Cherreads

Chapter 42 - Boundless Potential

The chamber did not end.

It stretched forward an immeasurable hall carved from darkness itself, where distance lost meaning and light went to die. Vast pillars rose like the spines of dead gods into an unseen ceiling, their surfaces so polished they drank the void, offering no reflection, no escape. Between them stood dozens, perhaps hundreds, of other thrones, a few occupied, expressing a different kind of power, and many empty, blending into the oppressive gloom.

Each throne marked an Ascended Crowned being, a god born not just out of existence, but of completion.

She sat among them, unmoving.

Her throne was neither the grandest nor the smallest, yet it commanded attention in a way that unsettled even divinity. It was shaped like interlocking crescents, folding inward upon themselves, as though reality had tried and failed to look directly at her. Black filaments flowed from its base like ink drifting through water, dissolving into the floor before they could fully exist.

Her form was still, statuesque, draped in layered shadows that clung to her like a second skin. Long black hair spilled over her shoulders, and down the throne, within them distant galaxies, nebulae, and faint motes of crimson light drifted like dying stars. A blindfold wrapped tightly across her eyes, woven from something that was not cloth but absence—an intentional denial of sight.

And yet, she saw.

Beneath the blindfold, her eyes moved.

Not left or right, but everywhere, tracking futures, pasts, possibilities branching and collapsing in the same instant. The air around her shimmered subtly, as though burdened by the weight of too many truths occupying the same space. To stand before her was to feel examined down to the marrow of one's fate, every choice laid bare before it was ever made.

She did not breathe. She did not shift.

When she spoke, her lips did not part.

The words were.

They echoed without sound, vibrating directly within the mind, bypassing ears, language, and resistance alike. They carried no emotion, no sorrow, no malice, only certainty.

"Humanity…"

The word rippled outward, brushing against the empty thrones, stirring faint reactions from distant presences that did not bother to look at her.

"…their population has dwindled to a mere 60 percent across the globe."

Images accompanied the statement unbidden: cities reduced to skeletal remains, oceans choked with wreckage, continents scarred by battles that rewrote geography itself. Survivors huddled in fortified enclaves, unaware that their extinction was being calmly tallied in a hall beyond reality.

She lifted her head.

Opposite her, sprawled across a throne that looked less constructed and more grown out of obsession, lay a child.

His throne was a blasphemous confection.

Its back and base were formed from dozens of fused doll faces, packed tightly together like a grotesque mosaic. Each porcelain face bore the same warped smile. Some were frozen in laughter, others split by fine fractures that ran through their cheeks and eyes, mirroring the child's own broken perfection. Tiny cracks spider-webbed across them, yet none were empty. Within each glassy gaze flickered faint, distorted reflections of distant worlds, as if they watched even now.

Candy-striped pillars arched along the sides of the throne, red and white spirals twisted into ceremonial mockery, while the remains of forgotten comfort cushioned the seat itself. Teddy bears, stuffed animals, and plush toys lay crushed and half-fused into the obsidian frame. Some were missing eyes. Others clutched stitched smiles far too broad to be comforting. Their fabric bodies sagged unnaturally, as though time itself had worn them thin.

The metal beneath it all gleamed a deep, oil-dark black, threaded with silver filigree that bent away from logic, curling and recoiling as if reality refused to touch it directly.

And atop it all, the child lounged sideways across it without a shred of reverence.

His small legs dangled over one armrest, pale feet swinging lazily back and forth, up, down, up, down, while his head rested against the opposite arm. White hair spilled messily like strands of moonlight caught in motion. A jester's crown sat crooked atop his head, its curved black prongs tipped with tiny metallic bells and spherical ornaments that never rang unless he wanted them to. His mismatched eyes, one a cold, crystalline blue and the other shimmering with fractured red, glinted with irreverent amusement as he stared into the endless chamber.

A smile tugged at his lips.

"Hehe…"

The sound echoed far too loudly.

He lifted one hand, fingers snapping once.

A lollipop materialized instantly, spiraled crimson and ivory, glossy as if freshly born from indulgence itself. With a flick of his wrist, the wrapper unraveled, the crinkle of plastic snapping through the hall like a thunderclap.

Click.

The candy met his teeth as he popped it into his mouth.

"Fufu~"

He sucked on it thoughtfully, legs still swinging, head tilting just enough to glance at her beneath his lashes.

"It will keep going down," he said lightly, voice sweet and cruel all at once. "These feeble beings are too weak to survive the new world. Let alone have enough capable survivors until the awakening of the true system begins."

He rolled the lollipop around his mouth, cheeks hollowing slightly.

"HUHU…"

A pause.

Then, amused again.

"Their potential is diminishing at an accelerated rate," he continued, licking the candy with deliberate slowness. "They are proving… uninspired."

One leg kicked higher, heel tapping against the throne with a hollow clack.

He leaned forward just a little, elbows resting on the armrest, chin propped in his palm, every bit the bored child and every bit an Ascended Crowned god.

"Hehe… honestly, Astraea Noctyrr." he sighed, eyes drifting toward the endless void beyond the pillars, "We should go ahead to a different world and start cultivating there."

The bells on his crown chimed softly.

Not from movement.

From amusement.

Around them, the hall remained infinite and silent. Humanity's extinction was debated by a child licking sugar from his fingers, lounging atop a throne built from captured realities.

"Are you done, Mirthryn Jexel...?"

The blindfolded figure's thought did not so much sound as settle into the chamber. It was a pressure change, a shift in the fundamental pitch of existence that made the child's bells chime again, involuntarily this time.

"...Your child like personality is clashing with your true nature." She continued, her head tilting with an unnerving, bird-like stillness. The un-glimpsed galaxies in her hair drifted, their light absorbed by her darkness. "We have chosen this world as a collective, not you alone, and it was chosen because its potential is boundless."

She remained perfectly still, yet her attention sharpened, focusing on him with the intensity of a collapsing star.

"They may be weak now, but their capacity for growth is... astronomical. Potentially, there could be a few hundred individuals who could ascend to our ranks." Her thought carried the weight of absolute certainty

The child pouted around the lollipop, swirling it faster, the motion agitated now. "But it is boring to watch!" he whined, his words laced with a petulant eternity. "How about we accelerate the process, thin out the herd, and find the worthy among them? Then I can have some fun! Hehe... Hahaha..."

He sat up straight, swinging both legs over the side of the throne with sudden energy, the bells on his crown chiming in a chaotic chorus. His mismatched eyes gleamed with a terrifying light, the red one swirling like a vortex of blood and madness. "We could spawn a world boss early! A huge one! A city killer! Wouldn't that be a delightful spectacle? All countries get one giant monster! HUHUHU!"

He giggled, a sound that echoed with the promise of carnage.

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