Shadow Husband:I Have a Hidden SSS-Class System-Chapter 40: THE PATTERN
Rama stood at the head of the war room table, exhaustion evident in every line of his body. Around him sat the core leadership—Sekar, the four champions, seven S-Ranks, Yanto, Budi, Ratna, Director Hartono, and General Wijaya.
"Thank you for coming back so quickly," Rama began, pulling up the System analysis on the main display. "What I’m about to show you changes everything we thought we knew about the void attacks."
He activated the projection.
[VOID ENTITY DEPLOYMENT PATTERN - ANALYSIS COMPLETE]
The display showed a graph mapping the two attacks—Herald and Reaver—with projected future incidents.
"The System analyzed combat data from both encounters. It found a pattern in how the Void Lords are deploying entities." Rama highlighted key data points. "The Herald was Level 73. The Reaver was Level 89. That’s a sixteen-level jump in seventy-two hours."
"We already knew each attack would be stronger," Chen Wei said.
"Yes, but look at the acceleration curve." Rama zoomed in. "It’s not linear. It’s exponential. The System projects that if the pattern holds, the next entity will be Level 107."
The room fell silent.
"That’s impossible," Prakash said finally. "Level 107? That’s—"
"Thirty-seven levels higher than me. Fifty-seven levels higher than most Players." Rama’s voice was steady despite the fear. "And the attack after that? Level 127. The one after? Level 149."
"We can’t fight that," Adi said quietly. "Even with Legion Protocol, even with a thousand champions—Level 149 is orders of magnitude beyond us."
"It gets worse." Rama pulled up the timeline projection. "The attacks aren’t slowing down. They’re accelerating. We had seventy-two hours between Herald and Reaver. The System predicts thirty-six hours until the next one. Then eighteen hours. Then nine."
Sekar stood abruptly. "You’re saying we’ll face exponentially stronger enemies at exponentially faster intervals."
"Yes."
"That’s a death spiral. We can’t recover between fights, can’t train, can’t prepare—"
"We’re not meant to survive," Rama interrupted. "That’s the point. This isn’t an invasion. It’s an extermination. The Void Lords are systematically overwhelming our ability to respond."
Silence filled the room like a physical weight.
General Wijaya was the first to speak. "How long until we reach complete failure state?"
Rama pulled up the calculation he’d been dreading. "If we maintain current combat effectiveness and the pattern continues, we’ll be unable to defend against void attacks in approximately... fourteen days."
"Fourteen days?" Hartono’s voice was hollow. "Not eighteen months?"
"Eighteen months until the main invasion. But the preliminary attacks will overwhelm us in two weeks. After that, void entities will manifest freely, humanity’s organized resistance collapses, and the Void Lords have a completely defenseless world when they arrive."
The room absorbed this like a death sentence.
"There has to be something we’re missing," Ratih said desperately. "Some way to break the pattern."
"There is." Rama pulled up another section of the analysis. "The System identified one anomaly. The Reaver shouldn’t have arrived when it did. According to the mathematical progression, it should have appeared in seventy-two hours, not sixty."
"It came twelve hours early," Yanto said. "We noticed that."
"Not early. Ahead of schedule because we forced the Herald’s retreat." Rama highlighted the correlation. "Every time we successfully repel an attack, the Void Lords accelerate the next deployment. They’re adapting to our resistance."
"So fighting back makes it worse?" Kenji asked.
"Fighting back the way we have makes it worse. Forcing retreats, sealing gates—it tells them we’re dangerous enough to require faster elimination." Rama paused. "But there’s another pattern. When the Herald manifested, it spent three minutes assessing us before attacking. The Reaver spent zero seconds. It came through aggressive, targeting me specifically."
"They’re learning," Sekar said. "Gathering intelligence and adapting."
"Exactly. Which means—" Rama pulled up the final projection. "—the Level 107 entity won’t be a scout or combat operative. It’ll be something designed specifically to counter our tactics. It knows we can reverse gates. It knows we have champions. It knows our coordination patterns."
"A hunter," Budi said grimly. "They’re sending a hunter."
"That’s the System’s classification. Void Hunter. Specialized entity designed to kill champions and prevent gate reversals."
Ratna stood. "Then what do we do? If fighting makes it worse but not fighting means we die anyway—"
"We change the paradigm entirely." Rama closed the projections. "We stop playing defense. We go on offense."
"Offense against what?" General Wijaya demanded. "We don’t know where the Void Lords are, how to reach them—"
"We don’t need to reach them. We need to disrupt their deployment pattern." Rama pulled up gate data. "Every void entity comes through an existing gate. They’re using our dimensional weak points as entry corridors. What if we started closing gates? Permanently?"
