Chapter 224: A Hero's Rage
Captain Comet was a blur of righteous fury, a living bullet aimed directly at the warden's office.
"Elisa, door," Nox said calmly.
Elisa grinned and swung her warhammer. She did not hit the hero. She hit the entire wall of the office. The wall exploded outward in a shower of concrete and steel, meeting Captain Comet in mid-air. The hero was thrown off course, his charge broken as he swerved through the cloud of rubble.
"Let's go."
They leaped from the now-open-air office, their descent slowed by a gentle use of Nox's void power. They landed in the prison yard, which was now a full-blown, cartoonish riot. The ground had been turned into a bouncy castle, and a villain was making it rain lemonade.
"This is ridiculous," Mela muttered, sidestepping a walking armchair that was complaining about the lack of doilies.
"It is also our cover," Vexia stated. "We must exfiltrate before Captain Comet can regroup."
Captain Comet, however, was not the kind of hero who regrouped. He just got angrier. He blasted his way out of the debris cloud, his eyes glowing with a white-hot intensity. He ignored the rioting villains. His gaze was fixed on Nox.
"YOU DID THIS!" he roared, and the sky itself seemed to darken. He pointed a finger, and a beam of pure, concentrated solar energy shot toward Nox.
Serian stepped in front of him. A shield of pure, golden, life-affirming light appeared before them. The solar beam hit the shield, and the two opposite forces of divine energy met in a blinding, silent explosion. Serian stumbled back, her face pale.
"His power… it is fueled by his conviction. And right now, he is very, very convinced."
'So his power level is tied to his emotions. And we've just pushed his 'anger' slider all the way to the max. Inefficient.'
"We can't fight him," Nox said. "Not like this. He's a walking nuclear reactor of self-righteousness. We have to leave."
He grabbed Serian's arm and pulled out the small, black business card of the Guild. He focused his will on it.
'Exit, now.'
The shimmering doorway of the Guild began to form in the air beside them.
But Captain Comet was not going to let them go. He saw the shimmering portal, and he saw his target trying to escape. He let out a raw, primal scream of pure, frustrated fury. And he unleashed his full power. It was not a beam or a blast. It was a wave. A wave of pure, kinetic force, an omnidirectional explosion of raw power that erupted from his body.
The wave of force hit the prison, and the entire structure disintegrated. The rioting villains, the bouncy castle, the lemonade rain, it was all erased in a single, silent, overwhelming instant.
The shockwave hit Nox and his team just as they were stepping through the portal. The world dissolved into a storm of pure, deafening white noise and crushing, absolute force. Nox felt Serian's hand ripped from his. He felt his own body, his very consciousness, being torn apart by the sheer, raw power of a hero's grief.
The portal, their only way out, shattered like glass.
The last thing Nox saw before his world went black was the look on Captain Comet's face. It was not a look of triumph. It was a look of pure, dawning horror at what he had just done. He had not just destroyed his city's prison. In his rage, he had just destroyed a hero's most sacred rule. He had lost control.
The story of Captain Comet, the perfect, flawless hero, had just taken a very, very dark turn.
Nox, and his entire team, were gone, scattered across the chaotic, unpredictable currents of the multiverse. The Guardians of the Void Imperium were lost.
---
There was no pain. No sound. No light.
Nox was just… adrift. A disembodied consciousness, floating in an endless, chaotic river of pure, raw story. He saw entire worlds flash past him. A world of towering, steam-powered robots. A world of quiet, introspective philosophers. A world of singing, sentient mushrooms. He was in the space between the stories.
'Liona, status.'
[ERROR. CONNECTION TO GUILD NEXUS SEVERED.] Liona's voice was a distorted, glitching mess. [NARRATIVE ANCHOR LOST. ADRIFT IN UNSTABLE REALITY-SPACE. PROBABILITY OF SELF-RECONSTITUTION: 0.001%.]
'So, we're screwed.'
[THAT IS A STATISTICALLY ACCURATE, IF CRUDE, SUMMARY.]
He tried to gather his own power, to use the void to create an anchor. It was like trying to build a dam in a hurricane with a handful of sand.
'Serian. Elisa. Vexia. Mela. The others.' He reached out with his mind, trying to feel their presence. But there was nothing. Just the roaring, silent chaos of a million million stories all screaming at once.
They were gone. Scattered. Lost. He was alone. Again.
The despair was a familiar, comfortable darkness. It would be so easy to just… let go. To dissolve into the stream.
'No. I'm not that kid anymore.'
He remembered the choice he had made in the orphanage, the choice to forgive himself. He remembered the look in Serian's eyes. He was not alone. He was just… lost. And if you were lost, you just had to find your way back.
He stopped fighting the current. He opened himself to it. He let the river of stories flow through him. He did not try to consume them. He just listened. He was a Guardian of stories. A librarian of the lost. This was not a storm to be weathered. This was a library to be read.
He felt the story of the steam-powered robots, their war against a sentient cloud of rust. He felt the story of the mushroom-people, their epic quest to find the perfect patch of sunlight. He was no longer just Nox. He was becoming a part of the stream.
And as his own sense of self began to dissolve, he felt a flicker. A single, familiar, and impossibly bright thread of pure, golden light in the chaotic, gray storm. It was a story he knew. A story of a lost princess, of a fallen kingdom, of an unshakeable, unwavering hope.
It was Serian.
He focused all of his will, all of his being, on that single, golden thread. He was no longer just drifting. He had a destination. He had a beacon. He did not swim against the current. He used it. He became a story himself, a story of a king searching for his queen, and he let the great, cosmic river carry him toward her.
The journey was long. He felt his own story, his own memories, being frayed and worn away. But he held on to that single, golden thread. It was his anchor. It was his home.
And as he finally, after an eternity of drifting, began to coalesce, to pull the scattered pieces of his own consciousness back together, he knew one thing with an absolute, unshakeable certainty. He would find them. All of them.
He would find his way back. And then, he was going to have a very, very long talk with a certain hero in a bright, primary-colored cape.
His new story had just found its first, and most important, plot point: Reunion. And revenge.