Chapter 224: Chapter 224—Nuclear
The Black Author rolled his neck once, the sound of it audible in the courtyard’s quiet, and Dimitri Stein looked at him with the expression of a man reassessing a situation he’d thought he understood.
“Okay,” the Author said. “Enough with the paltry words. We are not in some Senate meeting.” He spread his hands — an open, almost generous gesture, ink trailing from his fingers like smoke from a just-extinguished flame. “Let’s get the show on the road. You try your best to put me down, and I beget the inevitable loss of a Champion of the Republic.”
He was the one that struck up a conversation, Dimitri thought, with the particular weariness of a man who had been in enough exceptional situations to recognize when he was in one and find it annoying anyway. What’s he hassling me for. He really is nuts.
He didn’t say this. He adjusted his stance instead and considered his options with the methodical calm that years of building toward Champion had deposited in him like good sediment.
The problem in the south were aplenty. He’d deal with what that meant later.
Right now he had to deal with what was in front of him.
—–
There was a thing that people who had never seen Champions fight tended to misunderstand about the nature of the encounter. They imagined it as a scaled-up version of what they knew — a very large version of the fights they’d witnessed at Initiate level, or heard described from Adept engagements. More power, more damage, same essential grammar.
This was wrong in the way that most intuitive extrapolations were wrong: correct in direction, catastrophically insufficient in magnitude.
Think of it this way.
A Fledgling was a knife. Physical, direct, dangerous only at intimate range, the threat entirely dependent on proximity and contact. You had to be close to a knife for it to matter. You had to let it touch you.
An Initiate was a gun. Distance opened up. The abilities that emerged at that threshold — the soul talent expressions, the core integrations operating at their first real coherence — could project force and effect beyond arm’s reach, could engage across rooms, across corridors. A room full of Initiates was a room full of loaded weapons, and the danger was in the angles.
Adepts were where the vocabulary broke. They were walking, talking cannons — the force available to them at baseline, without effort, without escalation, could level a street if they stopped keeping it contained. The discipline of an Adept was not the discipline of building power but the discipline of not releasing it. Every moment of an Adept’s existence was a choice to hold back. Most people never understood this. They saw the controlled version and thought it was the whole thing.
Experts were Adepts who had resolved that containment at the level of mastery — the power was no less, but the control had become total, structural, automatic. They didn’t hold back through effort anymore. They held back because they had directly mastered their soul force, compressed it to perfect density, made the compact version the natural version. Sniper rifles. Everything available, nothing wasted. The damage they could do was the damage they intended to do, precisely, and no more and no less.
Elites were bombs. The word existed for a reason. The sheer scale of their prowess wasn’t a metaphor — there were documented cases of Elite-level engagements reshaping terrain. Not as collateral damage. As consequence of existence in combat mode. An Elite in a city was an Elite deciding, continuously, not to unmake the city, and the city survived on the strength of that decision.
And Champions.
Champions were nuclear weapons wearing the bodies of humans, or Crawlers, in the cases where the Shroud had produced something that reached that threshold from the other side. The comparison wasn’t hyperbole. It was engineering. The soul force available to a Champion wasn’t a quantity that existed on the same scale as what came before it — it was a different category of thing entirely, the way nuclear yield existed in a different category than conventional explosive. More wasn’t the right word. Different order of reality was closer.
So: two Champions. One courtyard. One compromised city already running Shroud aftermath protocols, civilians in Narrative Imposition, dimensional membranes still stabilizing from the breach.
Dimitri understood immediately why he wasn’t going nuclear.
He was a Senator of the Republic. He had a responsibility to the people of the Republic that was not rhetorical — it was the actual load-bearing structure of his position, the reason his Champion status carried political weight rather than simply military weight. Going nuclear in a populated district while the city was already compromised wasn’t a tactical option. It was a war crime he’d be committing against his own people.
The Author, for his part, had no such institutional obligation.
But he wasn’t going nuclear either, and the reason for that was, Dimitri had concluded, entirely characteristic of the man. The author needed the Republic’s people. Not sentimentally — he wasn’t a sentimental man in any obvious way. Economically. Structurally. The way the wealthy needed the poor to remain poor enough to define wealth by contrast, but alive enough to do the labor that wealth required. The Author had spent decades building something — the Umbral Covenant, the intelligence networks, the long game of the membrane data — and all of it required a functional Republic to push against. A destroyed Republic was useless to him. An awakened one was the only outcome worth having.
