The Game Where I Was Rank One Became Reality-Chapter 92: The Rotting Grain Descends

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Chapter 92: The Rotting Grain Descends

Demeterra watched her war fail.

Not suddenly — failures never came suddenly for a god who planned in decades. The failure arrived in increments: the vanguard stalling, the supply lines disrupted, the eastern flank compromised by Seylith’s betrayal, the divine creature standoff producing damage to both sides but breaking nothing decisively. Her army had pushed three trench lines deep into Ordinator territory and was bleeding at a rate that turned victory into attrition and attrition into a question.

[DEMETERRA — War Assessment, Day 11]

[Army Status: ~5,200 effective (from 8,500 at deployment)]

[Casualties: 1,800 killed, 1,500+ wounded/incapacitated]

[Supply Status: 65% nominal — sabotage losses ongoing]

[Vassal Status: Seylith (DEFECTED), Durnok (depleted from Descent), Kreth (repositioned), Gorvahn (committed)]

[Thornwyrm: Damaged but functional — Growth domain regeneration active]

[Grand Ordinator Defense: 3rd Trench Line holding — counter-push successful]

[Assessment: Current trajectory = prolonged siege. Unacceptable FP drain.]

The numbers did not lie. They had never lied. Demeterra had built her civilization on the principle that growth was mathematics — input, output, yield. The mathematics of this war were turning negative.

She calculated the cost of continuing. Three more days of assault at current casualty rates: another eight hundred dead, FP expenditure of approximately twelve thousand per day on battlefield blessings and supply-chain divine interventions. A week would cost her thirty percent of her remaining army and push her FP reserves below the comfort margin she maintained for territorial passive generation.

She calculated the cost of retreat. Loss of face. Loss of territory. Loss of Seylith. Loss of the northern border towns that had already been converted. Strategic contraction to her core farmlands.

She calculated the cost of what she was about to do.

Descent.

A Rank 5 god manifesting physically on the battlefield was not a tactic. It was an event. The divine form — the physical projection of a god’s consciousness into the material world — brought the full weight of a deity’s power into direct, physical expression. For a Rank 5, it meant an avatar of tremendous magnitude: the Growth domain made manifest, transforming the earth itself into a weapon.

The FP cost was astronomical. At Rank 5, Descent burned roughly five thousand FP per minute. Her reserves — depleted by the war, by the sabotage, by the ongoing drain of maintaining blessings across a contracted territory — sat at approximately one hundred and ten thousand. The Rank 5 maintenance threshold was fifty thousand.

She could sustain Descent for approximately twelve minutes before her reserves hit the danger line. Twelve minutes to break the Ordinator’s third line, break his army, break his Hydra, and break his will.

Twelve minutes. Make them count.

She descended.

***

The sky darkened.

Not clouds — the divine substrate itself shifted, the ambient atmospheric energy bending around a presence that was larger than weather. The grasslands went still. Birds stopped mid-flight and dropped to the ground as if strings had been cut. Insects fell silent. The wind died.

And then the earth moved.

A column of green-gold light erupted from the ground two hundred meters south of the third trench line. It rose sixty meters into the overcast sky — a pillar of divine energy so concentrated that the air around it crystalized into patterns of frost and dew. The light was alive. It pulsed. It breathed. It grew.

From the light, Demeterra stepped into the world.

She was enormous. Four meters tall — not the grotesque enlargement of a body stretched beyond its proportions, but the natural scale of a being for whom this size was the minimum expression of what she contained. Her form was humanoid but not human — skin of bark-textured gold, hair of flowing grain that moved with a weight that defied wind, eyes that were not eyes but openings into a divine space so vast that looking into them produced vertigo.

She wore no armor. She carried no weapon. The Growth domain was her weapon.

The ground around her erupted.

Roots burst from the earth in a radius of fifty meters, thickening and multiplying with the accelerated fervor of a lifetime of growth compressed into seconds. They tore through the trench walls. They shattered the palisades. They wrapped around the stonesteel-reinforced positions and crushed them the way tree roots crushed stone walls — not with force but with patience made instant.

The third trench line — Harsk’s masterwork, the final fortified position — collapsed in forty seconds.

Demeterra walked through the ruins. Each step produced growth: grass surging to knee height, wildflowers erupting in her footprints, the faint golden glow of the Growth domain rewriting the landscape in real-time. Behind her, the Thornwyrm’s damage sealed itself completely — her proximity was a restoration field, the divine creature’s bark re-forming, its wounds closing, its acidic sap reservoirs refilling.

Her troops surged forward. Not because she commanded them — because her Descent lifted every Rootist soldier’s morale from exhaustion to euphoria in the time it took for her light to reach them. The goddess was *here*. The mother was walking among them. A soldier who had been ready to collapse with fatigue straightened, gripped his weapon, and ran north with the conviction of a man who had just been told by god herself that he would not fall.

***

Zephyr could not match her.

