, one of them a new-born with untapped potential, is a crisis."
"Grave? Crisis?" Krazak waved a dismissive hand, sending a few drops of magma sizzling to the pristine floor. "It’s two of them. Two! We wiped out thousands. Our ancestors, together, purged an entire race of reality-benders. And you’re worried about a hermit and his kid?"
A second Diva, its form more angular and sharp, spoke. "Do not underestimate Alistair, Ashura. He was among the most powerful of them. He has eluded us for eons. And the child... her awakening was... clean. Potent. The Psion’s data suggests a purity we have not seen since the Progenitors."
Krazak’s smirk faded slightly. "So what’s your play, Luminar? Unite the fleets? Launch another Great Crusade? My boys are always up for a good fight, but it seems like overkill for a family reunion."
"The Mechanist suggested a planet-killer," the third Diva added, its voice softer, like wind chimes. "The Xylos have already contacted... the Hunter."
At the mention of the Hunter, even Krazak went quiet for a moment. Syphon, the hunter, actually took a half-step back, a gesture of deep-seated instinctual fear.
"The Hunter," Krazak muttered, his bravado momentarily gone. "They’re not messing around." He shook his head, the magma in his veins glowing brighter. "No. That’s their answer to everything. Smash it from a distance or send a ghost to make it disappear. Where’s the fun in that? Where’s the challenge?"
"What do you propose?" Luminar asked, its tone indicating it already knew the answer and found it distasteful.
"I propose we watch," Krazak said, his grin returning. "Let’s see what the old man is up to. Let’s see what the kid can do. If they start trying to fold the universe into a new shape, then we step in. But right now? They’re hiding in a graveyard. They’re scared. This isn’t the opening move of a new war. It’s a desperate man’s last stand."
"The risk is too great," the angular Diva argued. "A single Aethel, in its final death throes, could initiate a localized collapse. The damage—"
"—will be contained to the Veil!" Krazak interrupted, slamming his fist into his palm again. "Which is a blasted, empty wasteland that nobody wants! It’s the perfect place for this! It’s a cage of their own making! Let them play in their sandbox. If they try to break out, we break them."
Luminar was silent for a long time, its crystalline form processing trillions of calculations and probability scenarios. The Ashura way was reckless, impulsive, and chaotic. It was also, in this specific instance, strategically sound. Committing their forces now would be a massive expenditure for a threat that was, for the moment, contained. And inviting the Hunter into their affairs always came with a cost.
"Very well," Luminar said finally. "We will not engage. Not yet."
Krazak let out a triumphant laugh. "See? The crystals have a spine after all!"
"But," Luminar continued, its voice cutting through the noise, "we will not be blind." It gestured, and a complex star chart appeared between them, zooming in on the Veil. "We will focus the full might of our deep-space sensor arrays on the Veil. We will find Alistair’s fortress. We will watch his every move. The moment his power signature fluctuates beyond a containment threshold, the moment he attempts to access a Nexus Point for anything other than receiving his other children, we will act. And we will not be gentle."
Krazak nodded, a fierce light in his eyes. "Fine by me. Just means we get a better show." He leaned forward, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial rumble. "So... where is the old snake hiding?"
The three Diva focused their will. On the star chart, the chaotic mess of the Veil began to resolve. They filtered out the background radiation of the eternal Diva-Ashura conflict, the gravitational whirlpools of dead stars, the psychic screams of long-dead battles. They looked for the unnatural. The silent. The void.
And there it was.
A perfect, tiny sphere of absolute calm in the heart of the storm. A place where the laws of physics were not just stable, but were being enforced. It was a bubble of such profound order that it was, in itself, a screaming anomaly in the chaotic Veil.
"Got you," Krazak whispered, his grin widening. He looked at the Diva. "You have your eyes on him. Good. Me? I think I’ll have a few of my best scouts get a little closer. Just to... keep things interesting."
Without waiting for a reply, he turned and led his lieutenants back through the portal, which snapped shut behind them.
The chamber was silent once more. The three Diva rulers stared at the pinpoint of order on the map, the location of their oldest, most feared enemy.
"They are just two," the wind-chime Diva said, almost to itself.
"For now," Luminar replied, its perfect voice devoid of all emotion. "But a single spark is all it takes. And the Ashura, in their arrogance, are fanning the flames."
They continued to watch. The game was in motion. And all the major players in the galaxy now had their eyes fixed on a single, silent point in the darkness. The quiet before the storm was over. The storm was now gathering, and everyone was waiting to see who would be swept away first.


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