Plus: you couldn’t fill a world with only old men and the people who agreed with old men. It would be, Dimitri thought the Author would agree, disastrous.
So they would fight at the level that Champions fought when they were choosing not to unmake each other. Which was still a level that would, if they were not careful, turn this courtyard into a crater.
Dimitri rolled his shoulders. “You’re sure about this.”
“I’m sure about everything,” the Author said pleasantly. “It’s one of my quirks.”
—–
The first exchange lasted four seconds and covered forty meters of the courtyard.
Dimitri opened with Bloodline at the Adept application — not the lethal version, not the corruption that ended family lines, but the disruptive version, the interference that targeted the Author’s own biological substrate and introduced instability at the genetic level. It was the equivalent of making a gun jam by reaching into the mechanism. The target had to be alive for it to work, which was a constraint, but it bypassed almost every conventional defense because conventional defense was built around stopping force, not stopping the subtle rearrangement of molecular inheritance.
The Author didn’t dodge. He edited.
The ink rose around him in a wall — not a physical barrier but something that occupied the space between Dimitri’s application and its target and rewrote what was in that space. The Bloodline interference hit the ink wall and came out the other side having forgotten what it was going for. The ability wasn’t blocked but Revised. It passed through and dissipated against the courtyard wall with the aimlessness of a person who has walked into a room and cannot remember why.
Dimitri had expected something like this. He’d already moved.
His secondary application was physical — the Bloodline talent at its Initiate expression, which was the ability to perceive genetic connections and use that perception for targeting. He knew exactly where the Author’s body was at all times, not through spatial awareness but through the biological signature, the specific genetic reality that couldn’t be Narratively Imposed away because it existed at a level below perception. He crossed the courtyard in the time it took the ink wall to process the first attack, got inside the revised space, and hit the Author in the sternum with a palm strike carrying the concentrated soul force of someone who had been doing this for a long stretch of time.
The Author went backward.
Not because the strike broke anything. Because it was the honest physics of force applied to a body, and even Champions obeyed honest physics when they weren’t actively rewriting it.
He caught himself against the courtyard wall, coat settling, ink swirling into a new pattern around him. He looked at Dimitri with an expression that was not pain and not surprise and was perhaps, marginally, something like reassessment.
“Bloodline as a targeting system,” he said. “Not just a weapon. Fascinating—you’re using the genetic signature I carry to locate me under the Narrative.”
“You can’t Impose away your own DNA,” Dimitri replied. “You can mask perception, but not erase what is.”
The Author tilted his head, amusement flickering across his face. “Interesting distinction. Sometimes I forget I’m not the only clever, sensible person in the Republic. Not entirely my fault—we are, after all, trapped in a hell of a world, living among the remnants of a dead god trying to devour us. I’ve been arguing something like this for twenty-three years.” He straightened, voice sharpening. “Let’s see how far that logic gets you.”
Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 242 - 242—Moving Crawlers
- Chapter 241 - 241—Adam's Morning
- Chapter 240 - 240—The Adept's Accounting
- Chapter 239 - 239— Crownhold’s Back
- Chapter 238 - 238—Differentials
- Chapter 237 - 237– The Path Between Nations II
- Chapter 236 - 236—The Path Between Nations
- Chapter 235 - 235— Dawn has Arrived
- Chapter 234 - 234—The Training Window
- Chapter 233 - 233— The Company of The Unprepared II
- Chapter 232 - 232—The Company of the Unprepared
- Chapter 231 - 231— The Architecture Of War II
- Chapter 230 - 230—The Arithmetic of War
- Chapter 229 - 229—The Architecture Of Inevitability II
- Chapter 228 - 228—The Architecture of Inevitability
- Chapter 227— Glimpse of Trauma
- Chapter 226—Strings
- Chapter 225— Receeding For Now
- Chapter 224—Nuclear
- Chapter 223— A Boring Discussion Between Monsters II
- Chapter 222— A Boring Discussion Between Monsters
- Chapter 221— The Black Author
- Chapter 220— The Picture Perfect ending?