"Gates reseal themselves after monsters are cleared," Hartono said. "That’s basic Hunter science."
"Regular gates do. But what if we forced them to seal early? Before all monsters are cleared?" Rama looked at the four champions. "We have the power to reverse gate energy. What if instead of reversing it to push entities back, we collapsed the gates entirely?"
"That would trap any remaining monsters on our side," Adi pointed out.
"Yes. But it would also eliminate that gate as a potential void entry point. One less corridor they can use."
"There are thousands of gates worldwide," Chen Wei said. "You can’t collapse them all."
"We don’t need all of them. Just the high-risk ones." Rama pulled up a global map. "The System can identify which gates have dimensional signatures compatible with void entities. We target those specifically. Make it harder for them to deploy."
"You’re talking about a global operation," Sekar said. "Coordinating teams across continents, collapsing hundreds of gates simultaneously—"
"Which is why I need the UN Security Council briefing moved up. Not in forty-eight hours. Today. Now." Rama looked at Hartono and the minister who’d joined them. "Can you make that happen?"
"I can try. But they’ll want proof—"
"Show them this data. Show them the casualty reports. Show them that we have fourteen days before organized resistance collapses." Rama’s voice was hard. "And tell them that if they don’t cooperate immediately, their countries will be the ones begging for help when void entities start manifesting in Paris, Moscow, and Washington."
The minister pulled out his phone. "I’ll make the calls."
Yanto raised his hand. "Even if we collapse high-risk gates, the Void Lords will find alternatives. We’re buying time, not winning."
"Time is what we need most. Every day we delay the acceleration gives us another chance to create champions, train forces, develop countermeasures." Rama pulled up the Legion Protocol data. "We have four champions. We need six more. General, you mentioned a thousand volunteers?"
"En route. Arriving within twelve hours."
"I need your best hundred immediately. We’re running modified Trials—shorter duration, higher intensity. The Architect’s research showed ways to compress the process."
"You said that had a thirty percent mortality rate," Budi objected.
"It does. Which is why I’m only using volunteers who understand the stakes." Rama looked at the assembled leaders. "I need to be clear about what I’m asking. We’re going to send a hundred soldiers into a trial that will kill thirty of them. The seventy who survive might become champions. Or they might fail and come out unchanged. The math is brutal."
"But necessary," General Wijaya said grimly. "I’ll brief them personally. They’ll know what they’re choosing."
"Good." Rama checked the countdown. "Twenty-eight hours until the Void Hunter arrives. Here’s what needs to happen in that time. Champions—you’re on gate collapse duty. I’ll provide a priority target list. S-Ranks—coordinate with your governments to prepare secondary target gates globally. Network—work with military forces on integrated defense for Jakarta. When the Hunter arrives, we meet it with everything."
"And you?" Sekar asked.
"I’m meeting with the hundred volunteers. Then briefing the Security Council. Then preparing our defense." He paused. "And praying that this works."
The meeting dispersed, leaders rushing to their tasks.
Sekar caught Rama’s arm. "The pattern analysis. You said it changes everything. But you didn’t say whether we can actually win."
"Because I don’t know," Rama admitted. "The math says we lose in fourteen days. But math doesn’t account for human adaptability, desperation, or luck. Maybe we find something in those fourteen days. Maybe one of the new champions has an ability that changes the game. Maybe—"
"Maybe isn’t a strategy."
"It’s all we have."
She pulled him close. "Then we make it enough."
Six hours later, Rama stood before a hundred military volunteers in Eternal Bond’s training facility. All elite. All volunteers. All aware they might die.
"The Trial of Worthiness will test you beyond anything you’ve experienced," he began. "Thirty percent of you won’t survive. Of the seventy who do, some won’t become champions. You’ll face simulated enemies that can kill you. Scenarios designed to break you psychologically. And the entire process will take twelve hours of compressed hell."
He paused, letting it sink in.
"If you want to leave, do it now. No shame. No judgment. You’ll still serve in the defense forces."
Nobody moved.
"Good. Then let’s begin. The first group of twenty—with me. Everyone else, wait here. You’ll go in waves."
The first twenty followed him to the Trial chamber—a dimensional space the System created for this purpose.
As they entered, Rama felt the weight of what he was doing.
Sending people to possible death on his order.
Leading them into a trial he’d barely survived himself.
But the alternative was extinction.
He activated the Trial sequence.
Twelve hours later, Rama stood in the medical bay, looking at the results.