Rank 4 against Rank 5. His Descent capacity — if he attempted it — would produce a form one-third her size, with one-fifth her power output, for eight minutes instead of twelve. He would drain himself past the degradation threshold within four minutes. It was not a contest; it was mathematics.

Don’t fight her directly. You can’t. You never could. Fight around her.

Through the bond: *Krug. Pull everyone back. Now. Give ground. She can’t maintain this.*

Krug didn’t argue. The Priest had seen the golden pillar. Had felt the Root-quake that broke the trench line. Had watched the goddess walk through a fortified position like it was made of paper.

The retreat was not orderly. It was survival. Soldiers ran. Some dropped weapons. Officers screamed for formation and were ignored by men who had seen a four-meter deity made of golden light tear apart the strongest position they’d ever built.

Demeterra advanced. Each step was forty meters of fortification destroyed. Each minute was a kilometer of ground gained. The grassland behind her was a garden — lush, golden, beautiful in a way that only a god of Growth could make a battlefield beautiful.

Six minutes, Zephyr counted. *She’s been down for six minutes. Burn rate at Rank 5: five thousand per minute. She started at roughly a hundred and ten thousand. She’s at eighty thousand now.*

He activated the contingency.

Not on the battlefield. Behind her. Five hundred kilometers south, in her core territory, where her Root Cradles — the blessing infrastructure that regenerated her troop strength, replenished her FP, and maintained her territorial passive — operated with the quiet efficiency of an empire’s beating heart.

The remaining sleeper agents — ten people, scattered across three Root Cradle facilities — received the final signal.

They didn’t sabotage the facilities. They destroyed them.

Fire. Simple, mortal fire — applied to the organic Root Cradle structures that were as flammable as the living wood they were made of. Three of four Root Cradles went up in the time it took Demeterra to walk another hundred meters north.

She felt it instantly. The loss was not physical — it was architectural. The Root Cradles weren’t just buildings; they were nodes in her divine infrastructure, the anchor points through which her territorial passive FP generation flowed. Losing three meant losing seventy-five percent of her passive income.

[DEMETERRA — CRITICAL ALERT]

[Root Cradle Status: 1 of 4 operational — 3 destroyed (sabotage)]

[Passive FP Generation: -75%]

[Current FP Reserve: 68,000 (Descent drain: 5,000/min)]

[Rank 5 Maintenance Threshold: 50,000]

[WARNING: At current burn rate, reserves will breach threshold in 3 minutes 36 seconds]

[RANK DEGRADATION: IMMINENT]

The notification hit her mid-stride. Not a gentle alert — a screaming red warning in her divine consciousness, the system equivalent of an alarm bell in a sinking ship.

Her passive generation — the Rank 5 perk that let her territory itself generate FP independent of believer activity — was dying. The Root Cradles that channeled it were burning. Twenty years of infrastructure investment, twelve thousand believers’ worth of accumulated divine architecture, collapsing behind her while she stood in a field five hundred kilometers away, burning FP at five thousand per minute.

Three minutes and thirty-six seconds. That was the gap between her current reserves and the Rank 5 threshold.

Below that threshold: rank degradation. Loss of Rank 5 passive generation. Loss of her highest-tier blessings. Loss of the territorial advantage that made her an empire-class deity instead of a regional power.

She stopped walking.

The growth surging from her footsteps slowed. The golden light dimmed. The Thornwyrm, at the peak of its proximity-fueled regeneration, felt the divine energy ebb and its repairs stall.

Demeterra looked north. Three hundred meters ahead, the Iron Covenant’s retreating army was regrouping — broken, scattered, but alive. The Hydra coiled defensively at the rally point, two heads raised, golden eyes watching the goddess with the unblinking attention of a creature that knew it was outmatched but would fight anyway.

The Grand Ordinator was up there somewhere. Watching. Calculating. Counting the seconds the way she was counting them.

He planned this. He planned all of this. The sabotage. The timing. He knew I’d descend and he waited.

She started the withdrawal. Not the Descent — the army. The Growth domain’s effects contracted as she dialed back her output. The golden light faded from euphoria-bright to working-dim. The roots receded. The garden behind her footsteps stopped spreading.

Her troops faltered. The divine momentum — the euphoria that had made exhausted soldiers run forward with the certainty of the blessed — evaporated like morning fog. Men who had been charging moments ago stood in the ruined grassland and looked around with the confused expressions of people waking from a dream.

Demeterra’s Descent ended. The four-meter form of bark and golden light collapsed inward, the divine projection dissolving, the consciousness returning to her divine space with the specific exhaustion of a god who had pushed too hard and spent too much.

[FP Reserve: 52,000]

[Rank 5 Threshold: 50,000]

[Margin: 2,000 FP]

Two thousand. The margin between Rank 5 and degradation. Less than half a day’s passive generation, if she’d still had passive generation.

She stabilized. Barely.