- Chapter 219— Cascading
- Chapter 218—The Verdict
- Chapter 217— Race Against Time
- Chapter 216— Cracks in The Foundation
- Chapter 215— Powder Keg
- Chapter 214— Introspection
- Chapter 213— Celestine’ Timely Intervention
- Chapter 212— Feeling Lost
- Chapter 211— Blackmail
- Chapter 210—Seeking Help
- Chapter 209— Gathering Intelligence
- Chapter 208— Blame
- Chapter 207—First Mission
- Chapter 206— Pursuance of Individuality
- Chapter 205— Bane of Blood
- Chapter 204—Mara’s Breakthrough
- Chapter 203—Weird Merchant
- Chapter 202—Faction In The Works
- Chapter 201— A New Perspective
- Chapter 200— Johnmark VS Bright II
- Chapter 199— Johnmark VS Bright I
- Chapter 198— Silas’ Perspective
- Chapter 197—Everybody’s In On It
- Chapter 196—Testing The Spies
- Chapter 195— Baby Steps on Espionage
- Chapter 194— Soul Signatures
- Chapter 193— Thoughts on Structure
- Chapter 192— Back at It Again
- Chapter 191— End of the Narrator
- Chapter 190— Help Rendered In The Past
- Chapter 189— Culture Shocks
- Chapter 188— Crownspire
- Chapter 187— Happenings
- Chapter 186— Adam’s weird Side Project
- Chapter 185— Set In Motion
- Chapter 184— Acknowledging Power
- Chapter 183— The Compromised
- Chapter 182— Tether Drain
- Chapter 181— The Narrator
- Chapter 180— Merchant Calculations II
- Chapter 179—Merchant Calculation
- Chapter 178— Faculty Meeting
- Chapter 177—Political Currents
- Chapter 176— Forging Identity III
- Chapter 175— Forging Identity II
- Chapter 174: Forging Identity
- Chapter 173— External Pressure
- Chapter 172—Recovery and Recognition
- Chapter 171—Advancement and Consequences
- Chapter 170—Extraction and Advancement
- Chapter 169—Impulse and Execution
- Chapter 168— First Blood and Final Breath
- Chapter 167— Raw Combat and Harsh Lessons
- Chapter 166— Self evaluation
- Chapter 165— External Machinations and Internal Secrets
- Chapter 164—Self Interest
- Chapter 163— Bessia’s Stand
- Chapter 162: Trials of Fire
- Chapter 161— The portal
- Chapter 160— Bitter Preparation
- Chapter 159—The Art of Creation
- Chapter 158—Coalition in the South
- Chapter 157—Ominous preparations II
- Chapter 156—Ominous Preparations
- Chapter 155—The Widening Gap
- Chapter 154— Connections and Gaps
- Chapter 153—Opportunism and Cruelty
- Chapter 152— Power’s True Structure
- Chapter 151— Calculated Transformations II
- Chapter 150—Calculated Transformations
- Chapter 149— Discoveries and Dilemmas
- Chapter 148- Little Problem
- Chapter 147—Economics of Survival
- Chapter 146— Classes
- Chapter 145— First Lessons in Violence
- Chapter 144—Truth Beyond Propaganda
- Chapter 143— Victory and Defeat II
- Chapter 142—Victory and Defeat
- Chapter 141— Delusion
- Chapter 140: Combat Assessment - First Blood
- Chapter 139— First examination III
- Chapter 138—First examinations II
- Chapter 137— First Examinations
- Chapter 136— Arrival at Sparkshire
- Chapter 135— New -
- Chapter 134—Final Gathering
- Chapter 133—Cores and Farewells
- Chapter 132— Goodbyes
- Chapter 131—Counting the Cost
- Chapter 130—The Underwhelming Battle
- Chapter 129—Brutal Efficiency
- Chapter 128— Saved By The Engine
- Chapter 127— The Engine’s Arrival
- Chapter 126—Elsewhere
- Chapter 125—The Royal Beneath
- Chapter 124— Lethal Geometry IV
- Chapter 123— Lethal Geometry III
- Chapter 122—Lethal Geometry II
- Chapter 121— Lethal Geometry
- Chapter 120— The Silence and The Siege
- Chapter 119—Choices in the North
- Chapter 118— The Engine
- Chapter 117— Signals
- Chapter 116— Adept Distress
- Chapter 115—Noble Rhys
- Chapter 114—Everyone’s come for a checkup
- Chapter 113—Convergence of Power
- Chapter 112: Vacancy Creation
- Chapter 111: The Opportunist’s March
- Chapter 110— Three-way Casualties
- Chapter 109— Collision
- Chapter 108: Death of a Nobody
- Chapter 107—Third party
- Chapter 106— Clear Light’s Eve
- Chapter 105— Players Position
- Chapter 104— The Night Before
- Chapter 103— Ascension and Infestation
- Chapter 102—Delays and Decisions
- Chapter 101— Celebrations R18*
- Chapter 100: The Fifteen R18*
- Chapter 99—Schemes
- Chapter 98—- Thoughts and Reckonings
- Chapter 97—Adam’s Calculations
- Chapter 96—Stumbling Forward
- Chapter 95—Empathy
- Chapter 94—Cold Calculations
- Chapter 93—The Weight of Stones II
- Chapter 92—-The Weight of Stones
- Chapter 91—A bad Way to Grief R18*
- Chapter 90—Sad News
- Chapter 89—Conversations in Vester
- Chapter 88—Ellarine POV
- Chapter 87—Aftermath
- Chapter 86— End of Battle
- Chapter 85—First blood
- Chapter 84—Pencil Pushers
- Chapter 83—Eve Before Showdown
- Chapter 82—I spoke with Vaelith?