Of the hundred volunteers, twenty-nine had died. Their bodies lay in the morgue, families being notified.
Seventy-one had survived.
And of those seventy-one, eight had become System Champions.
[SYSTEM CHAMPIONS: 12/10 REQUIRED]
[LEGION PROTOCOL: ACTIVATED]
The System announcement echoed across all champion interfaces simultaneously.
[LEGION PROTOCOL NOW AVAILABLE]
[CHAMPIONS MAY DESIGNATE UP TO 1,000 NON-CHAMPION FIGHTERS FOR ENHANCED STATUS]
[LEGION FOLLOWERS RECEIVE: +50% ALL STATS, BASIC SYSTEM INTERFACE, ENHANCED COORDINATION]
[WARNING: LEGION FOLLOWERS DEPENDENT ON CHAMPION SURVIVAL]
Twelve champions total. Eight new ones created in twelve hours.
At the cost of twenty-nine lives.
Rama felt sick.
But they now had Legion Protocol.
And twenty-six hours until the Void Hunter arrived.
His phone rang. Sekar.
"The Security Council agreed to an emergency session. You’re on in thirty minutes. Virtual conference. They want answers."
"Tell them I have answers. They won’t like them, but they’re true."
"Rama—"
"I know. I’m ready."
He wasn’t ready. But he went anyway.
Because that’s what champions did.
They fought even when they weren’t ready.
The virtual conference connected him to fifteen world leaders, thirty military officials, and dozens of advisors.
Rama briefed them for forty minutes straight.
The void entities. The pattern. The fourteen-day timeline. The need for immediate global coordination.
When he finished, silence filled the virtual room.
Then the arguing began.
Three hours of political infighting, territorial disputes, resource arguments, and denial.
Rama let it continue for exactly ten minutes.
Then he stood.
"Enough. You can argue about jurisdiction and politics after we survive. Right now, we have twenty-three hours until the next attack. I need authorization to collapse high-risk gates globally. I need military forces coordinated. And I need it now."
"You’re asking for unprecedented authority—" one leader began.
"I’m asking you to not die. But if you want to debate while void entities slaughter your citizens, that’s your choice." Rama pulled up casualty projections. "Here’s what happens if we do nothing. In fourteen days, organized resistance collapses. In sixty days, humanity is extinct. Those aren’t estimates. That’s math."
He disconnected before they could respond.
Thirty seconds later, his phone exploded with messages.
Authorizations. Approvals. Commitments.
Not unanimous. Not complete.
But enough.
Twenty hours until the Void Hunter.
Rama stood on the rooftop of Eternal Bond, watching champions and military forces prepare across the city.
Sekar joined him. "The first gate collapse was successful. Singapore team just reported. Gate’s permanently sealed."
"Good. How many more?"
"Forty-three identified worldwide. Teams are en route."
"And the new champions?"
"Integrating with their assigned forces. Legion Protocol is active for two hundred soldiers so far."
"We’re moving."
"We’re scrambling," Sekar corrected. "But yes, we’re moving."
Rama’s System chimed.
[VOID HUNTER MANIFESTATION: ACCELERATED]
[NEW ETA: 6 HOURS]
His heart stopped.
"It was supposed to be twenty hours."
"What?"
"The Hunter. It’s coming in six hours. Not twenty."
Sekar went pale. "They adapted to our gate closures."
"They’re not giving us time to prepare." Rama activated emergency comms to all forces. "All units, this is Champion Actual. Enemy ETA revised to six hours. Full deployment immediately. This is not a drill."
Across Jakarta, alarms began blaring.
Six hours to prepare for a Level 107 entity designed specifically to kill champions.
With half their forces still deploying.
With gate closure operations incomplete.
With the new champions barely integrated.
Rama looked at Sekar.
"We’re not ready."
"We never are," she replied. "Come on. Let’s go to war."
They descended from the rooftop together.
Behind them, Jakarta prepared for its third void attack in five days.
And somewhere in the void, the Hunter was coming.
Early.
Intelligent.
Designed specifically to end humanity’s resistance.
Six hours until impact.
And Rama had absolutely no idea if they’d survive.
The System chimed one final time.
[WARNING: VOID HUNTER DETECTED]
[SPECIALIZATION: CHAMPION ELIMINATION]
[SECONDARY FUNCTION: GATE REVERSAL PREVENTION]
[THREAT ASSESSMENT: EXTINCTION-LEVEL]
Not in six hours.
Now.
The Hunter had arrived four hours early.
And it was already inside Jakarta.







