My Infinite System.-Chapter 251: Family Reunion
The Nova Sanctum hung in the void above the dead world, a stark, metallic intruder in a sky of swirling, impossible colors. It had torn its way through the Nexus Point not with grace, but with brute force, its hull groaning in protest at the laws of reality being bent around it.
Below, on a shattered plain of black glass that stretched to a horizon of jagged, purple mountains, two figures stood watching its descent.
Lucy’s new eyes saw the ship not as a mere collection of metal and wiring, but as a dense knot of ordered matter, a defiant little pocket of something in the overwhelming everything of the Veil. And within that knot, she felt a familiar, blazing signature. A sunflare of stubborn will and protective fury she would know anywhere.
A smile, genuine and relieved, touched her lips for the first time since her transformation. "Lucian," she breathed, the name a sigh of gratitude. "He’s here."
Beside her, Alistair kept his hands clasped behind his back, his expression unreadable. He gave a slow, deliberate nod. "Yes. He is." But there was no warmth in his acknowledgment, only a faint frown of calculation, as if a variable in a complex equation had just shifted.
The ship settled on its landing struts with a final, weary hiss. The ramp descended, cutting through the silent, heavy air.
Lucy’s smile faltered.
The first figure to emerge was not Lucian. It wasn’t the hulking form of Kael, or the nervous energy of Silas. It wasn’t Reia’s sharp gaze or Evelyn’s calm presence.
It was a man she had never seen before. He was tall, lean, dressed in simple, dark clothes that seemed to absorb the strange light. His hair was black like Lucian’s, but longer, tied loosely back. His eyes, a cool, assessing green, scanned the environment before locking onto them. There was no recognition in them, only a deep, weary cynicism.
He stopped at the bottom of the ramp, his gaze sweeping over Lucy’s transformed appearance—the glowing sigils, the crystalline horn, the way space itself bent around her—without a flicker of surprise.
"Well," the stranger said, his voice dry and flat. "You don’t look human." His eyes then shifted to Alistair, and a bitter, humorless smile twisted his lips. "And you. Dear old, supposedly dead dad. Look at you. Not a day over ten thousand. Your dead son’s back from the grave. And he’s here to put an end to whatever this... plan... is."
Lucy stared, completely bewildered. She looked from the stranger to her father. "Who... who are you?" she asked, her multi-layered voice betraying a hint of confusion.
Alistair’s face was a mask of paternal sorrow. He placed a gentle hand on Lucy’s shoulder. "Lucy... this is Marc. Your older brother. We had him before you and Lucian. He was taken from us... we searched for so long. We could never find him. We thought... we thought he was dead." His voice was thick with a grief that sounded utterly real.
For a moment, Lucy felt a pang of sympathy. A lost brother, returned.
But Marc just let out a short, sharp laugh. It was a harsh, ugly sound in the quiet. "Bullshit."
The word cut through Alistair’s performance like a knife.
"That’s a load of crap and you know it," Marc continued, his voice losing its flat tone and gaining an edge of raw anger. "You can sense us. The same way you sensed Lucy’s bloodline awakening, you felt mine. You knew I was alive. You knew exactly where I was. You just let me rot in Eron’s lab. You let that monster carve me up and twist me into a weapon because it was convenient for your grand design."
The accusation hung in the air, toxic and devastating.
"He’s lying, Lucy," Alistair said, his voice soft, trying to soothe. "The pain he endured has twisted his memory."
"My memory is just fine."
This new voice came from the ship’s ramp. Lucian emerged, stepping into the weird light of the Veil. He was in his full combat suit, the black material and flowing coat making him look like an avenging shadow. The matte-black handle of his weapon was clenched in his fist. His eyes, hard and furious, were fixed on Alistair, but his words were for his sister.
"I’m sorry it took me so long to find you, Lucy."
Lucy’s heart ached at the sight of him. He looked tired, older, but his presence was a solid, real thing in this place of nightmares. "Lucian," she said, her smile returning, though it was weaker now, uncertain. "It’s okay. You’re here now. Come down. I’m here with Dad. There’s... there’s so much I need to show you. What I can do now... what we can be."
She reached a hand out towards him, the glowing sigils on her arm pulsing softly. It was a plea for unity, for the family she had just found to come together.
Lucian didn’t move from the ramp. His gaze was heartbreakingly sad as he looked at her, then shifted back to Alistair with pure contempt.
"Lucy, he’s lying to you," Lucian said, his voice low and urgent. "He’s not here for a family reunion. He doesn’t want us to be a family. He wants to use us. All of it—the invasion, Mom’s death, Marc being taken, you being brought here—it was all to awaken our power. To make us into weapons for his revenge against the universe. We aren’t his children to him. We’re just tools."
The words hit Lucy like physical blows. She looked at Alistair, searching his face for the lie. She saw the kindly father, the patient teacher. She saw the grief for a lost son.
But she also saw the calculation in his eyes that never quite vanished. She felt the immense, controlled power he held in check, a power that felt less like protection and more like a cage. She remembered the relentless pressure, the way he had spoken of their "song" as if it were a thing to be conducted, not lived.
The quiet certainty she had felt moments before began to crack, and the old, familiar conflict—the human girl versus the cosmic legacy—threatened to tear her apart all over again. She stood frozen between the brother she had always known and the father who had shown her a terrifying new world, the truth hanging in the balance, more fragile than the dimensions she could now see.