- Chapter 81—Weight of Power
- Chapter 80— Waves Recede
- Chapter 79—who’s really untop?
- Chapter 78—Taking risks
- Chapter 77—Shadows
- Chapter 76—Weapon secured
- Chapter 75—First Battle
- Chapter 74—Reflection
- Chapter 73 — Colony
- Chapter 72 – In The Caves
- Chapter 71 – Sunshine
- Chapter 70 — Squad Selection
- Chapter 69 — The Price Of Entry R18
- Chapter 68—Return Of The Prodigal Shadow
- Chapter 67 — The Eastern March
- Chapter 66 — The Cost of Making It
- Chapter 65 — Ash Between Footsteps
- Chapter 64 — Vester’s Shadowed Walls
- Chapter 63 — All Roads Led to vester
- Chapter 62 — Asset Retrieval
- Chapter 61 — The Monarch Of Bone
- Chapter 60 — The Long Shadow Of The Adept
- Chapter 59 — Breaking Points
- Chapter 58 – The Mixed Wave
- Chapter 57 — Hollow lines
- Chapter 56 — The Fire, The Stone, and the Shadow Between
- Chapter 55 – The Ones Who Remain
- Chapter 54 — “The Slow Goodbye”
- Chapter 53 — The High Command Convenes
- Chapter 52 — Atheon’s Fury
- Chapter 51 — The Folded Path of the Initiate
- Chapter 50 — The Weight of What Remains
- Chapter 49 — The Shadow That Moves
- Chapter 48 — The Quiet After the Storm
- Chapter 47 — What Remains in the Dark
- Chapter 46—Bright vs Larkin II
- Chapter 45 — Bright vs Larkin I
- Chapter 44 — The Others
- Chapter 43 — The People Behind the Walls
- Chapter 42 — The Fall of the Silo
- Chapter 41 — The Night Grim Hollow Trembled
- Chapter 40 — The Hidden Network
- Chapter 39 — Lockdown At Dawn
- Chapter 38 — Threads In The Dark
- Chapter 37 — Shadows In The Cracks
- Chapter 36 — First Drills
- Chapter 35 — The Fledgling Squad
- Chapter 34 — New Burden
- Chapter 33 — The Fracturing Within
- Chapter 32 — The Month of Breaking
- Chapter 31 — Sparks of Discipline
- Chapter 30 — The Quiet Between Battles
- Chapter 29 — Debrief and Division
- Chapter 28 — Echoes Beyond the Fog
- Chapter 27 — The Heart of the Shroud
- Chapter 26 — Fractures in the Fog
- Chapter 25 — The Echoing Hunger
- Chapter 24 — Hunger of Men, Hunger of Monsters
- Chapter 23—The Line We Cross
- Chapter 22 — Overrun
- Chapter 21 —The Heart That Watches
- Chapter 20 – Gathering Storm
- Chapter 19 – The Pulse Beneath
- Chapter 18: The Maw’s Heartbeat
- Chapter 17: The Sound in the Fog
- Chapter 16 – Poisoned Strength
- Chapter 15 – The Whispering Hunt
- Chapter 14 – Blood and Bone
- Chapter 13 – The Pulse of Instinct
- Chapter 12 – Nightfall in the Maw
- Chapter 11 — Shattered Company
- Chapter 10 — Splinters in the Dark
- Chapter 9 — The Crawlers’ Greeting
- Chapter 8 — The Next March
- Chapter 7 — What Stays Hidden
- Chapter 6 — Outpost Grimhollow
- Chapter 5 — The Blooded
- Chapter 4 — Blood in the Fog
- Chapter 3 – The March into Blindness
- Chapter 2 – The Ones Who Still Talk
- Chapter 1 – The Fodder Line